Tubbs Fire

The Tubbs Fire was a wildfire in Northern California during October 2017. At the time, the Tubbs Fire was the most destructive wildfire in California history,[7][4] burning parts of Napa, Sonoma, and Lake counties, inflicting its greatest losses in the city of Santa Rosa. Its destructiveness was surpassed only a year later by the Camp Fire of 2018.[8] The Tubbs Fire was one of more than a dozen large fires that broke out in early October 2017, which were simultaneously burning in eight Northern California counties, in what was called the "Northern California firestorm."[9] By the time of its containment on October 31, the fire was estimated to have burned 36,810 acres (149 km2);[10][11] at least 22 people were believed to have been killed in Sonoma County by the fire.[12]

Tubbs Fire
Map of the burn area of the Tubbs Fire (top) and two other nearby fires
LocationSonoma County, California, Napa County, California, U.S.
Coordinates38.60895°N 122.62879°W / 38.60895; -122.62879
Statistics[1]
Cost~$1.3 billion (2017 USD)[2][3]
Date(s)October 8, 2017 (2017-10-08) – October 31, 2017 (2017-10-31)
Burned area36,807 acres (149 km2)[4]
CauseFailure of private electrical system [5]
Buildings destroyed5,643 structures[4][6]
Deaths22[4]
Non-fatal injuries1
Location of Tubbs Fire

The fire started near Tubbs Lane in the rural northern part of Calistoga, in Napa County. It destroyed more than 5,643 structures,[4][6][13] half of which were homes in Santa Rosa.[14] Santa Rosa's economic loss from the Tubbs Fire was estimated at $1.2 billion (2017 USD), with five percent of the city's housing stock destroyed.[2] The Tubbs Fire also incurred an additional $100 million in fire suppression costs.[3]

After an investigation lasting over a year, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (Cal Fire) determined that the Tubbs Fire was "caused by a private electrical system adjacent to a residential structure" and that there had been no violations of the state's Public Resources Code.[15]

Timeline

Tubbs Fire, October 10, 2017, MODIS Terra 721 satellite image,
Tubbs Fire, October 9, 2017, MODIS Terra visible satellite image
Tubbs Fire, October 10, 2017, MODIS Terra visible satellite image

October 8

The Tubbs Fire started near Tubbs Lane in Calistoga,[16] around 9:43 p.m. on Sunday, October 8.[17] As it and other North Bay fires began to spread, Sonoma County emergency dispatchers sent fire crews to at least 10 reports of downed power lines and exploding transformers. In northern Santa Rosa, the peak wind gusts at 9:29 p.m. hit 30 mph; an hour later, they were 41 mph.[18]

Pushed by strong winds from the northeast, the front of the fire moved more than twelve miles in its first three hours.[17] The Mark West Springs area, north of Santa Rosa in unincorporated Sonoma County, was directly in the path of the fire. Notably, over a thousand animals at the renowned Safari West Wildlife Preserve remained unharmed, saved by owner Peter Lang, who, at age of 76, single-handedly fought back the flames for more than 10 hours, using only garden hoses.[19][20]

Sonoma County officials could have sent out an emergency alert to every cellphone in the region on Sunday night as the fire grew, but chose not to, saying such a widespread alarm would have hampered emergency efforts. Instead, location based SMS and email alerts were broadcast – the first of these text messages going out at 10:51 pm, using a system called SoCo Alerts to notify people via cellphone; both are limited to those who sign up for these services. Officials also used a reverse 911 system that called landlines in certain areas.[21] At 11:58 pm, firefighters called for an evacuation order encompassing the area between the cities of Calistoga and Santa Rosa.[22]

October 9

The Puerto Vallarta restaurant burns on October 9, 2017
Smoldering remains of the Journey's End Mobile Home Park on October 9, 2017
Remains of a house on Cross Creek Road in Fountaingrove on November 1, 2017
Staircase leading to the west wing buildings of the Hilton Sonoma Wine Country Hotel on November 17, 2017
Overlook view of the damage to the Fountaingrove Inn (foreground) and Journey's End
The historic Fountaingrove Round Barn before and after the fire

