Sunday, January 25, 2009

Aircraft down: Crash Spills 25,000 Gallons Of Sewage

A small plane crash in Oceanside injured two people aboard and also caused a 25,000-gallon sewage spill.

A low-flying airplane hit a power pole and crashed Saturday in Oceanside, injuring two people aboard and causing a 25,000-gallon spill of raw sewage.

Police Sgt. Kelan Poorman says the single-engine Cessna Skyhawk was only a dozen feet off the ground when it hit a support pole for overhead electrical lines and went down a half-mile from Oceanside Municipal Airport at about 10:44 a.m. Saturday.

The aircraft also sheered off a sewage valve, releasing 25,000 gallons of raw goo before it could be stopped. Poorman says crews contained the sewage before it could reach nearby homes but everybody on the scene had to be decontaminated.

The 24-year-old pilot of the plane was trapped in the wreckage for a time. He and his 18-year-old passenger were taken to a local hospital. One man is listed in serious to critical condition and the other is said to be in good condition.

Poorman says it's unclear why the plane was flying so low. The pilot had not radioed any reports of trouble to local control towers.

Source: CBS2 - LINK

Hemet: Power restored after explosion and fire

Explosion, fire shut off power in Hemet

By DAVID OLSON
The Press-Enterprise

An explosion and fire at a Southern California Edison substation in Hemet cut off power to 6,400 customers Friday night and Saturday.

About 700 customers were without power for nearly 24 hours after the fire, which may have been caused when a car hit a power pole more than a mile away. Power was restored to most customers within an hour, and to hundreds of other customers overnight and through Saturday, Edison spokesman Steve Conroy said.

A car hit the power pole at 8:14 p.m. Friday on the 2900 block of Commonwealth Avenue, said Hemet Police Sgt. Nate Miller. It's unclear what caused the accident, he said.

The substation's transformer caught fire at about 8:15 p.m. Conroy said. The accident could have triggered problems that led to the transformer fire. Edison is investigating, Conroy said.

Charles Holman, 57, who lives about a half block from the substation, heard two explosions.

"I heard a big blow-up, opened the door and saw flames going completely up into the sky," he said.

The flames reached several stories high, Holman said.

Holman's home did not regain power until just before 8 p.m. Saturday, when Conroy said power was restored to the final 700 customers. He said that, other than about $40 in frozen meat that spoiled, his family got through the outage without a problem.

"We've got candles and all that stuff," he said. "We just got more sleep."

Joan Berry's mobile home shook from the power of the explosion. Berry, 71, lives about a half mile away.

The company Saturday was also cleaning up oil that leaked after the fire, he said. None of the oil seeped from the substation property, Conroy said.

Source: pe.com - Link

San Bernardino National Forest pile burns to continue

Winter pile burns to continue


San Bernardino National Forest Resumes Winter Pile Burning

SAN BERNARDINO, Calif., January 20, 2009— Fire crews are resuming winter pile burning at various locations across the San Bernardino National Forest. The favorable change in weather now provides opportunities to resume annual winter pile burning activities on hazardous fuels reduction projects on the forest. Smoke and flames may occasionally be visible from the roadways. Firefighters will have “prescribed fire” signs posted in project areas. The winter burning program will continue through early spring as weather and conditions permit.
“Burning slash piles is part our overall operations to reduce the risk of wildfires potentially spreading into communities,” stated San Bernardino National Forest Fire Chief Mike Dietrich. “Our standard practice is to evaluate the weather, forecasts, fuels conditions and adjust our operations accordingly, stopping and resuming as conditions warrant,” Chief Dietrich added.
Slash and debris pile burning are part of fuels treatment projects that include mechanical removal of vegetation. Fuel reduction projects near mountain communities include removing dead trees as well as thinning and stacking piles of dense brush, and burning the piles in the wet season.

The Pile Burning Locations Are:

Wrightwood Area

The pile burning will begin in the Circle Mountain area (also known as Helicopter Hill). Smoke and flames will be visible at the top of Lone Pine Canyon Road and possibly in the East Canyon area of Wrightwood. For the Boundary Ridge project, this will be our first pile burning effort in that area.

