Firefighters contain Sacramento grass fire
(FOX40.COM) — The Sacramento Metropolitan Fire Department responded to a one to two-acre grass fire in Sacramento on Wednesday afternoon.
According to Metro Fire, the grass fire started on the block of 6400 Tangerine Avenue at around 5:06 p.m. When crews arrived at the scene, they initiated a fire attack.
From brunch to BBQ to hiking: Celebrate Father's Day in Sacramento
No structures that were around the grass fire have been threatened, Metro Fire said.
At around 5:30 p.m., Metro Fire stated that the fire was contained, and crews were cleaning up the area.
No injuries have been reported at this time, and the cause of the fire is unknown.
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Dominion Post
4 days ago
- Dominion Post
Officials begin assessing flood damage in Marion
FAIRMONT — Damage assessments are now officially underway in Fairmont and Marion County, a week after flash floods swamped basements, submerged roadways and caused the partial collapse of an apartment building. Local emergency response officials spent Monday touring flood-ravaged areas with representatives from the Federal Emergency Management Agency and West Virginia National Guard. The guard's soldiers were among the first responders on the scene – which Adjutant Gen. Jim Seward said he appreciates, both for the response time and the idea of neighbors helping neighbors. 'We have troops and units who can respond from their homes,' the general said last week in Fairmont during an appearance with Gov. Patrick Morrisey. 'I thank the first responders that are here in the community,' the general said, 'because that's where the work happens.' Close to 170 Army and Air Force guard members from engineering and military police companies have been deployed to both Marion and Ohio counties, Seward said. The sudden storm on Father's Day dropped three inches of rain on Fairmont and Marion County in 30 minutes – and it was worse the evening before in Ohio County, where eight people died in the deluge there. In outlying Marion County as of Friday, Sycamore Hollow Road near Worthington remained the only road closed from the flooding, according to reports from the Division of Highways. Crews from the West Virginia Conservation Agency have also gone to work on the streams and creeks that jumped their banks while the storm raged. Meanwhile, the region this week is battening down for weather of a decidedly different kind. Temperatures were expected to crest at a near-record high of 96 Tuesday. Look for another high of 92 on Wednesday, the forecaster said. After that, the mercury will make a slight dip into the 80s for the rest of the week, with the threat of thunderstorms ever-present.


Dominion Post
22-06-2025
- Dominion Post
'The fields were a pond.' Flood waters ravage ballfields in Westover
MORGANTOWN — The waters have now receded from Westover City Park. What was left behind resembles very little of what once was, as continual rain storms led to flooding in the park the likes of which had never been witnessed before. 'A few years ago, we had some rains that destroyed some of the infields,' said Johnny Seggie, president of the WesMon Youth Baseball leagues. 'It was taken care of in a couple of days. This? I've never seen anything like this, ever.' The constant rain had taken the city pond nearly five acres in size and located at the top of the hill in the park to its crest during Father's Day weekend. What were once innocent and harmless creeks flowing throughout the area were now small rivers, Seggie said. The rain just wouldn't let up and that water had to go somewhere. That somewhere was down the hill like a waterfall and into the baseball fields, creating a site never witnessed in the area before. Seggie would know. He grew up as a kid playing on the five fields within the park. He remembers riding his bike down there a time, or two, before getting chased off. 'Just dumb kid stuff,' he said. He coached his two sons on those fields and also served as vice president before taking over as president of the league two years ago. Amber Thorne is the WesMon board's treasurer, the longest active member on the board. She first heard of the flooding on Father's Day. 'I remember thinking it couldn't be that bad,' she said. 'Then my husband and I drove over there and I couldn't believe what I was seeing. 'The fields were a pond.' 'I don't think there was anything that could have stopped it.' Johnny Seggie, WesMon youth baseball president Tops of bleachers were floating in areas where tops of bleachers just aren't supposed to be. On one field, the waters nearly reached high enough to submerge the dugouts on the field. 'Those dugouts are eight feet tall,' Seggie said. Mud and water were running off the hillside as if this was a water park rather than a baseball park. 'Water was coming down off the hill, you just could never imagine something like this happening,' Thorne said. 'Not like this.' A large sinkhole was left next to a playground after the flood waters receded. (Ron Rittenhouse/The Dominion Post) The good news, if there is such a thing in a situation like this, is the regular seasons in most of the leagues had already come to a close prior to the flooding. The league set a record this spring with a total of 533 kids participating in leagues that begin at the preschool age up to 14-years old. 'The league affected the most was our T-Ball league,' Seggie said. 'We had to cancel some games earlier because of rain, so we were hoping to get some more of those games in.' The annual All-Star weekend at the park has been put on hold. Teams that advanced to sectional and district qualifiers, WesMon officials are now scrambling to find fields in the area to play those games that could eventually lead a local team to the state championship and a shot at playing in the Southeast Regional, in Warner Robins, Ga. The winner of the Southeast Regional advances to the Little League World Series in Williamsport, Pa. To make a donation to WesMon Youth Baseball, send a Venmo to @WesMon-League or cash and checks can be dropped off at McCulla Funeral Home in Westover. The park is now closed until Westover city officials can assess the damage and begin structural repairs. As far as the upkeep of the playgrounds, fields, bleachers and dugouts, that falls on the WesMon organization. The majority of the fields, Seggie said, will have to be dug up and constructed again from scratch, due to the amount of mud currently on the fields. 'We'll have to put brand new field mix on most of the fields,' Seggie said. 'It's $700 a ton for the field mix. We used about 10 tons of it this year and last year. We'll need more now.' That's where donations to the league can help the most. Much like the waters from the rains, donations have been flooding in so far. 'In just the three days after the flood, word has gotten out and really a staggering amount has come in,' Seggie said. 'We've had so many people reach out to us who wanted to help, but you can only do so much with rakes and shovels. 'We will get through this. It's going to take a ton of work, but I think we can get everything ready for next season.'