By 1 a.m. on Monday, the fire, spreading quickly to the south and west, had reached the Santa Rosa city limits.[17] The advancing flames entered the city from the north,[23] moving into the Fountaingrove area, then moving down ravines between Mark West Springs Road and Fountaingrove Parkway.[24] At about 1:30 am, Sonoma County officials began to evacuate neighborhoods in and around Santa Rosa.[24] In all, tens of thousands of people were evacuated with very little notice.[25]

By about 2 am, the fire, carried by near hurricane-level winds,[24] had spread further to the west, crossing Highway 101.[16] By 4:30 am, the winds had reached their peak speed of more than 60 miles per hour.[17]

The fire devastated the Coffey Park neighborhood,[26][27] where an estimated 1,300 structures, mostly detached homes, were leveled.[28] Meanwhile, east of the highway, the Fountaingrove Inn, the historic Fountaingrove Round Barn nearby, and a large Hilton hotel were destroyed;[29][30] 116 of the 160 units at the Journey's End Mobile Home Park burned to the ground, while the remainder of the park was later red-tagged due to heavy damage.[31] Other damage along several streets bordering Highway 101 included a Kmart store and numerous restaurants that burned to the ground.[32][33]

By noon on Monday, two medical centers in Santa Rosa, Kaiser Permanente and Sutter Health, had been evacuated.[34] Some Kaiser employees reportedly used their personal vehicles to evacuate some of the 130 patients at that hospital.[35]

The destruction on Monday also included the complete loss of a senior living complex, Oakmont of Villa Capri; Hidden Valley Satellite, a primary school; and the Santa Rosa portion of Paradise Ridge Winery.[33] The Cardinal Newman High School campus was badly damaged, as was one end of the Luther Burbank Center for the Performing Arts.[33] Redwood Adventist Academy was also destroyed in the fire.[36] Another large concentration of burned homes was in the Larkfield-Wikiup area, about a mile north of the city, where about 500 buildings were destroyed.[13]

Of the 2,900 homes destroyed in Santa Rosa, over 200 of them belonged to doctors associated with the area's hospitals, including Kaiser Permanente, Sutter Hospital's Santa Rosa Center, and Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital.[37] Additionally, the fire destroyed Santa Rosa Community Health's Vista Campus, the largest in its system, which served 24,000 people annually.[38]

Pacific Gas and Electric Company cut off natural gas to 31,000 customers in the Santa Rosa and Windsor areas as a precaution.[39]

October 10

Wind direction turned clockwise from northeasterly to southerly (compare MODIS satellite images). At a town hall meeting on the evening of October 10 in Santa Rosa, Cal Fire representatives reported that there could be as many as 3,000 structures lost to the Tubbs and Atlas fires.[40][41]

October 11

On Wednesday, October 11, the entire town of Calistoga was evacuated;[42] about 2,000 people were asked to leave.[43] The escape for some was along roads walled by flames.[44] The Lake County Sheriff's Office issued an advisory evacuation notice for residents in the Middletown area, to the north of Calistoga.[45]

One active part of the fire was east of the town of Windsor, with the fire burning from Shiloh ridge to Chalk Hill Road and Knights Valley.[44]

October 12

As of 7 a.m. on Thursday, the Tubbs Fire had burned 34,270 acres, and was 10 percent contained.[46] In the city of Santa Rosa, officials said that the fire had destroyed an estimated 2,834 homes, along with about 400,000 square feet of commercial space.[14]

As of Thursday morning, efforts continued to be focused on two areas:

  • Near the northwest corner of Napa County, firefighters were battling the fire around Mount St. Helena, but they started pulling back before noon; the fire had hopped Highway 29, which runs adjacent to the mountain north of the evacuated town of Calistoga.[46] There was no fire activity in the town itself,[14] with the blaze spreading north and east of Calistoga through rugged terrain into Lake County, south of Middletown.[47] By Thursday afternoon, only a few dozen people had refused to evacuate from Calistoga.[48]
  • In northern Sonoma County, the fire was being monitored in the area to the east of Healdsburg and Windsor. Sonoma County ordered Rio Lindo Adventist Academy, a boarding school on the outskirts of Healdsburg near the edge of the Tubbs fire, to prepare to evacuate if necessary.

