Death toll rises as wildfires sweep toward Portland - Los Angeles Times
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Death toll rises as wildfires sweep toward Portland and smoke fills the Pacific Northwest skies

An aerial view of a mobile home park in Ashland, Ore., that been scorched by wildfire.
In this aerial view from a drone, search and rescue personnel from the Jackson County Sheriff’s Office look for a missing elderly resident in a mobile home park on Friday in Ashland, Ore. Hundreds of homes in Ashland and nearby towns have been lost due to the wildfire.
(David Ryder / Getty Images)
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Seeing the charred ruins of her home for the first time after wildfires ripped through the towering firs and oaks of surrounding Santiam Canyon, killing a neighboring boy and his grandmother, Mary Chenault stifled tears in the smoky air.

“We’ve never seen anything like this,” said Chenault, 68, who moved to the lush canyon east of Salem with her husband 30 years ago from Anaheim, never expecting wildfires to follow them to the Pacific Northwest. “I don’t think there’s going to be anything to save.”

Across Oregon on Friday, fire officials reported 35 fires were raging after a week of deadly blazes fueled by unseasonably strong winds and dry weather turned much of the Pacific Northwest into an inferno. Blazes have burned more than 1 million acres — 1,500 square miles, a span larger than Rhode Island and about double the destruction of smaller fires in years’ past. The scene was at once historic and horrific as tens of thousands evacuated, and houses and buildings were consumed.

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At a Friday briefing, Gov. Kate Brown said the state’s air quality ranked worst in the world.

Chris Favor douses the embers of a wildfire in the Santiam Canyon area east of Salem, Ore.
Chris Favor, 34, a construction worker from Mill City, Ore., uses a makeshift fire hose and water tank to douse the embers of a wildfire still burning in the Santiam Canyon area east of Salem on Friday. Favor’s neighbors Ricky Keen, 38, and brother Jesse Keen, 25, also construction workers, joined him. “We’re just trying to help,” Ricky Keen says.
(Molly Hennessy-Fiske / Los Angeles Times)

“Almost anywhere in the state you can feel this right now,” she said.

Seven people had died and at least 60 were still missing, and Oregon was “preparing for a mass fatality event,” said Andrew Phelps, the state’s emergency management director.

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Outside Portland, the state’s largest metro area of about 2 million, hundreds of firefighters battled two large fires Friday that threatened to merge. The city’s convention center and the state fairgrounds in Salem had both been turned into shelters. East of Salem, firetrucks and hot spot teams lined the highway, battling two fires that merged earlier this week.

As 40,000 people fled their homes, and more than 400,000 others prepared to do so, the White House approved an emergency declaration to help provide immediate assistance from the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

Fires blanketed fields and farms from Portland south to Eugene with snowy ash, turning vineyards and pumpkin patches into surreal moonscapes. In rural canyons and logging towns to the east, some tried to save their crops and animals, ushering horses and livestock into trailers. Others forced to flee at the last minute left barn doors gaping, cattle and chickens roaming free. To the south, near the California border, residents returned to find the towns of Phoenix and Talent flattened, gray and smoldering.

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The Chenaults, like many of their neighbors, escaped with just the clothes on their backs after being awakened by a police officer who knocked on their door early Tuesday and told them to leave.

Mary Chenault holds a photo of her home in Lyons, Ore., before a wildfire reduced it to ruins.
Mary Chenault, 68, a retired Oregon state transportation worker, holds a cellphone photo of her home of 30 years in Lyons, Ore., while standing in front of the charred ruins Friday. Up the road, a 12-year-old boy and his grandmother died in the wildfires.
(Molly Hennessy-Fiske / Los Angeles Times)

When they returned Friday morning, their rural road was engulfed in an ashy haze, the sun an ominous red ball. Across the road, the canyon dropped off into the Little North Santiam River, a natural fire break that saved some of their neighbors’ homes.

Steve Chenault, 68, who works part time for the state Department of Transportation, watched as his wife combed their wreckage for jewelry and other keepsakes.

