Fire Crews Revise Containment Estimate

Thursday, Jan 7, 2010  |  Updated 2:47 PM PDT
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Fire Crews Revise Containment Estimate

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GLENDALE, CA - SEPTEMBER 01: A firefighting helicopter flies by a smoke shrouded sun as it prepares to drop water on hot spots of the Station Fire September 1, 2009 in Glendale, California. Several wildfires have scorched more than 120,000 acres, destroyed over 70 structures and has forced thousands of evacuations as nearly 10,000 homes are being threatened. Two firefighters were also killed on Sunday trying to save an inmate fire-crew camp on Mount Gleason.. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

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Fire officials Sunday revised their estimated containment date for the largest wildfire in Los Angeles history, pushing it back four days to next Friday.

A fire spokesman said the large number of hot spots identified by twice-daily helicopter flights with infrared cameras around the 120-mile containment line prompted the change.

"We don't want to get ahead of ourselves," said Glendale Fire Department Capt. Carlos Guerrero.

Fire containment lines were still estimated to encircle about 84 percent of the blaze's perimeter today, and Guerrero said crews were being directed to specific smoldering areas inside the fire lines based on the aerial photographs highlighting areas of intense heat.

California Highway Patrol officers reported seeing small plumes of new smoke Sunday near where the fire started, along Angeles Crest Highway north of La Canada Flintridge.

Officials had earlier hoped to declare 100 percent containment on the three-week-old blaze as early as Tuesday.

Crews have been reduced by nearly half over the weekend, with about 1,519 firefighters remaining on the line.

Since the arson fire broke out near a Forest Service ranger station Aug. 26, it has scorched 160,557 acres, making it the largest fire in Los Angeles County history and tenth-largest fire in California since 1933.

The fire also claimed the lives of two firefighters whose truck plunged off a mountain road. A public memorial was held at Dodger Stadium Saturday for the two victims.  Vice President Joe Biden and Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger joined thousands of firefighters in honoring Capt. Tedmund ``Ted'' Hall, 47, of San Bernardino County, and firefighter Specialist Arnaldo ``Arnie'' Quinones, 35, of Palmdale.

Posted Sep 13, 2009
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