Cal OES Daily Situation Report September 8, 2017

The Salmon August Complex, west of Etna in Siskiyou County.

Photo Credit: caseyjhoward / Instagram 1 Duty Officer National Terrorism Advisory System EDO Sarah Poss Jennifer Gordon (Day) CSWC Watch Officer Chad Stokes (Night) [email protected] STAC Duty Officer 916-275-4069 FDO Bill Bondshu

LDO Troy Clegg

IDO Terri Mejorado

CDO Nancy Smith

SDO Joanne Phillips

PIO Brad Alexander

TDO Ben Green

IT Michael Crews

EQTP Yvette LaDuke

Tribal Liaison POC Lori Nezhura Access and Functional Vance Taylor Needs POC 2 SITUATION SUMMARY Cal OES Activation Status

State Operations Center Inland Region EOC Coastal Region EOC Southern Region EOC

Level 2 Level 1 Level 1 Level 1

Cal OES State Operations Center The Cal OES State Operations Center (SOC) is activated at Level II in support of statewide fires and National Emergency Management Assistance Compact (EMAC) coordination. • On 09/08/17, the SOC is activated from 0900 – 1700 hours.

Hurricane Harvey Deployments, State of Texas Resources requested in support of impacts due to Hurricane Harvey: • Urban Search and Rescue IST (Incident Support Team) – 4 Personnel from • Urban Search and Rescue IST Cache Support Personnel – 6 Personnel from California • HEPP (Hazardous Equipment Push Package) Support Personnel – 4 Personnel from California • HEPP-7 (Hazardous Equipment Push Package) Cache and Personnel – 4 Personnel from California • California US&R Blue Incident Support Team (IST) Support Personnel – 30 Personnel from California • Swiftwater Flood-Search and Rescue (SF-S&R)10 - Ventura with 1 Cal OES Assistant Chief and 14 personnel (Demobilizing, returning to CA) • SF-S&R 12 - Long Beach with 1 Cal OES Assistant Chief and 15 personnel (Demobilizing, returning to CA)

At the request of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), Governor Edmund G. Brown, Jr. has approved the additional deployment of specialized components of Urban Search and Rescue Task Force 2, 3, 6 and 7 (CA-TF2, 3, 6 and 7) through the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services (Cal OES) to aid the response to Hurricane Harvey. All of California’s state/federal Urban Search and Rescue Task Forces are assisting with operations in Texas or are enroute. This activation deploys the Water Rescue Mission Ready Package elements of the these four teams. Director Mark Ghilarducci explains how these requests come in and what our California USAR teams are prepared to do here in this video: Click here to view video

Hurricane Irma Deployments, State of Florida Resources requested in support of impacts due to Hurricane Irma: • California US&R Task Force 1 (CA-TF1), City Fire Department – Type I US&R with 80 personnel • California US&R Task Force 4 (CA-TF4), Oakland Fire Department - Type I US&R with 80 personnel • California US&R Task Force 8 (CA-TF8), San Diego City Fire Rescue - Type 1 US&R with 80 personnel • California US&R Task Force 3 (CA-TF3), Menlo Park Fire Protection District - Type 1 US&R with 80 personnel

EMAC Missions • See Cal OES Mission Tasking Slide 3 SITUATION SUMMARY Mexico Earthquake On 09/07/17 at 2149 hours, a magnitude 8.1 earthquake occurred 26 miles SW of Tonala, Chiapas, Mexico. Per the Cal OES Assistant Director of International Affairs, 11 states in Mexico felt the earthquake and aftershocks continue. There have been 33 fatalities and infrastructure and homes have been impacted. Mexico’s National Operation Center is activated and the federal government is assisting with response effort. The Cal OES Assistant Director of International Affairs will continue to monitor the situation. • The National Tsunami Warning Center (NTWC) issued a Tsunami Information Statement for California. • There is no tsunami danger for the California coast. • All coastal counties were briefed. • Cal OES Duty Officers were notified. • There have been no requests for State assistance.

Cal OES SOUTHERN REGION • See Fire Activity Slides

Cal OES COASTAL REGION • See Fire Activity Slides

Cal OES INLAND REGION • See Fire Activity Slides

4 FIRE ACTIVITY Cal OES Fire Preparedness Levels

National Northern California Southern California Preparedness Preparedness Preparedness Level 5 Level 5 Level 4

Multi-Agency Coordination Multi-Agency Coordination System MACS Mode: 4 System MACS Mode: 3

Fire Mission Tasking • 2017-FIRE-38436 has been approved for 6 California National Guard TYPE I Helicopters for water dropping and crew transport, and 1 TYPE I MEDEVAC helicopter with night vision capabilities for medical rescue operations. • 2017-FIRE-38476 has been approved for 3 Force Packages (12 Hand Crews) from California National Guard to support fire suppression activities on behalf of CAL FIRE. • 2017-FIRE-38556 has been approved for 1 California National Guard Fixed Wing RC-26 for infrared flight imagery for recording real time fire coverage on behalf of CAL FIRE. • 2017-FIRE-38527 has been approved for 1 California Conservation Corp Camp Crew to support the base camp on behalf of LA City Fire.

