Wildfires

Snow Fire Evacuations Lifted As Blaze Burns More Than 6,000 Acres

About 450 homes are threatened by the fire, sparked by a truck fire that spread to nearby vegetation.

Frederic J. BROWN / AFP

A brush fire sparked by a vehicle fire northwest of Palm Springs had burned 6,013 acres and was threatening 450 homes Saturday, officials said.

The “Snow Fire” was reported at about 2:40 p.m. Thursday in the 15000 block of Snow Creek Road, according to the Riverside County Fire Department. It was 8% contained as of Saturday morning.

Flames threatened about 450 homes in the Snow Creek and Windy Point communities, Cal Fire Capt. Fernando Herrera told City News Service. Herrera said wind speeds between 20 and 30 mph were threatening to push the flames northeast toward the Windy Point community.

No injuries or structure losses have been reported so far.

Evacuation orders for the Snow Creek area, north of Cottonwood Road, southeast of Snowcreek Road and west of Falls Creek were lifted Saturday night, Cal Fire reported.

Non-mandatory evacuation warnings were issued for homes south of Overture Drive, north of Overture Drive, east of Clearwater Way and west of Highway 111.

A temporary evacuation point was established at the James A. Venable Community Center at 50390 Carmen Ave. in Cabazon, where American Red Cross personnel were on hand providing snacks and water amid COVID-19 safety protocols, and arranging lodging at nearby hotels.

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The coronavirus pandemic has forced the American Red Cross to forego setting up congregate shelters in recent months, opting instead to arrange for hotel stays for evacuees with nowhere to go.

The CHP reported that the blaze began after a work truck caught fire north of Snow Creek on Thursday afternoon, which spread to nearby vegetation. 

Flames have since spread into the San Bernardino National Forest and the Santa Rosa and San Jacinto Mountains National Monument, prompting a multi-agency response.

A total of 215 firefighters were assigned to the firefight from several agencies, including the U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management. They were being assisted by four Cal Fire aircraft and two water-dropping helicopters.

Copyright CNS - City News Service
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