Time-lapse video map shows 911 calls on Tubbs fire

A record number of calls came in to Sonoma County 911 dispatchers during the early part of the deadly Tubbs fire.|

A vegetation fire broke out just before 7:30 p.m. Oct. 8 in Kenwood. Another grass fire was reported 27 minutes later by a 911 caller near Dutton Avenue and West Third Street in Santa Rosa.

Over the next 28 hours, people in Sonoma County dialed 911 in record numbers, reporting fallen trees blocking roads and vegetation fires, and then increasingly calling with pleas to be rescued.

Some calls lasted hours, like the dispatcher who stayed on the line with a couple taking refuge in a pool as fire and smoke swirled around.

With escape routes increasingly blocked by fire or fallen trees, dispatchers pored over maps to help lead people to safety. Most calls were short reports, with resolutions unknown.

A time-lapse heat map of 911 calls taken by Sonoma County's central dispatch center - the Redwood Empire Dispatch Communications Authority - illustrates how emergencies erupted across Sonoma County in increasing numbers starting about 7:30 p.m. Oct. 8 and continuing through Oct. 9.

A series of massive fires - what eventually became the Tubbs, Nuns, Adobe and Pocket fires - ignited between 9:45 p.m. and 3:30 p.m. in Sonoma County, eventually destroying an estimated 6,800 buildings and killing 23 people.

Dispatchers fielded 759 calls from people reporting fires and hazards, and requesting rescues - an average of about one call every two minutes.

“You can see how quickly this was unfolding across the county,” said Aaron Abbott, Redcom executive director.

Abbott has declined to immediately release dispatch audio or logs for Oct. 8 or 9, saying his staff is working closely with Cal Fire to provide detailed reports for those investigating the fires' causes. Abbott said they did not have the manpower to produce the documents for the public before providing the information to fire investigators.

In the time-lapse video map, large heat spots build over areas near Highway 128 and Bennett Lane north of Calistoga where the Tubbs fire ignited about 9:45 p.m.

The heat marks follow the Tubbs fire's destructive path to Santa Rosa, its burning front moving at a pace of about 3 mph and spewing embers a half-mile or more ahead, forcing entire neighborhoods to flee.

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