Orleans Complex, Vegetation Fires, Siskiyou County Location: 20 miles N of Orleans Jurisdiction: FRA Type-2 IMT (Young) – FRA Per Cal OES Duty Officers and ICS-209 as of 09/08/17 at 0759 hours: • 26,490 acres, 53% contained • Expected Containment: 09/30/17 • Fires in the complex are Ukonom, Haypress, Burney Fire, Forks Fire • Minimal fire behavior due to precipitation over the fire area • Structure defense along the Highway 96 corridor

Shelter • Humboldt County Shelter, Karuk Department of Natural Resources Building, 39051 Highway 96, Orleans • Shelter is closed as of 09/08/17.

5 FIRE ACTIVITY Eclipse Complex, Vegetation Fires, Siskiyou County Location: Near Happy Camp Jurisdiction: FRA Type-1 IMT (McGowan) – FRA Per Cal OES Duty Officers and ICS-209 as of 09/08/17 at 0759 hours: • 96,151 acres, 25% contained • Expected Containment: 10/10/17 • Fires in the complex are Cedar and Oak • Structure threat along the Highway 96 corridor with controlled traffic • Heavy timber including old growth with pockets of brush. Fires are generally burning in areas with no recent fire history. • Threats to Seiad Valley have been mitigated

Proclamations • On 09/06/17, a Proclamation was received from Del Norte County due to unhealthy air quality from smoke generated by area fires. The smoke generated by fires in Oregon (Chetco Bar) and Del Norte and Siskiyou Counties (Eclipse Complex) has caused significant health related issues with residents of Del Norte County. The County of Del Norte is requesting a Director’s Concurrence in order to assist the Del Norte County with the financial burden of the event.

Salmon August Complex, Vegetation Fires, Siskiyou County Location: Marble Mountain Wilderness and Jurisdiction: FRA Unified Command - SoCal Team 2 - Zombro/Bravo – CAL FIRE Per Cal OES Duty Officers and ICS-209 as of 09/08/17 at 0759 hours: • 65,343 acres, 15% contained • Expected Containment: 09/20/17 • 400 residences and 150 minor structures threatened. • Fires in the complex are Wallow and Mary • Structure threat to the communities of Etna and Greenview • Fire activity reduced due to 0.1 to 0.3 inches of precipitation over the fire area • Evacuation Warning continues for the communities of Sawyers Bar and Salmon River Roads, between Etna Summit and Nordheimer Flat

Summit Complex, Vegetation Fire, Tuolumne County Location: South of Douglas Day Use area off of Highway 108 Jurisdiction: Federal DPA, FRA, Stanislaus National Forest Type 3 IC (Kaiser) Per Cal OES Duty Officers and ICS-209 as of 09/08/17 at 0759 hours: • 4,124 acres, 9% contained • Expected Containment: Unknown • Fires in the complex are Douglas, Willow and McCormik 6 FIRE ACTIVITY Helena, Vegetation Fire, Trinity County Location: Highway 299 near the town of Helena, 5 mi NW of Junction City Jurisdiction: State/Federal DPA, SRA/FRA, Shasta-Trinity Unit/Shasta-Trinity National Forest Unified Command CAL FIRE/USFS CA-IMT 1 (Templin) / CAL FIRE (Kavanaugh) SRA/FRA Per Cal OES Duty Officers and ICS-209 as of 09/08/17 at 0759 hours: • 20,354 acres, 40% contained • Numerous structures threatened and destroyed • Minimal fire behavior due to heavy morning precipitation over the fire area

Activations • Trinity County EOC is activated at Level II from 0700-0000 hours.

Deployment • 2 Cal OES Fire and Rescue Assistant Chiefs assigned • 1 Cal OES Law Enforcement Branch Assistant Chief monitoring • 1 Cal OES Inland Region Emergency Services Coordinator (ESC) assigned • 1 Cal OES Inland Region Senior ESC assigned • 1 Deputy Regional Administrator (RA) Assigned

FMAG • On 08/31/17, a Fire Management Assistance Grant (FMAG) application was received. • The FMAG was approved on 09/01/17, declaration number FEMA-5199-FM-CA.

Proclamation • On 08/31/17, a Proclamation was received from Trinity County due to a series of wildfires which began on 08/30/17, and resulted in conditions of extreme peril to the safety of person and property in the county. There are no requests for assistance at this time. • On 08/31/17, Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. issued an emergency proclamation for Trinity County due to the effects of the , which has burned thousands of acres, damaged critical infrastructure, destroyed homes and caused the evacuation of residents. Click here to read full Proclamation • On 09/06/17, Trinity County requested CDAA and direct state assistance for private property debris removal.