Angelus Oaks / Barton Flats Area

The Angelus Oaks project is ongoing and if the weather cooperates, we should complete burning of all piles this season. This project is adjacent to Angelus Oaks and smoke and flames may be visible from State Highway 38. Occasionally motorists on State Highway 330 will see smoke from the pile burning.

Firefighters continue to burn slash and debris piles in the Barton Flats area east of Angelus Oaks. Smoke may be visible from State Highway 38.

Idyllwild Area

Firefighters are continuing to burn slash and debris piles near the Alandale Station on State Highway 243 north of Pine Cove in the Idyllwild area. Motorists along the highway will see smoke. Occasionally residents in San Jacinto and Hemet may see smoke from the project.

Local residents can help by assuring their property is fire safe. Residents in the local mountains can get assistance and advice in a number of ways:

  • Contacting your Local Fire Safe Council to get tips on fire safety and what homeowners can do around their property.

  • Find your local council on the web at http://www.firesafecouncil.org

  • Forest Care Program provides up to 75% reimbursement for thinning and clearance. For more information call 1-888- 883-8446 or visit Forest Care on the web at: http://www.sbnfa.com/forestcare.php

  • Residents in both Riverside and San Bernardino Counties can find a wealth of information on the Mountain Area Safety Taskforce (MAST) website at: http://www.calmast.org/

For more information regarding pile burning, or any other questions about your National Forest, please call your local Ranger Station at:

Arrowhead Ranger Station 909-382-2758
Big Bear Ranger Station & Discovery Center 909-382-2790
Cajon Ranger Station 909-382-2850
Idyllwild Ranger Station 909-382-2922
San Gorgonio Ranger Station 909-382-2881

For additional information about the San Bernardino National Forest, please visit: http://www.fs.fed.us/r5/sanbernardino/

Saturday, January 24, 2009

USGS Report: Tree Deaths Have Doubled Across the Western U.S

Tree Deaths Have Doubled Across the Western U.S. -- Regional Warming May be the Cause

Tree death rates have more than doubled over the last few decades in old-growth forests of the western United States, and the most probable cause of the worrisome trend is regional warming, according to a U.S. Geological Survey-led (USGS) study published in Science on January 23.

The study found that the increase in dying trees has been pervasive. Tree death rates have increased across a wide variety of forest types, at all elevations, in trees of all sizes, and in pines, firs, hemlocks, and other kinds of trees.

see caption for details
Red fir, Sequoia National Park, California. Photo credit: Nate Stephenson, U.S. Geological Survey. (Larger image)

Regardless of the cause, higher tree death rates ultimately could lead to substantial changes in western forests, said Phil van Mantgem, a USGS scientist and co-leader of the research team. Such changes, the team noted, can have cascading effects, such as by changing forest suitability for wildlife species. Additionally, increasing tree mortality rates mean that western forests could become net sources of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere, further speeding up the pace of global warming.

"The same way that in any group of people a small number will die each year, in any forest a small number of trees die each year," said van Mantgem. "But our long-term monitoring shows that tree mortality has been climbing, while the establishment of replacement trees has not."

The result is that forests have begun to lose trees faster than they're gaining them, said van Mantgem.

The study's authors ruled out a number of possible sources of the increasing tree deaths, including air pollution, long-term effects of fire suppression, and normal forest dynamics. In contrast, increasing regional temperature was correlated with tree deaths.

"Average temperature in the West rose by more than 1° F over the last few decades," said van Mantgem. "While this may not sound like much, it has been enough to reduce winter snowpack, cause earlier snowmelt, and lengthen the summer drought."

The lengthening summer drought could be stressing trees, leading to higher death rates, he said. Warmer temperatures also might favor insects and diseases that attack trees. Some recent outbreaks of tree-killing bark beetles in the West have already been linked to warming temperatures.

