Camp Fire, Day 10: Trump, Brown, Newsom visit; firefighters brace for red flag conditions
Air Force One flew in to
"This is very sad to see," Trump said at the Skyway
The president and governor toured the burned area with
Jones said she met Trump at the
"Mostly what he said was how sorry he was for all of our losses and he committed that the federal government was willing to help us," Jones told the Enterprise-Record.
In
"He said he couldn't believe it," Jones said. "It was unbelievable and that no one ever thought something like that would ever happen and that it was just devastation. He was just really blown away by how extensive the damage was."
At the mobile home park, the president stopped in front of an American flag hanging from what was left of a burned structure. He walked between strewn, blackened ovens, a metal shelf with charred plant pots on top, and too many burned out cars to count.
Trump spoke briefly in the mobile home park, where all 55 homes were destroyed. He thanked law enforcement and elected officials.
"Jerry and I have been speaking, and Gavin and I have now gotten to know each other. We're all going to work together and we'll do a real job. But this is very sad to see," Trump said.
"We have the greatest people in the world looking and helping," Trump said. "Law enforcement, always. They never let us down. They never let us down.
"I don't think we'll have this again to this extent," Trump said. "Hopefully this is going to be the last of these because this was a really, really bad one. Right now we want to take care of the people who have been so badly hurt. But we have incredible people doing the job."
In response to a question on what needs to be done, Brown said, "What needs to be done is being done."
The president visited the ruins of the mobile home park close to the home of
"It's good he showed up," Weldon said. "Not too many people have seen this much devastation in one place. He's see hurricanes and tornadoes, but fires are different. There's nothing left."
"One thing that really touched me," said
She said he meant it "the way I mean it -- that we're all Americans."
Jones told Trump "how thankful we were for the help we were getting and what a good job I thought
The motorcade then traveled down to
"They're out there fighting and they're fighting like hell," Trump said of the first responders. "It's like total devastation."
He described the fire as "still going very heavily. Very intense flame."
"We're looking for hundreds of people right now, literally hundreds," Trump said. "And hopefully that's going to be a good conclusion, not a bad conclusion."
FEMA Director
Asked whether climate change was a factor, Trump said: "I think you have a lot of factors." He turned back to forest management. "Right now that seems to be a very big problem."
Asked if the fire had changed his mind on climate change, Trump said: "No, no. I have a strong opinion. I want a great climate. I think we're going to have that and I think we're going to have forests that are really safe."
Prelude to visit
In
"It's definitely a morale boost for the Paradise P.D. that's been working nonstop," said detective
Aboard Air Force One, the
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"The president wants to get something done on this," LaMalfa said. "We need to be a lot more aggressive."
LaMalfa dismissed criticism of the president's earlier tweet on forest management as having more to do with its timing and politics than the substance of the argument. He said that forest management does not mean clear cutting but rather thinning and creating buffers around populated areas.
"Without forest management, things can go wrong," he said.
Before leaving
"Many more people are missing than anyone thought possible," he said, according to
Asked about forest management practices, which Trump criticized last weekend, he said: "Everybody now knows that this is what we have to be doing ... It shoulda been done many years ago."
The president added: "We will be talking about forest management. I've been saying that for a long time. It should have been a lot different situation. but the one thing is that everybody now knows that this is what we have to be doing, and there's no question about it. It should have been done many years ago. But I think everybody's on the right side. It's a big issue, it's a big issue, a very expensive issue, but very, very inexpensive when you compare it to even one of these horrible fires. And we'll save a lot of lives."
Fire concerns
Firefighters increased containment of the
A red flag warning was issued by the
Weather the last couple of days has been favorable. Control lines have been built directly on the burned area edge and some distance away from the fire. Those indirect lines are then backburned when possible to widen the barrier against the wildfire.
As of Saturday evening, the fire had killed 76 people. Three firefighters have been injured. The count of single-family homes destroyed was 9,700, with another 191 multi-family dwellings and 336 commercial buildings. The burned area is 149,000 acres.
Another 1,276 people are unaccounted for, but
Sixty-three of the dead have been tentatively identified.
On Saturday, Honea identified Loloene Rios, 56, of
Air quality is considered very unhealthy. People with heart or lung disease, older adults, and children should remain indoors and keep activity levels low, according to the
There was some improvement Saturday in air quality and that trend is expected to continue, although the overnight winds could affect that outlook.
Evacuations
Portions of the Cherokee evacuation zone,
Evacuation orders have also been reduced to warnings for the lower
The area of
All areas north of
Shelters
Meanwhile, a norovirus outbreak at shelters is making evacuees sick, and an unofficial evacuation camp that grew in the parking lot at the Chico Walmart is expected to close by Sunday.
The only shelters still accepting evacuees are at
A total of 46,031 people have been evacuated and 983 are being sheltered in evacuation centers.
Enterprise-Record reporters
___
(c)2018 Times-Herald (Vallejo, Calif.)
Visit Times-Herald (Vallejo, Calif.) at www.timesheraldonline.com
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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