Evacuations • Area between Helena and Oregon Mountain Summit, Canyon Creek area including Red Hill Rd. and all roads off of Red Hill Rd., Valdor Rd., Canyon Creek and all roads off of Canyon Creek, Power House Rd. and Upper Rd., Coopers Bar, and Barney Gulch communities • Approximately 2000 people • Residents on the south side of Hwy 299 will be allowed to re-enter as of 09/08/17 at 1200 hours in cycles of 20 cars every 15 minutes. 7 FIRE ACTIVITY Helena, Vegetation Fire, Trinity County (Continued) Shelter • American Red Cross (ARC), First Baptist Church, 1261 Main St., Weaverville • Midnight Count: 8 • Animal Shelter: Hayfork Fairgrounds, 6000 Highway 3, Hayfork • Clean Air Center: Golden Age Center, 201 Browns Ranch Rd., Weaverville • Open 0800-1800 hours daily • Clean Air Center: Cox Bar Elementary School, 304 Corral Bottom Rd., Big Bar • Open 1000-1700 hours daily

Road Closures • East of Helena West of Junction City on Highway 299 • Highway 299 is closed in both directions, west of Helena Bridge and East of Junction City • Expected to be opened intermittently but controlled 0530 – 2130 hours based upon fire activity.

Schools • The following schools are closed in Trinity County due to the fire and unhealthy smoke conditions: Trinity High School, Weaverville Elementary School, Lewiston Elementary School, Douglas City Elementary School. • No estimated time of reopening

Missions • 2017-IREOC-38536: One Cal OES Telecommunications Mobile Interoperability Gateway Unit (MIGU) to support Local Assistant Center (LAC) operations. Mission Closed.

Recovery • LAC closed on 09/06/17 at 1900 hours

Fork, Vegetation Fire, Trinity County 7 mi NE of Helena and Junction City, 1/2 mi NE of Helena Fire Federal DPA, FRA, Shasta-Trinity National Forest Per the Cal OES Duty Officers as of 09/08/17 at 0530 hours: • 1,050 acres, 0% containment • Fire continues to back towards Canyon Creek Rd. threatening 14 residential structures • Fire is being managed under the Helena IMT and is within 0.5 miles of merging

8 FIRE ACTIVITY Ponderosa, Vegetation Fire, Butte County (FINAL) Location: Ponderosa Wy. at Lumpkin Rd., near Feather Falls Jurisdiction: State DPA, SRA, Butte Unit CAL FIRE IMT-2 (Patterson) Per Cal OES Duty Officers and ICS-209 as of 09/08/17 at 0759 hours: • 4,016 acres, 95% contained • Expected Containment: 09/06/17 • Mop up and patrol • 54 structures destroyed (32 residences and 22 outbuildings)

Deployment • 1 Cal OES Law Enforcement Branch Assistant Chief monitoring • 1 Cal OES Inland Region Emergency Service Coordinator (ESC) supporting remotely • 1 Cal OES Recovery Representative

FMAG • On 08/29/17, a Fire Management Assistance Grant (FMAG) application was received. • As of 09/05/17 this fire is no longer under FMAG consideration.

Proclamations • On 09/01/17 at 1034 hours, the California State Warning Center (CSWC) received a proclamation from Butte County requesting State Assistance, CDAA, Federal Assistance, and SBA. • On 09/01/17, Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. issued an emergency proclamation for Butte County due to the effects of the , which has burned thousands of acres, damaged critical infrastructure, destroyed homes and caused the evacuation of residents. Click here to read full Proclamation

Shelters • All shelters have closed

Tribal- Mooretown Rancheria • Per the Cal OES Tribal Liaison, 8 structures have been destroyed, including the old Mooretown Rancheria site. • The impacted tribal members are sheltering with family members. • The Cal OES Tribal Office is working with the tribe to ensure that any unmet needs are addressed.

9 FIRE ACTIVITY Ponderosa, Vegetation Fire, Butte County (Continued) Missions • 2017-IREOC-38526: One MIGU to support Local Assistant Center operations • 2017-IREOC-38626: One Air Monitor in Paradise

Recovery • Butte County has requested a Debris SME from Cal OES Recovery. 1 Cal OES Representative deployed. • The county is working on Initial Damage Estimates. Assessments of destroyed homes will be conducted in the next few days. • A Local Assistance Center, Feather Falls Grange Hall, 9 Lumpkin Rd., Feather Falls, is scheduled to open 09/08/17 from 1000-1500 hours.

Schools • Feather Falls Elementary is closed due to unhealthy air conditions.

