18,100-acre Holy fire burns close to Lake Elsinore homes; blaze moves out of Orange County
Firefighters worked through the night and into Friday morning, wrestling with the fast-charging Holy fire – which swelled to an estimated 18,137 charred acres overnight, up from 10,236 acres the night before.
Fire personnel continued to push back on the flames that tried to reach homes in the Lake Elsinore area.
The glow of the orange flames could be seen Friday morning in the hills above Riverside County neighborhoods.
“We continue to actively engage, but cannot get ahead of the fire,” Cleveland National Forest officials tweeted out just before 7 a.m. Friday.
The fight goes on against the #HolyFire. A helicopter with its blinking red light can be seen approaching the flames. @KNX1070 pic.twitter.com/lqOhIr3VDk
— Jon Baird (@KNXBaird) August 10, 2018
Sycamore creek is doing good this am. Here is a view of the mountains from Deleo Regional Sport lbs Park. I hope the other communities are as lucky as we were. #holyfire #rockquarry #nothinggettingpastit #holyjim #HolySpirit @OrangeCountyEOC @OCFA_PIO @OCFireWatch @ABC7 pic.twitter.com/kXpdLn9pul
— Nick Marotta (@calpd) August 10, 2018
Firefighters planned to focus on the McVickers neighborhood, where the fire was especially aggressive Thursday.
MORE: This map shows where the Holy fire is burning, forcing evacuations and closures
Also Thursday, Gov. Brown declared a state of emergency in Riverside and Orange counties, a proclamation that will allow them to receive disaster assistance from the state. The order also waives fees for replacing vehicle records such as licenses and registrations destroyed by fire, and it eliminates the one-week waiting period for applying for unemployment benefits for those who have lost their job because of the fire.
The blaze, which officials say was ignited Monday by an arsonist in Holy Jim, remains at 5 percent containment. Containment is the percentage of the fire’s perimeter that firefighters have determined the blaze will no long spread beyond.
Cleveland National Forest officials say the Holy fire has left Orange County.
We have been receiving inquiries about the fire burning back towards #OrangeCounty. The fire is burning in Cold Water Canyon around Santiago Peak, & is not burning in OC. FFs are continuing firefighting effort in the area. #HolyFire @socalteam1
— Cleveland NF (@ClevelandNF) August 10, 2018
The Holy fire has burned at least 12 structures, most if not all in the forested communities of Holy Jim and Trabuco canyons in Orange County.
But there were reports some homes in the Lake Elsinore area may have been damaged on Thursday.
Thunderstorms outside of the Holy fire area created winds that whipped up the flames on Thursday, according to fire officials.
Authorities have issued mandatory evacuation orders for the Lake Elsinore-area communities of:
- McVickers Canyon
- Rice Canyon
- Horsethief Canyon
- Glen Eden
- El Cariso Village
- Sycamore Creek
- Rancho Capistrano
- The Ortega Highway corridor from the Grand Avenue in Riverside County to Nichols Institute in Orange County
All of the schools in the Lake Elsinore Unified School District, the Perris Elementary School District, the Perris Union High School District, the Menifee Union School District, and the Romoland School District, as well as Santa Rosa Academy were closed Thursday.
The Menifee district said its schools would be closed Friday as well. All Menifee elementary school back-to-school nights have been rescheduled to Aug. 23.