Trump visits California as Western wildfires emerge as campaign issue


Reuters | California | Updated: 14-09-2020 23:03 IST | Created: 14-09-2020 22:33 IST
Trump visits California as Western wildfires emerge as campaign issue
Representative Image Image Credit: Twitter(@CALFIRECZU)
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The wildfires sweeping the Pacific Northwest assumed center stage on Monday in the U.S. presidential race, with President Donald Trump set to visit California after blaming the blazes on poor forest management and his Democratic challenger, Joe Biden, stressing the role of climate change in stoking the fires. The Republican president, seeking re-election on Nov. 3, is due to meet with firefighters and emergency officials in Northern California. Democrats have blasted Trump for remaining mostly silent about the largest wildfires in state history, except for his efforts to blame the blazes on failures by the state government.

Biden, slammed by Republicans for failing to visit disaster areas, will speak from his home state of Delaware on the threat of extreme weather that experts have said is responsible for the wildfires. A blitz of wildfires across Oregon, California and Washington state has destroyed thousands of homes and a half dozen small towns since August, scorching more than 4 million acres (1.6 million hectares) and killing more than two dozen people.

Drone footage on Monday showed hundreds of homes reduced to ashes in the southern Oregon communities of Phoenix and Talent, around 5 miles (8 km) south of Medford last week, as a wind-driven firestorm raced north, blowing embers into trailer parks and residential subdivisions. Search-and-rescue teams went through gutted homes in more than half a dozen Oregon communities looking for human remains after Governor Kate Brown said dozens of people were missing and state officials prepared for "mass casualty incidents."

Trump, who pulled the United States out of the Paris accord that laid out an international approach to combat climate change, has authorized federal disaster aid for both California and Oregon. Trump's administration has waged a series legal battles with Democratic-run California, the most populous U.S. state, on a variety of issues including immigration and environmental policy. The state for its part has sued his administration more than 100 times. Trump lost badly in California in the 2016 election and is expected to fare poorly there this year as well.

The president and his administration have sought to pin the blame for the large wildfires on state officials, saying fuel-choked forests and chaparral scrub need to be thinned and "raked." Biden has blamed human-caused higher average temperatures in U.S. West coast states for the wildfires and included climate change in his list of major crises facing the United States, along with the coronavirus pandemic.

SERVING FOOD TO EVACUEES After four days of brutally hot, windy conditions in Oregon, the weekend brought calmer winds blowing inland from the Pacific Ocean, and cooler, moister weather that helped crews make headway against blazes that burned unchecked last week.

In Clackamas County south of Portland, Oregon relief crews dished out food to some of the tens of thousands of residents ordered to evacuate. These residents faced the added challenge of gaining food and shelter during a pandemic. "We want to make sure that everybody maintains social distance as much as possible," said Jeremy Van Keuren, community resilience manager at the Portland Bureau of Emergency Management. "It is admittedly difficult in this environment."

Dane Valentine, 28, on Sunday showed a Reuters journalist the remains of his house near Estacada, about 22 miles (35 km) southeast of Portland. "All gone," Valentine said.

Down the road, a woman with a Trump 2020 sign on her home pointed a shotgun at the journalist and shouted at him to leave. "You're the reason they're setting fires up here," she said, perhaps referring to false rumors that left-wing activists had sparked the wildfires.

Oregon emergency officials, meanwhile, worried that the shifting weather might bring increased winds after fires killed at least 10 people, with dozens of people missing, according to Oregon Governor Kate Brown. Thick smoke and ash from the fires have darkened skies over the West Coast for a week, creating some of the world's worst air-quality levels.

As the smoke that has been clogging the air and blocking heat from the sun begins to lift, California firefighters expected the weather to heat up and fire activity to possibly increase, the state's fire authority Cal Fire said. All told in California, nearly 17,000 firefighters were battling 29 major wildfires on Sunday, state fire authority Cal Fire said.

More than 4,000 homes and other structures have been incinerated in California alone over the past three weeks. About 3 million acres (1.2 million hectares) of land, an area approaching the size of Connecticut, have been burned in the state, according to Cal Fire.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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