South Fork, Vegetation Fire, Mariposa County Location: 1.5 miles east of Wawona Jurisdiction: FRA Type-3 IMT (Crowe) – FRA Per Cal OES Duty Officers and ICS-209 as of 09/08/17 at 0759 hours: • 6,640 acres, 47% contained • Expected Containment: 09/30/17 • No structures threatened • Mop up and suppression repair on the west flank of the fire. • Burning in tree mortality area

10 FIRE ACTIVITY Railroad, Vegetation Fire, Madera and Mariposa Counties Location: Highway 41, between Sugar Pine and Fish Camp Jurisdiction: Federal DPA, FRA, Sierra National Forest Type-2 IMT (Mills) Per Cal OES Duty Officers and ICS-209 as of 09/08/17 at 0759 hours: • 12,141 acres, 50% contained • Expected Containment: Unknown • Fire is threatening public and private infrastructures in the SR 41 corridor. • Fire continues to burn in a high tree mortality area

Activations • The Madera County EOC is activated at Level II from 0800-1700 hours.

Deployments • 1 Cal OES Fire and Rescue Branch Assistant Chief assigned • 1 Cal OES Law Enforcement Branch Assistant Chief assigned • 1 Cal OES Inland Region Emergency Services Coordinator (ESC) assigned

FMAG • On 09/02/17, a Fire Management Assistance Grant (FMAG) application was received. • The FMAG was approved on 09/02/17, declaration number FEMA-5202-FM-CA.

Proclamations • On 09/03/17 at 1854 hours, Madera County submitted a proclamation of local emergency. Madera County is requesting a waiver of regulations that may hinder response and recovery, CDAA, and federal resources. • On 09/06/17, a proclamation was received from Mariposa County due to the effects of the Railroad, Peak, and Cathedral Spires Fires. The County is requesting CDAA. • On 09/07/17, Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. issued an emergency proclamation for Madera, Mariposa and Tulare counties due to the effects of the Railroad, Pier, Mission and Peak fires, which have burned thousands of acres, threatened homes and critical infrastructure and caused the evacuation of residents. Click here to read full Proclamation

Evacuations • Mandatory: Sugar Pine Community, Cedar Valley Community, Sky Ranch Community, Sierra National Forest between CA-41 and Beasore Rd. • Approximately 293 homes, 600 people • Advisory: Northside of Bissett Station Rd. (Road 620) between Highway 41 and Round House Rd. (Road 628) • Approximately 75 homes, 200 people 11 FIRE ACTIVITY Railroad, Vegetation Fire, Madera and Mariposa Counties (Continued) Shelters The American Red Cross (ARC) has established the following shelter: • Oakhurst Community Center, 39800 Fresno Flats Rd., Oakhurst • Midnight Count: 34 • Small animal shelter: Oakhurst Community Center, 39800 Fresno Flats Rd., Oakhurst • Large animal shelter: Coarsegold Rodeo Grounds, 44777 Rodeo Grounds Ln., Coarsegold

Road Closures • Highway 41 is closed at Cedar Valley Dr. • Several smaller roads are closed in the area

Health and Medical • 2 Adult & Senior Care facilities impacted by smoke, outdoor activities have been cancelled. • 1 Child Care facility is closed through 09/08/17.

Law Enforcement • Mutual aid for Incident Command Post (ICP) security was requested for dayshift. Fresno County Sheriff’s Office, Merced County Sheriff’s Office, Kerman Police Department, and Clovis Police Department are deploying personnel.

Peak, Vegetation Fire, Mariposa County Location: Peak Rd X Usona Rd., 9 miles southeast of Mariposa Jurisdiction: State, SRA CAL FIRE IC (Leonard) Per Cal OES Duty Officers and ICS-209 as of 09/07/17 at 1742 hours: • 680 acres, 95% contained • Near the community of Bootjack • Minimal fire behavior.

Deployments • 1 Cal OES Law Enforcement Branch Assistant Chief monitoring • 1 Cal OES Inland Region Emergency Services Coordinator (ESC) assigned • 1 Cal OES Law Enforcement Branch Assistant Chief is monitoring

12 FIRE ACTIVITY Peak, Vegetation Fire, Mariposa County (Continued) Proclamations • On 09/06/17, a proclamation was received from Mariposa County due to the effects of the Railroad, Peak, and Cathedral Spires Fires. The County is requesting CDAA. • On 09/07/17, Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. issued an emergency proclamation for Madera, Mariposa and Tulare counties due to the effects of the Railroad, Pier, Mission and Peak fires, which have burned thousands of acres, threatened homes and critical infrastructure and caused the evacuation of residents. Click here to read full Proclamation

Evacuations • Mandatory: Usona Rd. from Indian Peak to Leonard Rd., Riverhaven and Bronco Hollow (Open to residents only as of 09/05/17) • Approximately 50 homes

