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Spreading California Wildfires Destroy 100 Homes, Devastates Town

At least 100 homes were destroyed as one of almost a dozen California wildfires besieged a small town while another doubled in size to 8,600 acres.
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A wind-whipped wildfire laid siege to a California town at the foot of Mount Shasta — destroying a church, damaging or leveling 100 homes and forcing authorities to order about half the people to leave.

The fire erupted Monday afternoon just south of the town of Weed, and 40 mph gusts of wind blew embers as far as a half-mile away. By Tuesday the wind had died down but the fire had spread to 375 acres and was only 20 percent contained, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, or Cal Fire.

Residents returned to survey the damage, which burned nearly a quarter of the town of 3,000 and sent people running for their lives. Tami Gonzalez rushed to remove children from a school as flames bore down on the town. “Horrendous, absolutely just devastating,” she said Tuesday.

Weed, about 50 miles from the Oregon state line, has about 3,000 people. Allison Giannini, a sheriff’s spokeswoman, said that at least 1,500 had been ordered to evacuate.

“It’s like out of a movie,” said Cory Rodriguez, who was baptized at the destroyed church, tearing up as she surveyed the charred wreckage. “Especially the church where I used to come like every Sunday.” A lumber mill that employs many people in town also caught fire.

The wildfire is one of seven burning across California. East of Sacramento, in the El Dorado National Forest, one fire continued to grow Tuesday, swelling from 8,600 acres Monday to 11,570 acres by Tuesday evening, according to Cal Fire. Around 500 homes remain threatened as more than 1,500 firefighters struggled to contain it.

Two fires were 100 percent contained in northern California Tuesday and a third, the 247-acre Dog Bar Fire in Nevada County, was nearly completely contained, Cal Fire said. Hot weather and record drought have exacerbated fires in the state. The tail end of Hurricane Odile, which tore through the Baja California peninsula of Mexico on Monday, is expected to hinder firefighters by bringing wind north from Mexico.

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— Alastair Jamieson and Erin McClam with The Associated Press