Some evacuation orders reduced as Highland fire grows in Riverside County
Good morning. It’s Thursday, Nov. 2. Here’s what you need to know to start your day.
- The Highland fire grows in Riverside County
- Most California voters say yes to local renewable energy projects
- The L.A. Times 2023 holiday gift guide is here!
- And here’s today’s e-newspaper
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Wildfire grows in Riverside County
Firefighters in Riverside County are continuing to battle a wildland blaze that led to evacuations and destroyed at least three homes in the Aguanga area.
As of Wednesday evening, the Highland fire had burned through 2,487 acres and was 15% contained, according to fire officials.
The blaze was reported at about 12:45 p.m. Monday in the area of Highlands Road and Aguanga Ranchos Road and is burning through dry brush and grass in steep terrain near the San Diego County line.
It has burned at least 15 structures and destroyed several, some of them homes. More than 1,100 firefighters responded and one person has been injured. The cause of the fire is under investigation.
Officials ordered about 4,000 residents in and around Aguanga to evacuate, though some orders were downgraded to evacuation warnings Wednesday afternoon.
A smoke advisory was in effect through Thursday morning for portions of Riverside and Orange counties.
Philip Gonsalves, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service, told The Times that dry weather conditions in the region are “favorable for fire growth.” And recent plant growth aided by rainfall from summer’s Tropical Storm Hilary could provide prime fuel for the blaze.
This week’s fire is a reminder that wildfires remain a year-round reality in the Golden State. California experienced milder fire seasons in 2022 and thus far in 2023 when compared with previous years, but that recent downtick is a small part of an upward trend as wildfires have grown more intense over the last few decades, according to researchers.
Data from CalFire show that this year through Oct. 30, 6,375 wildland fires have been sparked in the state, burning a collective 315,599 acres. That’s roughly 200 fewer fires than occurred in the same time period last year, but more acres have burned this year compared with 2022. The five-year average for acres burned in that same year-to-date time period is more than 1.5 million.
In August, I spoke with Glen MacDonald, a geology professor at UCLA and a co-investigator of the Department of the Interior’s Southwest Climate Adaptation Science Center, who explained that California’s fire season is steadily creeping into fall and winter in a way it has not historically. How these last few months of 2023 turn out depends on how soon this new water year gets watery.
“If you look at some of your really big fires, they’re late in the fall and they can burn right into the next year,” MacDonald told me. “We’ve got plenty of time to dry these fuels further if we don’t get precipitation in the fall.”
If you haven’t seen it, The Times maintains a map tracking the progress of wildfires currently burning in California. You can explore it here.
Today’s top stories
Climate and environment
- Climate change is turning swaths of California’s mountains into ‘zombie forests.’
- Poll: Most California voters say yes in their backyards for renewable energy projects.
- Large sections of the Angeles Crest Highway that were closed by winter storm damage reopen.
- Two giant sequoias scorched in a controlled burn last year are now expected to survive.
- A river runs through Bakersfield? A judge rules the Kern River must be allowed to flow.
- A smoke warning goes out to residents in two counties as the Highland fire burns 2,500 acres.
Business
- Don’t pre-tip on delivery? Don’t expect your food quickly, DoorDash warns.
- Disney says it expects to pay $8.6 billion for Comcast’s Hulu stake.
- Striking actors hold a massive rally in Los Angeles as negotiations progress closer to a deal.
More big stories
- Why the fall of Kevin McCarthy leaves California Republicans in a tough spot.
- The Supreme Court sounds ready to rule that a Californian can’t trademark T-shirts with Trump’s name.
- Inside the investigation to determine how Matthew Perry died.
- Californians who need help paying for ’round-the-clock home care are stuck on a state waitlist.
- This deal would remove the homeless hotel housing measure from L.A.’s March ballot.
- Shasta County ditched its Dominion voting machines. Now residents are braced for turmoil on Nov. 7.
- CBS sets Stephen Colbert-backed ‘After Midnight’ to fill the ‘Late Late Show’ slot.
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Commentary and opinions
- Dylan Hernández: The Dodgers must sign Shohei Ohtani, for more than just his talent.
- Carla Hall: I was a NOVID — until I wasn’t.
- LZ Granderson: Colin Kaepernick’s exile from the NFL is dumber than ever.
- Mark Z. Barabak: How suburbanites, Latinos and the ghost of John McCain turned Arizona into a presidential battleground.
- Opinion: How a Mississippi vote next week could foretell Democrats’ 2024 fate.
- George Skelton: A lot of Californians loathe both the Democratic and Republican parties.
Today’s great reads
The unmasking of the narcissistic, conspiracy-spreading baby-boomer rock star. Eric Clapton supports Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Van Morrison? Anti-vaxxer. Roger Waters? Accused of antisemitism. Are boomers OK?
Other great reads
- Making your sports venue better? Dodgers’ architect has a plan.
- How does nature inspire us? These Latino poets dig deep in their roots.
- The Black women’s group that helped launch Toni Morrison, Alice Walker and a new vanguard.
- What’s the fastest way to kill your lawn? Science says to forget the cardboard.
How can we make this newsletter more useful? Send comments to [email protected].
For your downtime
Going out
- 🎁 The L.A. Times 2023 holiday gift guide is filled with delightful suggestions for all kinds of nest-feathering, dresser-filling, bookshelf-filling, pantry-stocking and stocking-stuffing that’ll hit home.
- 🎄Mariah Carey, a.k.a. the Queen of Christmas, is done defrosting and ready for a holiday tour.
- 🎭 Abortion bans make 2023 America feel even more like 19th century Germany in ‘Spring Awakening’ — now on stage at the Union Center of the Arts.
Staying in
- 📚18 best nonfiction books for fans of Madonna, memoirs or cultural histories.
- 🎃 Halloween is over, but don’t trash your jack-o’-lantern — compost it. Here’s how.
- 📕 Paul Auster’s new novel lacks his usual postmodern fireworks. Thank God for that.
- 🥘 Can cauliflower be the star of your meal? Of course — here’s a recipe for whole roasted cauliflower with spicy tahini sauce.
- ✏️ Get our free daily crossword puzzle, sudoku, word search and arcade games.
And finally ... from our archives
On this day 40 years ago, President Ronald Reagan signed a bill designating the third Monday in January a national holiday in memory of Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. Earlier this year, Times essayist Jamil Smith wrote about the fierce opposition to the idea of an MLK Day from the man who eventually made it official, and why the holiday should make you uncomfortable.
Have a great day, from the Essential California team
Ryan Fonseca, reporter
Elvia Limón, multiplatform editor
Kevinisha Walker, multiplatform editor
Laura Blasey, assistant editor
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