"Tree death rates are like interest on a bank account - the effects compound over time," said Nate Stephenson, also with the U.S. Geological Survey and research team co-leader. "A doubling of death rates eventually could reduce average tree age in a forest by half, thus reducing average tree size."

In some cases, increasing tree deaths could indicate forests vulnerable to sudden, extensive die-back, similar to forest die-back seen over the last few years in parts of the southwestern states, Colorado, and British Columbia. "That may be our biggest concern," said Stephenson. "Is the trend we're seeing a prelude to bigger, more abrupt changes to our forests?"

Source: USGS Newsroom - Link

Weather alert: Severe thunderstorm - Tehama County

THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN SACRAMENTO HAS ISSUED A * SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WARNING FOR... CENTRAL TEHAMA COUNTY IN NORTHERN CALIFORNIA... * UNTIL 530 PM PST * AT 500 PM PST... NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DOPPLER RADAR INDICATED A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM CAPABLE OF PRODUCING PENNY SIZE HAIL.THIS STORM WAS LOCATED OVER CENTRAL TEHAMA COUNTY...OR ABOUT 7 MILES SOUTHEAST OF RED BLUFF...AND MOVING NORTHEAST AT 10 MPH. * THE SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WILL BE NEAR... HIGHWAY 99 NORTH OF LOS MOLINOS AT 510 PM PST

Area: NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SACRAMENTO CA

Affected Counties or parts of: Tehama County

Weather alert: Severe thunderstorm - Butte County

THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN SACRAMENTO HAS ISSUED A * SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WARNING FOR... WEST CENTRAL BUTTE COUNTY IN NORTHERN CALIFORNIA... EAST CENTRAL GLENN COUNTY IN NORTHERN CALIFORNIA... * UNTIL 415 PM PST * AT 336 PM PST... NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DOPPLER RADAR INDICATED A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM CAPABLE OF PRODUCING PENNY SIZE HAIL.THIS STORM WAS LOCATED NEAR BUTTE CITY...OR ABOUT 11 MILES EAST OF WILLOWS...AND MOVING NORTHEAST AT 5 MPH. * THE SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WILL BE NEAR... CODORA 345 PM PST GLENN AT 350 PM PST

Instruction:
IN ADDITION TO LARGE HAIL AND DAMAGING WINDS...HEAVY RAIN IS OCCURRING WITH THIS STORM AS WELL AS FREQUENT LIGHTNING. MOVE INDOORS IMMEDIATELY! LIGHTNING IS ONE OF NATURES NUMBER ONE KILLERS. REMEMBER...IF YOU CAN HEAR THUNDER...YOU ARE CLOSE ENOUGH TO BE STRUCK BY LIGHTNING.

Area: NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SACRAMENTO CA

Affected Counties or parts of: Butte, Glenn

Sent: 2009-01-24T15:42:15-08:00

Earthquake: 3.2 M - Telescope Peak, CA

Magnitude 3.2 - CENTRAL CALIFORNIA

Earthquake map

Earthquake Details

Magnitude3.2
Date-Time
  • Saturday, January 24, 2009 at 18:08:38 UTC
  • Saturday, January 24, 2009 at 10:08:38 AM at epicenter
Location36.085°N, 117.136°W
Depth10.6 km (6.6 miles)
RegionCENTRAL CALIFORNIA
Distances
  • 10 km (6 miles) SSW (205°) from Telescope Peak, CA
  • 41 km (26 miles) NNE (31°) from Trona, CA
  • 42 km (26 miles) NNE (32°) from Searles Valley, CA
  • 71 km (44 miles) NE (43°) from Ridgecrest, CA
  • 172 km (107 miles) W (267°) from Las Vegas, NV
Location Uncertaintyhorizontal +/- 0.4 km (0.2 miles); depth +/- 1.8 km (1.1 miles)
ParametersNph=024, Dmin=25 km, Rmss=0.24 sec, Gp= 65°,
M-type=local magnitude (ML), Version=C
Source
Event IDci10373189

