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Staying alive: Why Californians are escaping nation’s biggest wildfire

Adora Molina knows fire. Six years ago when a fire raged through her town of Magalia, California, she waited until the last minute to evacuate. Her car wasn’t working that morning. So her husband, who had left for work already, defied authorities to go back to the house to get her. 

This time, when an evacuation warning came, they grabbed their go bags and left right away. 

Why We Wrote This

Wildfires, like other extreme events, teach important lessons in safety and adaptation. In the recent Park Fire, which has burned some 400,000 acres, more Californians are now heeding evacuation orders and leaving danger zones swiftly.

The Park Fire, burning in Northern California since July 24, has consumed nearly 400,000 acres and is the largest active wildfire in the United States. Thousands of people living in the communities that dot this forest landscape have evacuated their homes – seeking refuge in hotels, with friends, or in emergency shelters like one at the Neighborhood Church here in the city of Chico. 

Devastating as it is, people are adapting. Residents like Ms. Molina are paying closer attention to – and heeding – evacuation orders and getting better at swift exits from danger zones. 

Adaptation means people who live in wildfire zones can start to replace worry with preparation, says Yana Valachovic, a scientist and wildfire adviser. They think, “This will happen. I’ve got all my stuff. My house is ready. My community knows what to do … and I’ve got my act together,” she says. 

Adora Molina knows fire. Six years ago when a fire raged through her town of Magalia, California, she waited until the last minute to evacuate. Her car wasn’t working that morning. So her husband, who had left for work already, defied authorities to go back to the house to get her. 

This time, when an evacuation warning came, they grabbed their go bags and left right away. 

Like other residents facing wildfires this week – the Quarry Fire in Colorado’s Jefferson County and others now burning in the West – she and her husband went in search of emergency shelter.

Why We Wrote This

Wildfires, like other extreme events, teach important lessons in safety and adaptation. In the recent Park Fire, which has burned some 400,000 acres, more Californians are now heeding evacuation orders and leaving danger zones swiftly.

The Park Fire, burning in Northern California since July 24, has consumed nearly 400,000 acres and is the largest active wildfire in the United States. Thousands of people living in the communities that dot this forest landscape have evacuated their homes – seeking refuge in hotels, with friends or relatives, or in emergency shelters like one at the Neighborhood Church here in the city of Chico. 

After three days at the evacuation shelter, Ms. Molina says she’s tired but grateful for food and a safe place to rest. She’s ready to go home. But the fire could shift at any moment – and they’re not taking any chances.  

Devastating as it is, people are adapting. Residents like Ms. Molina are paying closer attention to – and heeding – evacuation orders and getting better at swift exits from danger zones. Many current evacuees survived the 2018 Camp Fire, which killed 85 people and destroyed the town of Paradise, just 20 minutes away. So they have learned wildfire lessons as well.

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