Shelters The American Red Cross (ARC) has established the following shelter: • Oakhurst Community Center, 39800 Fresno Flats Rd., Oakhurst • Midnight Count: 34 • Small animal shelter: Oakhurst Community Center, 39800 Fresno Flats Rd., Oakhurst • Large animal shelter: Coarsegold Rodeo Grounds, 44777 Rodeo Grounds Ln., Coarsegold

Mission, Vegetation Fire, Madera County Location: Mission Dr. X Italian Bar Rd., 2 miles east of North Fork Jurisdiction: State/Federal DPA, FRA Unified Command with CAL FIRE Team 3 (Lawson) and USFS (Tolmie) Per Cal OES Duty Officers and ICS-209 as of 09/08/17 at 0759 hours: • 1,035 acres, 50% contained • Structures remain threatened in several communities • Minimal fire behavior with smoldering • Burning in tree mortality area

Activations • The Madera County EOC is activated at Level II from 0800-1700 hours.

Deployments • 1 Cal OES Law Enforcement Branch Assistant Chief assigned • 1 Cal OES Fire Rescue Branch Assistant Chief assigned • 1 Cal OES Inland Region Emergency Services Coordinator (ESC) assigned

13 FIRE ACTIVITY Mission, Vegetation Fire, Madera County (Continued) FMAG • On 09/04/17, a Fire Management Assistance Grant (FMAG) application was received. • The FMAG was approved on 09/04/17, declaration number FEMA-5204-FM-CA.

Proclamations • On 09/03/17 at 1854 hours, Madera County submitted a proclamation of local emergency. Madera County is requesting a waiver of regulations that may hinder response and recovery, CDAA, and federal resources. • On 09/07/17, Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. issued an emergency proclamation for Madera, Mariposa and Tulare counties due to the effects of the Railroad, Pier, Mission and Peak fires, which have burned thousands of acres, threatened homes and critical infrastructure and caused the evacuation of residents. Click here to read full Proclamation

Evacuations • Mandatory: Cascadel Woods • Voluntary: Benedict Meadow

Shelters The American Red Cross (ARC) has established the following shelter: • Oakhurst Community Center, 39800 Fresno Flats Rd., Oakhurst • Midnight Count: 34 • Small animal shelter: Oakhurst Community Center, 39800 Fresno Flats Rd., Oakhurst • Large animal shelter: Coarsegold Rodeo Grounds, 44777 Rodeo Grounds Ln., Coarsegold

Law Enforcement The Madera County Sheriff’s Department has requested Law Enforcement Mutual Aid to the Region V Mutual Aid Coordinator, Fresno County Sheriff’s Office will continue on an as needed basis.

14 FIRE ACTIVITY Pier, Vegetation Fire, Tulare County Location: Highway 190, at Wishon Rd. 7 miles East of Springville Jurisdiction: State/Federal DPA, FRA, Type-1 IMT (Minton), Unified Command with Tulare County and CAL FIRE Per Cal OES Duty Officers and ICS-209 as of 09/08/17 at 0759 hours: • 24,949 acres, 35% contained • Moderate fire behavior with backing, flanking and smoldering

Activations • Tulare County EOC was activated at Level II from 0800-1700 hours. • Cal OES Inland Region EOC was activated at Level II from 0700-1700 hours.

Deployments • 1 Cal OES Law Enforcement Branch Assistant Chief assigned • 1 Cal OES Fire and Rescue Branch Assistant Chief assigned • 2 Cal OES Inland Region Emergency Services Coordinator (ESC) assigned

FMAG • On 08/29/17, a Fire Management Assistance Grant (FMAG) application was received. On 09/05/17, an update to the FMAG Request was received. • On 09/05/17, the FMAG was approved, declaration number FEMA-5205-FM-CA.

Proclamation • On 08/30/17 at 1126 hours, a Proclamation was received from Tulare County, requesting a Gubernatorial Proclamation, disaster funding assistance through the California Disaster Assistance Act (CDAA), a Fire Management Assistant Grant (FMAG), and waiver of regulations that hinder response and recovery efforts. • On 09/07/17, Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. issued an emergency proclamation for Madera, Mariposa and Tulare counties due to the effects of the Railroad, Pier, Mission and Peak fires, which have burned thousands of acres, threatened homes and critical infrastructure and caused the evacuation of residents. Click here to read full Proclamation

Evacuations • Mandatory: Pierpoint Springs, Wishon, Doyle Springs, Alpine, Sequoia Crest, Cedar Slope, Camp Nelson, Sequoia Crest, Mountain Aire (Rogers Camp), Upper Rio Vista, and Cow Mountain • Approximately Approximately 765 homes, 1400 people • Voluntary: Ponderosa, Cow Mountain, and Upper Rio Vista

Shelter • American Red Cross (ARC), Porterville College, 100 E. College Ave., Porterville. • Midnight Count: 0 15 FIRE ACTIVITY Pier, Vegetation Fire, Tulare County (Continued) Road Closure • State Route 190 is closed from Rd. in Springville to 5.2 miles east of Springville, Balch Park Rd. at Bear Creek Rd. • On 09/05/12 at 1200 hours, Balch Park Rd. at Bear Creek Rd. open to residents only (with proof of residency) • Sequoia National Forest closure includes trails, roads, and lands around the .

