Fire fears intimidate residents near park
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Marisa O’Neil
Man and nature are getting a little too close for comfort around the
fire-prone Talbert Nature Preserve, some residents worry.
A Sept. 4 fire burned about three acres in the county wilderness
park between the end of 19th Street in Costa Mesa and the Santa Ana
River. The blaze came within about 50 yards of homes in the Newport
Terrace Condominiums, which is filled with eucalyptus trees and other
greenery that residents worry are drying out and could easily spread
the next fire from the park into the complex.
Oakland fire investigators blamed eucalyptus trees for the
intensity of the deadly 1991 fire in the East Bay hills that killed
25 people.
“The wildlife preserve is always catching fire,” resident Heaven
Moffeit said. “It’s a given. There’s homeless people living down
there, kids playing down there. We have fires down there a couple
times a year. And all it takes is one burning ember to start a fire
here, with all these trees with dead branches on them. We’re scared
that something is going to happen.”
The complex sits atop a 20-foot bluff, overlooking the willow
trees and pampas grass that fill the preserve. That bluff and a
small, residential road are all that separate homes from the 200-acre
wilderness area, which other residents and fire officials agreed
burns a couple of times a year.
Though residents speak of the pristine beauty of the area, they
worry that not enough is being done to maintain eucalyptus trees and
other landscaping around the complex.
“It’s absolutely gorgeous, like the land time forgot,” resident
Lynn Cook said. “There are little rabbits and lizards that run
around. We have so many wonders of nature. But, of course, on the
flip side of that, we get the dangers.”
Moffeit and Cook said they saw burning embers land on the property
during the last fire. Embers could easily ignite dry branches on
notoriously combustible eucalyptus trees or dry underbrush around the
complex, Moffeit said.
“It’s like a match waiting to be lit,” she said.
The property management company is doing its annual tree-trimming
maintenance and has fire extinguishers set around the complex, said
Earl Miller, president of the Newport Condominium Assn. The problem
lies outside the complex, in the park, he said.
Homeless camps and children playing in the park keep the fire
danger there high, he said.
“I’m always worried,” he said. “Every day I’m worried. By the same
token, we’ve done what we can and have had good response from the
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa fire departments.”
County park rangers and police from Newport Beach and Costa Mesa
patrol the area looking for homeless camps, officials said, and they
routinely send campers on their way. Some residents blamed transients
for the latest fire, but the cause has not been determined, Costa
Mesa Fire Capt. Brian Roberts said.
Talbert Nature Preserve covers about 200 acres, Senior Park Ranger
Phillip Shields said. The park, with nature trails for hikers, is a
protected area, so there is a limit as to what can be done there.
Growth in the park is managed by a biologist, Shields said.
Fire crews can alter vegetation in the area only when they have to
protect homes, Costa Mesa Deputy Fire Chief Gregg Steward said.
“It’s a protected area, so you can’t just go altering it just
because you want to,” Steward said.
Fire and sanitation district officials have speculated that the
Sept. 4 fire may have set off a power outage that allowed 13,000
gallons of partially treated sewage to spill into the Santa Ana River
that afternoon. Water dropped onto the fire from a helicopter touched
power lines in the area, causing them to spark.
Orange County Sanitation District acting General Manager Bob
Ghirelli said Tuesday that they have not received any confirmation of
the cause. The spill closed beaches in Newport Beach and Huntington
Beach briefly over the Labor Day weekend.
* MARISA O’NEIL covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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