Friday, January 23, 2009

Earthquake 3.1 M - Offshore Baja California, Mexico

Magnitude 3.1 OFFSHORE BAJA CALIFORNIA, MEXICO

Earthquake Details
Magnitude3.1
Date-Time
Location32.443°N, 117.699°W
Depth32.6 km (20.3 miles)
RegionOFFSHORE BAJA CALIFORNIA, MEXICO
Distances
  • 56 km (35 miles) WSW (242°) from Coronado, CA
  • 57 km (35 miles) WSW (255°) from Imperial Beach, CA
  • 61 km (38 miles) SW (223°) from La Jolla, CA
  • 64 km (40 miles) SW (234°) from San Diego, CA
Location Uncertaintyhorizontal +/- 1.2 km (0.7 miles); depth +/- 31.6 km (19.6 miles)
ParametersNph=020, Dmin=61 km, Rmss=0.13 sec, Gp=230°,
M-type=local magnitude (ML), Version=O
Source
Event IDci10372097

Ride along with Tanker 910 on Freeway Fire

California Wildland Fire YouTube discovery: Tanker 910 during the 2008 Freeway IC wildfire

Tanker 910 on Freeway Fire Crew: Flight Captain Kevin Hopf, Chief Pilot Jack Maxey, Flight Enginneer Brad Pace, CAL FIRE Captain John Romero

FEMA: Weekly National Situation update report

National Situation Update: Friday, January 23, 2009

Homeland Security Threat Level: YELLOW (ELEVATED).

Significant National Weather

South:
The hard freeze warnings for parts of Florida ended this morning and temperatures will finally move quickly upward today. Another cold front will gradually move through the South this weekend. Showers will develop from the Oklahoma-Texas Red River Valley into the Tennessee Valley and will then gradually move toward the northern Gulf Coast, northern Florida and the southeast coast. Highs will range from the 70s and 80s in Texas to the low 70s in Florida and 50s and 60s in the Carolinas.
West:
Showers will continue today along the west coast before moving into the Northwest. The heaviest rain will be in northern and central California with a foot or more of snow in the highest elevations of the Sierra. Snow from California to Colorado with amounts diminishing this weekend. High temperatures will range from the single digits in southern and eastern Montana to the 70s in southeast California and southern Arizona.
Midwest:
Another arctic cold front will move southward through the Midwest to the Ohio Valley. Scattered areas of light snow are possible over parts of Michigan, northern Wisconsin and northern Minnesota.with a little light snow possible in the central Plains. Lake-effect snow will develop across Michigan. Light snow will move eastward from South Dakata, Nebraska and northern Kansas into Iowa. High temperatures will range from around zero in the Dakotas and the upper Midwest to the 30s across Kansas, southern Missouri and Kentucky.
Northeast:
Some light snow is possible as an arctic cold front moves into the region from the Midwest. Highs will range from the single digits along the Canadian border to the 30s and few lower 40s in the Virginias. (NOAA, NWS, Various Media Sources)

Fire Management Assistance Grant

No activity. (FEMA HQ)

Tropical Weather Outlook

Western Pacific:
There are no current tropical cyclone warnings. (NOAA, HPC, National Hurricane Center, Central Pacific Hurricane Center and the Joint Typhoon Warning Center)

Earthquake Activity

No new activity (FEMA HQ)

Preliminary Damage Assessments

No new activity (FEMA HQ)

Disaster Declaration Activity

On Thursday, January 22, 2009, the Governor of Washington State requested a Major Disaster Declaration as a result of severe winter storms, occurring January 6 - 16, 2009. The Governor is requesting Individual Assistance for nine counties and Hazard Mitigation statewide.

The Governor of New Hampshire requested an adjustment to the federal cost share for FEMA-3297-EM-NH and FEMA-1812-DR-NH. The Governor is requesting 100% Federal funding for debris removal and emergency protective measures (Categories A and B) under the Public Assistance program for FEMA-1812-DR-NH and for direct federal assistance for FEMA-3297-EM-NH. (FEMA HQ)

Last Modified: Friday, 23-Jan-2009 08:11:12 EST
Source: fema.gov- reports - Link

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