Among the losses reported on Thursday was the destruction of the Santa Rosa hillside home of late Peanuts creator Charles Schulz; his widow, Jean Schulz, escaped unhurt.[46][47] By Thursday evening, 28,000 customers in the Santa Rosa and Windsor areas still had not had their gas service restored.[39]

October 13–31

On Friday morning, October 13, the fire was 25 percent contained.[49] It remained about two miles outside of Calistoga's city limits.[50]

A fire erupted in the hills east of Oakmont late Friday night, prompting the mandatory evacuation of neighborhoods early Saturday morning from Calistoga Road to Adobe Canyon Road, along Highway 12. The zone included several schools and the Oakmont Village retirement neighborhood. Evacuations for the area were lifted by late the following Wednesday.

By Saturday morning, October 14, the fire was 44 percent contained.[51] A "small army of firefighters and police" was positioned between where the fire was most active, north of Calistoga, and the city itself.[52]

In the Fountaingrove area of Santa Rosa, firefighters and utility crews combed through the ruins left by the fire. Fire officials searched for dangerous hot spots that could re-ignite the blaze, and utility workers began cleaning up the demolished neighborhoods.[53]

November 11, 2017, Landsat 8 OLI, bands 753, Napa, Sonoma fires of October 2017
November 11, 2017, Landsat 8 OLI, bands 753, false color infra-red satellite image, zoom to full resolution on Santa Rosa, California. Scale: 1:24,000.
SkySat satellite image of the aftermath of the Tubbs Fire in the Coffey Park neighborhood of Santa Rosa, California.

Containment progress

Fire containment status[54]
DateAcres burnedContainment
Oct 925,000[55]
0%
Oct 1027,000[56]
0%
Oct 1127,363[57]
10%
Oct 1234,770[58]
10%
Oct 1335,270[59]
44%
Oct 1435,470[60]
50%
Oct 1535,470[61]
60%
Oct 1636,432[62]
75%
Oct 1736,432[63]
87%
Oct 1836,432[64]
91%
Oct 1936,432[65]
92%
Oct 2036,432[66]
93%
Oct 2136,793[67]
94%
Oct 22–2536,807[68][69][70][71]
94%
Oct 2636,807[72]
95%
---------
Oct 3136,807[73]
100%

Comparison to the Hanly Fire

In 1964, the Hanly Fire, the 2nd largest fire in Sonoma County history, burned 52,700 acres, with striking similarities to the Tubbs Fire.[74] The damage caused by the two fires differed dramatically, however: since 1964, hundreds of expensive homes, a golf course and clubhouse restaurant, office and medical buildings, light industry, lakeside retirement homes, a long row of nursing facilities, and two hotels were built in the Fountaingrove area, which had been almost entirely open land in 1964.[75]

The path the Hanly Fire took in 1964, as well as the areas it burned, were very similar to the Tubbs Fire: from Calistoga, along Porter Creek and Mark West Springs roads into Sonoma County, burning homes along Mark West Springs and Riebli roads, through Wikiup, and to Mendocino Avenue, where it stopped, across the street from Journey's End Mobile Home Park.[76] The fire was propelled by 70 mph winds, close to hurricane strength; it initially went east from Calistoga, but on the third day its direction switched, going south-west from Calistoga to Santa Rosa in only about half a day.[74] The Hanly Fire only destroyed a few dozen homes, as the area it burned was so sparsely settled in 1964.[77]

Sonoma County has four "historic wildfire corridors,"[78] including the Hanly Fire area. New homes in the fire zones are required to meet building code requirements for fire-resistant materials for siding, roofing and decks, with protected eaves to keep out windblown embers.[74] Those measures made little difference in the Tubbs Fire. For example, despite a 100-foot fire break that ringed much of the Fountaingrove II subdivision, which consisted of 600 upscale homes in the same path as the Hanly Fire,[79] virtually the entire subdivision was destroyed by the Tubbs Fire.[80][81]