Critical Infrastructure • Per CUEA the grid is clear.

Tribal- Indian Tribe Per the Cal OES Tribal Liaison: • No tribal buildings are currently under threat. • The Cal OES Inland Region is in communication with the tribe’s Emergency Director and at this time, the tribe is reporting no unmet needs.

Health and Medical • The county is working with local Emergency Medical Services Authority (EMSA) to transport to Sierra View Hospital in Porterville due to smoke in the area. • Sierra Care at the Lake nursing facility has 10 patients. • The decision was made to shelter in place and not go to the hospital, however ambulance support is ready if needed. • Tulare County Public Health Branch has issued an Air Health Alert due to increased smoke.

16 FIRE ACTIVITY La Tuna, Los Angeles, Los Angeles County Location: La Tuna Canyon Rd., Sun Valley, Los Angeles Type 2 IMT Unified with LA City, LA County, Glendale, Burbank Per the Cal OES Duty Officers as of 09/08/17 at 0759 hours: • 7,194 acres, 95% contained • Minimal fire behavior with smoldering • Demobilization occurring

FMAG • On 09/01/17, a Fire Management Assistance Grant (FMAG) application was received. • The FMAG was approved on 09/02/17, declaration number FEMA-5201-FM-CA.

Proclamation • The City of Los Angeles issued a proclamation of a local emergency on 09/02/17 at 1500 hours. The City of Los Angeles is requesting the Governor proclaim a State of Emergency for Los Angeles County; the Governor use his executive powers to waive regulations that may hinder response and recovery efforts; and that the California Disaster Assistance Act (CDAA) financial assistance for recovery be made available as well expediting the access of State and Federal resources and disaster relief. • The County of Los Angeles issued a proclamation of a local emergency on 09/03/17 at 1712 hours. A Proclamation from Los Angeles County has been received requesting that the Governor of California, pursuant to the Emergency Services Act, issue a proclamation declaring an emergency in Los Angeles County; that the Governor waive regulations that may hinder response and recovery efforts; that recovery assistance be made available under the California Disaster Assistance Act; and that the State expedite access to State and Federal resources and any other appropriate federal disaster relief programs. • On 09/03/17, Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. issued an emergency proclamation for Los Angeles County due to the effects of the La Tuna Fire, which has burned thousands of acres, threatened homes and critical infrastructure, and caused the evacuation of residents. Click here to read full Proclamation • On 09/06/17, a Proclamation was received from the City of Burbank, Los Angeles County, due to the effects of the La Tuna Fire. The City of Burbank is requesting a Gubernatorial Proclamation, regulations that may hinder response and recovery efforts be waived, assistance be made available under CDAA, expedited access to State and Federal resources, and any other appropriate federal disaster relief programs.

Health and Medical • AQMD has deployed two air pollution officers to the incident. AQMD has placed air monitoring devices at the Sunland Recreation Center (8651 Foothill Blvd., Sunland).

17 FIRE ACTIVITY Palmer, Beaumont, Riverside County Location: Oak Valley Pkwy X Palmer Ave., west of Beaumont Jurisdiction: State DPA, SRA, Riverside Unit Type 3 CAL FIRE (Moore) Per the Cal OES Duty Officers as of 09/07/17 at 1852 hours: • 3,874 acres, 90% contained • Minimal fire behavior

Deployments • 1 Cal OES Fire Rescue Branch Assistant Chief assigned

FMAG • On 09/02/17, a Fire Management Assistance Grant (FMAG) application was received. • As of 09/05/17 this fire is no longer under FMAG consideration.

Slinkard, Vegetation Fire, Mono County Location: 8 Miles North of Walker, Ca near Topaz Lake Jurisdiction: Local / Federal DPA, LRA/FRA, Antelope Fire Protection District / Owens Valley District BLM Per Cal OES Duty Officers and ICP-209 as of 09/07/17 at 1741 hours: • 8,925 acres, 97% contained • Minimal fire behavior

Deployment • 1 Cal OES Fire and Rescue Branch Assistant Chief assigned

Resources Assigned • 2 Cal OES Type 1 Strike Teams • 2 Local Government Type 3 Strike Teams

FMAG • On 08/30/17, a Fire Management Assistance Grant (FMAG) application was received. • As of 09/05/17, the fire is no longer under FMAG Consideration.

