Home park ‘looks like a war zone’


CALIFORNIA WILDFIRES

Nearly 500 homes in the park were destroyed by the inferno.

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Stacks of charred bricks, blackened shells of cars and burned tree trunks were all that remained Monday in much of the community some residents once called the “Beverly Hills of mobile home parks.”

The mostly retired residents returned to see what was left of their homes at Oakridge Mobile Home Park, where winds with hurricane intensity blew a wall of fire through nearly 500 manufactured homes and set them ablaze so quickly that even firefighters had to drop their hoses and run.

“It looks like a war zone — no trees, no buildings,” said Michele Warneck, 54, who burst into tears after returning from the park. She had watched her two-bedroom house burn on the television news. “Everything that was porcelain just blew up.”

Once considered a paradise with swimming pools and tennis courts, the park was now roamed by cadaver-sniffing dogs in search of anyone who didn’t escape.

The inferno destroyed 484 homes in the park Saturday. Firefighters were able to save about 120 homes, but many were badly damaged.

The fire was one of three that have destroyed about 1,000 homes and apartments and burned 41,000 acres, or 64 square miles, forcing thousands to flee.

Most evacuation orders were lifted by Monday, when clear skies and calm winds allowed firefighters to make some gains, but officials warned of another bad air day and classes were canceled at dozens of schools near fire zones in Orange County.

In Sylmar, scores of residents stood in line outside a high school gymnasium for tours of the charred mobile home park where retirees once played tennis, took a dip in a jacuzzi and played Mah-Johng and poker.

Those whose homes were destroyed were shuttled through the neighborhood in a black van. Police were still investigating the fire, so people weren’t allowed to get out and sift through the ashes for scraps of their belongings.

“It’s gone,” said Ed Hurdle, 82, after taking one of the first park tours. “The car is gone. The house is gone. It’s twisted metal. It’s totally charred there. There’s no hope at all. Nothing. Nothing. Nothing.”

A separate set of white police vans ferried residents whose homes were still standing so they could gather medication and other essentials.

“My house was in great shape. All it was was dirty,” said Betty Glassman, 78. “I feel like I’m in a dream. Pinch me.”

Cadaver dogs have been searching the burned units, but so far have only found the cremated remains of a man who died several years ago.

Animal control recovered several dead animals and three live cats. Los Angeles County Assistant Coroner Chief Ed Winter said the cats could have been hiding under one of the units that wasn’t damaged.

Neighbors huddled together inside the gymnasium, which has been turned into a Red Cross shelter for evacuees, hugging one another and comparing notes about what they saw and what they were able to salvage.

“It’s a disaster. It looks like Hiroshima,” said Joan Costa, carrying plastic bags filled with makeup and medicines she had pulled from her home.

Elsewhere, the largest of the fires has burned more than 28,000 acres in Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and Los Angeles counties and has destroyed more than 250 homes and apartment units. San Bernadino became the fourth county declared a state of emergency.

The first of the wildfires broke out in the Montecito area of Santa Barbara County. The causes of all the fires were under investigation, although officials labeled the Santa Barbara-area fire “human-caused,” said Doug Lannon, a spokesman with the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.