“She thinks she knows where it is,” he said, “You know — hope.”

The couple worried about thieves targeting the area. The day before, they had seen police arrest two men nearby on suspicion of looting, a special charge covering burglary and theft during a state of emergency, and others have been arrested in neighboring canyon towns.

But after a brief search, the couple left empty-handed, more concerned about their safety in what was an active fire zone. Fire crews and neighbors were spraying hot spots nearby. Many surrounding roads were closed, but a police officer had let them through out of sympathy.

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State fire managers met at the Lyons fire station to plot strategies in the parking lot as donations piled up inside near Fire Chief Bob Johnston and Gary Rychard, president of the department’s board. An exhausted firefighter walked past, face covered in ash. Johnston said he was awaiting the arrival of the latest crews from out of town to help his volunteer department’s 15 firefighters.

“We had firefighters on the fighting line for 40 hours. They didn’t know what had happened to their own houses,” Rychard said. “We’re a small community and we’ll stick together.”

Mike Walz, 65, who fled wildfires in Mehama, Ore., carries a jug of water to douse small fires in his relatives' yard.
Mike Walz, 65, who fled wildfires in Mehama, Ore., carries a jug of water to douse several small fires in the yard of the home where his Dorothy Keasey and her husband David live in Mill City, Ore.
(Molly Hennessy-Fiske / Los Angeles Times)

A few miles up the road in Mill City, population 2,000, retirees David and Dorothy Keasey avoided police roadblocks by walking a mile past the smoking remains of homes to reach their property. They passed streets that were mostly silent except for a few shrill smoke detectors sounding in the hazy half-darkness. Once they reached their driveway, the couple scrambled over fallen trees and smoldering roots to reach their home, which had not burned — yet. Her brother brought a jug of water he used to douse several small fires in the yard.

They ran into the mayor, Tim Kirsch. He was driving around with a public works employee, assessing damage and ensuring the city’s water supply didn’t run dry. Earlier this week, firefighters had almost exhausted it, he said, but he considered them “blessed”: They lost 20 structures, far less than canyon towns a few miles east like Gates, which was 75% burned.

“The ridge over there is still actively burning,” Kirsch said from his pickup, praising local volunteer firefighters. “Right across the river here, the Fire Department held the line. If they hadn’t, it would have wiped out the city.”

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Lori Hopkins, 53, evacuated from Gates with a friend early Tuesday as the house where they were staying was destroyed by wildfires. They drove west Friday to an American Red Cross shelter at the state fairgrounds in Salem, already filled with several dozen cars and RVs.

“We were going to go down the coast — now they’re evacuating too,” Hopkins said.

 Jon Pennick, 16, joins some friends to fight fires in Gates, east of Salem, Ore.
Jon Pennick, 16, whose family lost their 108-year-old farmhouse in the wildfire in the tiny canyon town of Gates, Ore., east of Salem, joins some friends to defend the few structures that remain.
(Molly Hennessy-Fiske / Los Angeles Times)

In Gates, a town of about 500, some residents had already returned Friday after evacuating, determined to defend the few structures that remain from hot spots and stray embers, mesmerizing as dangerous fireflies. They drove around town in pickups outfitted with water tanks and fire hoses, dousing still-smoldering properties as they passed.

On the back of one of the trucks was Jon Pennick, 16, whose family’s 108-year-old farmhouse was destroyed. His grandparents’ home nearby burned too. The high school junior hadn’t been able to see the sites yet, because roads were still blocked by sheriff’s deputies. So he was staying with friends and fighting fires near their homes.

“We just need more help at this point. Fire crews don’t have enough,” he said.

Nearby, his neighbor Eric Benolken was hauling water in a four-wheeler to fight small fires. Benolken, 56, a contractor, said his 87-year-old mother’s house and his entire neighborhood burned — except his home near the river.

His mother evacuated to stay with family in Portland. Benolken wasn’t sure whether she would have to evacuate again as fires spread there.

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“I can’t keep up,” he said.

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