Evacuation • Mandatory: Roberts Ranch Rd. north to the state line. • Estimated 20 homes, 35 people

18 MAJOR ROAD / HIGHWAY / BRIDGE CLOSURES

Major Road Closures Northern California Central California Southern California

No Lifeline Route Closures No Lifeline Route Closures No Lifeline Route Closures

Lifeline Routes • There are no lifeline route closures.

Non-Lifeline Routes: • There are many non-lifeline closures throughout the state. Please visit the Caltrans Road Conditions page for the most current information.

Wildfire Closures: • Trinity County: State Route 299 is closed 0.8 miles west of Helena to Junction City. • Estimated Time of Reopening: Unknown • Madera and Mariposa County: State Route 41 is closed from 8 miles north of Oakhurst to 2.9 miles north of the Madera/Mariposa County Line. • Estimated Time of Reopening: Unknown • Tulare County: State Route 190 is closed from Balch Park Rd. in Springville to 5.2 miles east of Springville. • Estimated Time of Reopening: Unknown

Emergency Center Activations: • There are no Emergency Center Activations at this time.

Interactive Travel Forecast Map Based on Weather Conditions Provided by National Weather Service (Prototype) http://www.wrh.noaa.gov/wrh/travel/?wfo=mtr

Click on the Caltrans Logo to check current highway conditions. You can also call 1-800-427-7623 for current highway conditions. 19 California 911 System

CA 911 Outages Northern California Central California Southern California

No 911 Outages No 911 Outages 911 Outage

Service Interruptions: • None Reported

Remote/Community Isolations: Community Isolation, Community of Coleville, Mono County On 09/07/17 at 1728 hours, the Cal OES 9-1-1 Branch notified the California State Warning Center (CSWC) of a Community Isolation in Coleville, Mono County, due to a fiber cable burned by wildfires. The isolation is affecting landline 9-1-1 services only. The Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) is operational. California Unified Emergency Association (CUEA) and the Cal OES 9-1-1 Branch have confirmed cellular 9-1-1 services are not affected and the population affected is approximately 308 customers. • Wildfires have burned through copper, telephone poles, and approximately 16,000 ft. of fiber in the Coleville area • The Cal OES Fire Duty Officer (FDO) and Law Duty Officer (LDO) have confirmed that Mono County and Coleville residents are safe and that the fire is moving away from Coleville into Nevada. • Per the Cal OES Southern Duty Officer (SDO), Mono County has made no request for state assistance at this time. • At 2148 hours, Cal OES 9-1-1 Branch advised that damage to the fiber, copper and poles in Coleville is more severe than anticipated. • Technicians will continue to work through the weekend with an estimated restoral timeframe of Monday, 09/11/17. • If the status of either landline or cellular service should change, Cal OES 9-1-1 Branch will be notified immediately. • The CSWC made notifications per SOP. • Cal OES Duty Officers have been advised and will continue to monitor.

20 CDPH ZIKA VIRUS UPDATE EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The Medical and Health Coordination Center (MHCC) continues to be activated in response to Zika virus disease. The California Department of Public Health (CDPH) and Emergency Medical Services Authority (EMSA) are currently the only Emergency Function 08 (EF 08) partners at the state level reporting on this activation.

The MHCC is coordinating with EF 08 partners, healthcare facilities and local health departments (LHDs) to ensure responses to inquiries are timely and accurate.

CDPH and EMSA Duty Officer Programs are monitoring Zika virus disease after hours and communicating with the Regional Disaster Medical and Health Coordination (RDMHC) and the Medical Health Operational Area Coordination (MHOAC) Programs throughout California.

As of Friday, 09/01/17, there have been 588 travel-associated Zika virus infections in California. No new cases have been reported since the last situation report dated 08/24/17. CDPH centers and programs continue to monitor Zika virus disease and provide information to the MHCC related to their specific activities on a weekly basis.

Please see attached for full report

21 WEATHER OF CONCERN Weather of Concern • A stagnant, hot air mass and smoke from area wildfires is creating unhealthy air quality throughout the Central California interior. An Air Quality Alert is in effect for the San Joaquin Valley and the foothills of the Sierra.

Active Weather Warnings, Watches and Advisories by County: • https://alerts-v2.weather.gov/counties/CA

22 WEATHER SYNOPSIS BY REGION NORTHERN CALIFORNIA A low will form just off the California coast later today and drift south over the weekend. Higher pressure will be able to move into Northern California by the end of the weekend and early next week for a warming and drying trend. The low will be on the move north again Tuesday, and by the middle of next week, cooler, moister conditions will return to the region. Isolated daily afternoon and evening mountain showers or thunderstorms are possible each day, although they seem unlikely Sunday except perhaps in the Tahoe area. Shower and thunderstorm activity are expected to increase again early next week and continue the rest of the week. Temperatures will cool again to near seasonal normals next week, which for the warmest inland areas will be in the lower 90s. Even daytime relative humidity (RH) will remain moderately high for the most part with better overnight recoveries. The chance of large fires developing will be on the decrease over the next 7 days, but there will still be plenty of potential for new fire starts or holdovers to develop. Some periods of light offshore winds will become possible in a few days as the high pressure system moves into place.