News and social media coverage

The fire was covered extensively and in depth by news outlets from around the San Francisco Bay Area and beyond.[lower-alpha 1] In addition to local coverage, CNN and Fox News were on scene in Sonoma County, focusing primarily on northern Santa Rosa.[83][84] The majority of communication regarding the fire came from social media websites such as Twitter, Facebook, Snapchat and Nixle.[85]

From October 9 through 13, Snapchat ran a geolocation tagging filter to isolate material about the fire, and these posts were featured on the Discover page.[86] By October 11, over 12,000 videos and images had been uploaded to Snapchat.[87] Donald Laird, an instructor at Santa Rosa Junior College, and Richard Dunn, a local photographer, submitted featured posts.[88]

Twitter analytics revealed that the majority of tweets about the Tubbs Fire were posted on October 11.[89]

The Press Democrat staff also won the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News Reporting for "lucid and tenacious coverage of historic wildfires that ravaged the city of Santa Rosa and Sonoma County".[90]

Cause of the fire

Suspicion for the cause of the fire fell on energy company Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E), but the company seemed to be cleared of responsibility in this incident after Cal Fire released the results of its investigation on January 24, 2019, upon which news the company's stock price jumped dramatically.[91][92]

On August 14, 2019, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Dennis Montali, the federal judge for the PG&E bankruptcy proceedings, presided over a hearing for victims of the Tubbs Fire, and they presented their case for a fast-track state civil trial by jury to resolve if PG&E is at fault for the Tubbs Fire, rather than customer equipment causing the fire as determined by Cal Fire. The judge's ruling on this trial had important ramifications for how Tubbs Fire victims were to be compensated and the schedule for the bankruptcy.[93][94] On August 16, 2019, the judge ruled that the trial can proceed "on a parallel track" because "it advances the goals of this bankruptcy." A fast-track jury trial in state court could reach a verdict in January or early February.[95][96][97] This trial was scheduled to begin January 7, 2020 in San Francisco.[98] PG&E needed to get its bankruptcy plan approved by June 30, 2020 to be included in the fund for fire costs created by the new state law AB 1054.[99][100][101][102] After the judge's ruling, the company's stock price sank by 25%.[103]

On December 6, 2019, PG&E proposed to settle the wildfire victim claims for a total of $13.5 billion, which would cover liability for its responsibility originating from the Tubbs Fire, Camp Fire, Butte Fire, Ghost Ship warehouse fire, and also a series of wildfires beginning on October 8, 2017, collectively called the North Bay Wildfires (2017).[104][105][106] The court case for the Tubbs Fire was superseded by the Restructuring Support Agreement (RSA) of December 9, 2019[107] and by the bankruptcy plan.[108]

On Saturday, June 20, 2020, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Dennis Montali issued the final approval of the plan for PG&E to exit bankruptcy,[109][110][108] meeting the June 30, 2020 deadline for PG&E to qualify for the California state wildfire insurance fund.[99][100][101] Wildfire victims will get half of their $13.5 billion settlement as stock shares in the reorganized company,[111][112] adding to the uncertainty as to when and how much they will be paid.[113][114] Because of uncertainties in the value of the liquidated stock, in part because of the financial market impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, PG&E agreed to increase the amount of stock.[115][116] PG&E funded the Fire Victim Trust (FVT) with cash and stock on July 1, 2020.[117][112][118] Wildfire victims will be paid in cash funded partly from the cash portion of the settlement, and partly from stock that will be liquidated into cash on a schedule not yet determined.[116]

gollark: Neither.
gollark: Atomic clocks are superior.
gollark: <@330678593904443393> Quartz things don't keep time that well.
gollark: TAI doesn't do leap seconds. I think that's it.
gollark: Er. Some reference frame.