San Francisco Chronicle
16-06-2025
- San Francisco Chronicle
Fast-moving brush fire on Hawaii's Maui island evacuates about 50 people. No structures have burned
HONOLULU (AP) — A fast-moving Hawaii brush fire fueled by fierce winds forced the evacuation of about 50 Maui residents on the opposite side of the same island where a devastating blaze killed over 100 people two years ago. The fire started Sunday in a sparsely populated area with land set aside for Native Hawaiians. Fire size now estimated at 330 acres The Kahikinui was initially estimated at 500 acres (202 hectares), but aerial surveys overnight put the estimate at about 330 acres (134 hectares), Maui's fire department said. The fire is 80% contained. The remote, challenging terrain made it difficult to estimate the fire's size, the department said in a statement. A police drone showed hot spots, but none flared overnight. No injuries or structural damage was reported. Weather conditions were mostly sunny Monday with a high of 67 degrees Fahrenheit (19 degrees Celsius) and east winds of about 15 mph (24 kph), gusting up to about 25 mph (40 kph). Authorities conducted door-to-door evacuations and part of a highway remains closed. Flashbacks to an earlier fire Warren Aganos was on his family's Hawaiian Homelands lot preparing to go on a Father's Day hunt when a neighbor called him around 9 a.m. telling him a fire had broken out. 'I hung up and raced out, I didn't let her finish,' said Aganos, who has been slowly rebuilding the three structures his family lost in a 2016 brush fire that burned over 5,000 acres (2,000 hectares) in the same area. 'I was thinking about the last one,' he said. 'It was super emotional.' Aganos said he rushed in his truck to make sure first responders knew where the community's water storage tanks were before navigating Kahikinui's dirt roads down to the highway where he could see smoke billowing over the hillside. The community lacks electrical and water infrastructure, and some of the roads are only navigable by four-wheel drive. What is the region like? Kahikinui is less populated and developed than Lahaina, which was the Hawaiian Kingdom's capital in the 1800s and is now a popular tourist destination. Kahikinui was used for cattle ranching for many years and is near a state forest reserve. The fire department sent engines, tankers and a helicopter to battle the blaze. Three bulldozers cut firebreaks in the lower part of the community, Desiree Graham, co-chair of Kahikinui's firewise committee, said. The area has 104 Hawaiian homeland lots of 10 to 20 acres (4 to 8 hectares) each. About 40 lots have homes, including 15 with full-time residents. Some lots have more than one home, Graham said. A state agency issues lot leases under a program Congress created in 1920 to help Native Hawaiians become economically self-sufficient. Those with at least 50% Hawaiian blood quantum can apply for a 99-year lease for $1 a year. Fire devastated Lahaina nearly two years ago Maui is still recovering from the massive inferno that enveloped Lahaina in August 2023. That fire was the deadliest in the U.S. in more than a century. It destroyed thousands of properties and caused an estimated $5.5 billion in damage. University of Hawaii researchers say unemployment and poverty rose after the blaze. The Kahikinui fire may seem small compared to continental U.S. fires, but it's significant for an island of 735 square miles (1,903 square kilometers). Other Western fires Crews also are battling wildfires in the Pacific Northwest, around the Great Basin, in California and the Rockies. National Weather Service forecasters and federal land managers have warned in recent weeks that fire danger is escalating in many places amid rising daytime temperatures and single-digit humidity levels. The risks won't start to wane — at least in the southwestern U.S. — until the monsoon starts to kick in, bringing much-needed rain. In southern New Mexico, a wildfire ballooned to nearly 30 square miles (77 square kilometers) over the weekend in the Gila National Forest. The flames forced the evacuations of homes that dot the mountains north of Silver City, blocked access to the Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument and prompted air quality warnings as smoke drifted north. Campgrounds and access points to the Continental Divide National Scenic Trail also were closed. In Oregon, several dozen homes in Wasco County were destroyed by a fire that started last Wednesday. Some evacuations remained, but fire managers said Monday that the threat to structures had diminished. So far this year, the nation has seen double the number of fires as last year but the acreage is less, according to the National Interagency Fire Center. More than 2,700 wildland firefighters and support personnel were assigned to 15 large wildfires across the country. —- ___