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA An area of low pressure currently off the Central California Coast will drop south to off the Southern California Coast by Sunday and then shift north and inland over Central California by Wednesday. This area of low pressure will bring scattered showers and thunderstorms to the mountains and deserts (including the Central Coast mountains) through Saturday. Widespread showers and thunderstorms will affect the entire region Sunday as the low pushes south. The shower and thunderstorm threat will most likely end across most of Southern California by Monday afternoon, but widespread shower and thunderstorm activity will continue across Central California through Tuesday. Isolated showers and thunderstorms will be limited to the Sierra and Northern Deserts Wednesday as the low pressure area pushes inland. Most locations will receive between a tenth inch and a half inch of rainfall with this low, but some mountain locations will receive up to an inch of rainfall. Maximum temperatures will be near normal through early next week, with mid 70s to mid 80s across the mountains and mid 80s to mid 90s in the valleys. Minimum humidity will be above 20% across the region through early next week. The area of low pressure that moves inland over Central California Wednesday will be replaced by another low pressure area late next week. This will increase the number of showers and thunderstorms across the region. Temperatures will be a little below normal Wednesday through the end of next week. Winds will be light through the end of next week, except there will be strong and erratic winds in and near any thunderstorms that develop.

23 WEATHER MAP

24 Cal OES LAW ENFORCEMENT MISSIONS Cal OES Law Missions • 2017-LAW-38666, 09/08/17, 1741 hours: The Air Force Rescue Coordination Center (AFRCC) notified the Cal OES Law Duty Officer (LDO) of an ALNOT with correlating satellite messages just outside of Bolinas. AFRCC was able to obtain a location in Marin County. Marin County is currently conducting a ground search for the plane with mutual aid assistance from San Mateo and Napa Counties. CHP and Civil Air Patrol (CAP) are assisting with air support and the AFRCC is conducting a Forensic RADAR data search and Forensic Cell Phone data search from the pilot’s phone to assist in the search. Mission Ongoing.

25 Cal OES MISSION TASKING Cal OES Missions • 2017-SOC-38314: One (1) California Department of Parks and Recreation Associate State Archeologist to support the Joint Field Office (JFO) from 08/28/17 to 09/29/17. In coordination with a Cal OES Senior Environmental Planner, the Associate State Archeologist will review Disaster Damage Descriptions for potential California Historical Resources Information System (CHRIS) requests and request CHRIS reports when necessary. • 2017-Cal OES-35819: Twelve Caltrans engineers requested to conduct damage and site inspections throughout the state for impacts related to 2017 February Winter Storms. The lead engineer will report to the Joint Field Office to coordinate the response. • 2017-Cal OES-38400: One (1) Air Quality E-BAM modem for Klamath (Del Norte OA) • 2017-Cal OES-38404: One (1) Air Quality Monitor/E-BAM modem for Gasquet (Del Norte OA) • 2017-Coastal-37716: One (1) Air Monitor for Humboldt County • 2017-Inland-37583: DTSC Hazardous Waste Task Force (On Scene) • 2017-Inland-37584: CalRecycle Debris Management Task Force (On Scene) • 2017-Inland-37776: Two (2) Air Monitors for Mariposa County (On Scene) • 2017-Inland-38039: Five California Air Resources Board (CARB) air monitors have been placed in Siskiyou County to monitor smoke from numerous wildfires in Siskiyou County as well as smoke drifting into Siskiyou County from wildfires in Modoc, Trinity, Del Norte and Humboldt counties. (On Scene)

Cal OES EMAC Missions • 2017-FIRE-38430: 2 Cal OES Type 1 Swift Water Rescue Teams to support Texas (Demobilizing, returning to CA) • 2017-FIRE-38532: California Urban Search and Rescue (US&R) Red IST - 1 Personnel from California to Puerto Rico, and 5 Personnel to Virginia, 1 personnel from California to Tennessee, 2 personnel from California to Georgia • 2017-Cal OES-38629: Two (2) A-Team Members to assist current EMAC staff. One (1) member from Emergency Medical Services Authority (EMSA) and one from California National Guard (CNG) deployed 09/07/17.

26 Mission: We protect lives and property, build capabilities, and support our communities for a resilient California.

We achieve our mission by serving the public through effective collaboration in preparing for, protecting against, responding to, recovering from, and mitigating the impacts of all hazards and threats.

27