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‘It’s hard to go to work when you’re worried your house could burn down.’ Fleeing flames in fire-weary SoCal

A huge cloud of gray smoke rises from the Hughes fire. Theme park rides are visible in the foreground.
The Hughes fire, as seen from Magic Mountain, started Wednesday north of Castaic and exploded to more than 5,000 acres in less than two hours.
(Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

Moments after the Hughes fire exploded, L.A. County Deputy Dist. Atty. Jonathan Hatami said he raced out of the Michael Antonovich Antelope Valley Courthouse in Lancaster and drove back to Santa Clarita, where his children and hundreds of others were being evacuated from West Creek Academy as the sky overhead darkened with smoke.

“You had some parents crying. You had younger kids ... they were crying. You could see the smoke from the school, everybody is kind of on edge,” said Hatami, whose children are 8 and 10.

Amid an extended red flag warning, the Hughes fire exploded north of Castaic and quickly grew to more than 9,400 acres. About 31,000 people in areas surrounding the fire were under evacuation orders.

The latest fire forced thousands of residents to flee, closed a major north-south freeway artery, threatened inmates in a massive prison and deprived of rest firefighters and emergency responders who have been battling blazes across Southern California for weeks. Hatami and his family received an evacuation notice Wednesday evening while his wife, a Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputy, was dispatched toward the flames earlier that afternoon.

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The veteran prosecutor said his entire family is experiencing “fire fatigue” after more than two weeks spent waiting for wind-driven flames to threaten their home.

“We’re sort of on standby to see what might happen, we’re ready to go,” he said. Pictures taken from Hatami’s backyard showed enormous gray smoke clouds looming in the distance, and he winced at the thought of his wife being even closer to the flames.

“Everybody is on edge. It’s a lot. I love California. I love Los Angeles, but this is definitely stressful,” he said. “It’s hard to go to work when you’re worried your house could burn down and your kids are at school and your wife is out there and you don’t know what’s going to happen with her.”

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Amid an extended red flag warning, the Hughes fire exploded north of Castaic and quickly grew to more than 9,400 acres. About 31,000 people in areas surrounding the fire were under evacuation orders.

The Hughes fire quickly charred 5,000 acres and forced thousands to flee from their homes amid a month of extreme fire conditions that have plagued Southern California.

The fire started off of Lake Hughes Road just before 11 a.m. and quickly prompted evacuation orders in and around Lake Castaic, which by afternoon extended toward Ventura County to the west and near Sandberg to the north. More than 19,000 people were ordered to evacuate and 14,000 others were in areas where evacuation warnings were issued.

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