Valley fire evacuees depart Napa County Fairgrounds for uncertain future

The departures continued Tuesday from the Napa County Fairgrounds as President Obama declared a major disaster covering the Valley fire area in Lake, Sonoma and Napa counties.|

Aid with temporary housing, home repair:

Residents affected by the Valley fire may sign up with the Federal Emergency Management Agency online at

www.DisasterAssistance.gov; via smartphone at m.fema.gov or by calling 800-621-3362.

CALISTOGA — People displaced by the massive Valley fire folded their tents and loaded their vehicles on Tuesday, departing from their impromptu home here at the Napa County Fairgrounds, with some going back to houses still standing and others facing only rubble and an uncertain future after the destructive wildfire.

The evacuees had put their lives on hold here for up to 10 days since the Valley fire ignited and swept over a huge swath of southern Lake County, burning more than 1,200 homes and killing at least three people.

They slept in tents, RVs and a fairgrounds building and came together three times a day over meals. They cared for the pets and livestock saved from the fire and generally had come to regard one another as neighbors.

But their most commonly shared sentiment was a desire to return to Lake County, which has been scarred by the 76,000-acre blaze, wiping whole neighborhood blocks off the map while sparing others. Some evacuees had homes waiting for them, but many others said their next stop was a shelter that opened Saturday at Twin Pine Casino and Hotel outside fire-ravaged Middletown, where officials were scrambling to accommodate the returnees.

'We're trying to keep people as close to their communities as possible,' said Supervisor Rob Brown, whose district includes devastated neighborhoods on Cobb Mountain, where the wildfire erupted in the early afternoon of Sept. 12.

By late that night, the wind-driven blaze had swelled to 25,000 acres, prompting mandatory evacuations of an area home to more than 8,000 people. For many, the only escape route was south on Highway 29 into Napa County, where an evacuation center took shape at the fairgrounds and by the end of last week held more than 900 people.

The population began dwindling over the weekend as Middletown, with 1,300 residents; Hidden Valley Lake, with about 5,500 residents; and numerous smaller communities reopened, triggering a process county officials are calling 'repopulation.' The Calistoga fairgrounds shelter will close Thursday morning.

The departures continued Tuesday as President Barack Obama declared a major disaster covering the fire area in Lake, Sonoma and Napa counties. The declaration triggers the release of federal money for recovery and cleanup, including grant money for temporary housing and home repairs.

State Sen. Mike McGuire, D-Healdsburg, said the funding will help with recovery and rebuilding as part of a local, state and federal effort to 'ensure Lake County comes back stronger than ever and thrives.'

Residents affected by the fire may register with the Federal Emergency Management Agency online at www.DisasterAssistance.gov, via smartphone at m.fema.gov or by calling 800-621-3362.

By Tuesday, there were only a few dozen tents at the fairgrounds, and Napa County officials said the evacuation center would close after breakfast Thursday, with each family receiving a bag of food.

Some evacuees loaded boxes of their only belongings — mostly new donated clothes, blankets and other necessities — into cars and pickups. Others had left their tents to go north and make plans before packing up.

'It's pretty thinned out,' said Kristi Jourdan, a Napa County spokeswoman, after walking the fairgrounds Tuesday morning. 'People said, 'We're rolling out.' '

Alejandra Lopez, 17, of Middletown said her parents had left in the family's pickup to take a first load up to Middletown, where they planned to stay at the casino owned by the Middletown Rancheria of Pomo Indians.

Beyond that, Lopez said she didn't know what her parents planned to do. 'We haven't really talked about it,' she said.

She and her family were at her little brother's football game in Fort Bragg while the fire destroyed their apartment on Barnes Street. They stayed in Fort Bragg that night and then headed to Calistoga.

Across the field, David Uribe, 33, said he was overwhelmed by all the details of relocating and not knowing if his Whispering Pines home was still standing. Yet he said he couldn't wait to get back to Lake County.

'I need to start writing things down. I'm losing track of everything,' Uribe said.

Rochelle Gross, 47, who lost the home she and her husband, Bill, rented in Cobb, said she was ready to let go of all she had lost — the possessions, the beloved cat who perished in the fire — and start looking ahead.

She forged fast friendships with people camping around her at the fairgrounds, calling them 'my neighbors.'

The couple was headed for the Twin Pine Casino with the donated clothes, shoes and blankets they received at the fairgrounds. Having moved to Lake County from Southern California three years ago, they forged a deep connection with the area and are determined to stay, Gross said.

What comes next week, next month or next year isn't clear, she said.

'It's so hard. We were renters, and we didn't have renter's insurance,' Gross said. 'But it is our home. We've said to each other, 'Let's buy land and camp until we can build.' '

The casino's event center, a huge tentlike structure, was sparsely populated Tuesday afternoon but was expecting 185 people to spend the night and can accommodate 250, said Kyle Lewis, the casino's director of marketing and guest services.

The 59-room hotel is filled with tribal members and employees who lost their homes, but rooms will be made available to evacuees as they become available, he said.

Supervisor Brown said 48 rooms at the shuttered Konocti Harbor Resort and Spa will soon be available for temporary housing, and a hotel in Cobb will offer 30 rooms as soon as that area is reopened to residents.

Brown said he had yet to hear of any major housing crunch as many of the county's affected residents return. 'A lot of people have gone out on their own and found a house to rent,' he said.

Hidden Valley Lake has made 55 RV spots available, Brown said.

The Red Cross, which is operating the casino shelter, also is maintaining shelters at Grace Church in Kelseyville and Clearlake Senior Center in Clearlake, said Cynthia Shaw, spokeswoman for the American Red Cross Northern California Coastal region.

If the three shelters fill up, the organization will open more, she said.

Students in Cobb, Middletown and Hidden Valley Lake will be able to return to classes Monday, although as many as a third of the 1,500 students in the Middletown school district may be unable to get there.

'We think we may be down 400 or 500 kids,' Superintendent Catherine Stone said. Of the 160 students at Cobb Mountain Elementary, at least 60 lost their homes, she said.

The district's five schools survived the fire, but all required cleanup from the smoke and ash.

Cobb students initially will attend classes at Middletown Middle School, as their school requires major cleanup.

For complete wildfire coverage go to: www.pressdemocrat.com/wildfire

Staff Writer Robert Digitale contributed to this report. You can reach Staff Writer Guy Kovner at 521-5457 or guy.kovner@pressdemocrat.com. On Twitter @guykovner. You can reach Staff Writer Julie Johnson at 521-5220 or julie.johnson@pressdemocrat.com. On Twitter @jjpressdem.

Aid with temporary housing, home repair:

Residents affected by the Valley fire may sign up with the Federal Emergency Management Agency online at

www.DisasterAssistance.gov; via smartphone at m.fema.gov or by calling 800-621-3362.

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