See also

Notes

  1. Several local outlets received national recognition for their broadcasts. KXTV (Continuing Coverage) and KNTV (Hard News, News Documentary) won Edward R. Murrow Awards, while KPIX won the National Headliner Award and the Sigma Delta Chi Award (both for Breaking News coverage).[82]

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  96. Blunt, Katherine (August 19, 2019). "PG&E Shares Tumble After Judge Allows Trial on Whether It Caused Wildfire". The Wall Street Journal.
  97. Brickley, Peg; Morgenson, Gretchen (November 8, 2019). "PG&E Bankruptcy Protections Could Mean Less Money for Wildfire Victims". The Wall Street Journal. Chapter 11 rules give the giant California utility what amounts to a lid on compensation
  98. Morris, J.D.; Gardiner, Dustin (July 12, 2019). "Newsom authorizes $21 billion fund to protect utilities from fire costs". San Francisco Chronicle.
  99. Nikolewski, Rob (October 24, 2019). "California regulators approve funding for controversial wildfire law". The San Diego Union-Tribune.
  100. Gonzales, Richard (November 1, 2019). "Calif. Governor Seeks To 'Jumpstart' PG&E Bankruptcy Talks; Threatens State Takeover". npr.org.
  101. Guiney, Brian P.; Kim, Sichan (June 8, 2020). "PG&E's $58B Bankruptcy Plan Moves Closer to Approval". Patterson Belknap.
  102. Morris, J.D. (August 19, 2019). "PG&E shares plunge 25% after judge allows Tubbs Fire trial". The San Francisco Chronicle.
  103. Gonzales, Richard (December 7, 2019). "PG&E Announces $13.5 Billion Settlement Of Claims Linked To California Wildfires". National Public Radio.
  104. Acharya, Bhargav (December 6, 2019). "Bankrupt PG&E reaches $13.5 billion settlement with California wildfire victims". Reuters.
  105. PG&E (March 17, 2020). "Disclosure Statement to the Plan" (PDF). Prime Clerk. p. 159.
  106. "RESTRUCTURING SUPPORT AGREEMENT". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. December 9, 2019.
  107. PG&E. "Important Documents Related to the Plan and Disclosure Statement". Prime Clerk. Retrieved June 26, 2020. The most useful document is the Disclosure Statement to the Plan.
  108. Scaggs, Alexandra (June 22, 2020). "PG&E Is Emerging From Bankruptcy After Its Financing Plan Was Approved". Barron's.
  109. Chediak, Mark (June 21, 2020). "PG&E Wins Final Approval for Its Bankruptcy Reorganization". Bloomberg News. Power giant can now exit largest U.S. utility restructuring
  110. Blunt, Katherine (February 13, 2020). "PG&E's Fire Victims Are Set to Become Its Biggest Shareholders". The Wall Street Journal. California utility offers to fund part of settlements with stock. Some, though, don’t want to own ‘the company that burned their houses down.’
  111. Iovino, Nicholas (July 1, 2020). "PG&E Emerges From Chapter 11 Bankruptcy". Courthouse News Service.
  112. Blunt, Katherine; Brickley, Peg (June 16, 2020). "PG&E to Exit Bankruptcy After Wildfires, Still Saddled With Debt". The Wall Street Journal. Hedge funds, other investors stand to make billions from complex chapter 11 case while fire victims, paid part of settlement in stock, face uncertainty about cashing out
  113. Morris, J.D. (June 7, 2020). "Full funds for PG&E fire victims may not be ready for 6 years, lawyer says". The San Francisco Chronicle.
  114. Penn, Ivan (June 12, 2020). "PG&E Gives Wildfire Victims More Stock in Bankruptcy Plan". The New York Times.
  115. Iovino, Nicholas (June 12, 2020). "PG&E Boosts Stock for Fire Victims in Bankruptcy Case". Courthouse News Service.
  116. Penn, Ivan (July 1, 2020). "PG&E, Troubled California Utility, Emerges From Bankruptcy". The New York Times.
  117. "Fire Victim Trust Funded July 1st". PR Newswire. July 1, 2020.
  118. Johnson, Doug. "How the Tubbs Fire Affected Santa Rosa's Homeless Population". FOX40. Retrieved January 13, 2020.
  119. Arnago, Tania; Caesare, Daniella; Morgan, Miranda; Ortiz, Taijah; Hatch, Haley; Padilla, Modesti; Betchart, Sawyer. "Homelessness: What Sonoma County Can do Better" (PDF). Retrieved January 13, 2020.
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