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Luck, readiness pay off in Santa Barbara's Mission Canyon

Hundreds of homes are set in a narrow canyon downwind from brush-covered wildlands, but evacuation drills, brush clearance and reverse 911 calls all help avert a major disaster.

May 08, 2009|Bettina Boxall and Catherine Saillant

SANTA BARBARA — Everyone in Mission Canyon knew these days of flame and smoke would come. It was just a matter of when and how bad it would get.

They had staged evacuation drills, set up phone trees and put herds of brush-munching goats to work. They had cut down clusters of eucalyptus and bought metal shutters to protect against flying embers.


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By Thursday, the Jesusita fire had scorched the canyon's green umbrella and destroyed dozens of homes. But there were no deaths and most of the hundreds of houses in the rustic enclave were still standing.

Luck and readiness played their parts in averting a full-blown catastrophe. The blaze didn't start burning homes until the second day, giving residents time to evacuate.

"It could have been considerably worse," said Santa Barbara County Fire Chief Tom Franklin. "If there's any community that is prepared, it's Mission Canyon."

Residents know they live in a firetrap and can never escape the potential for a fiery disaster. Hundreds of homes are set in a narrow canyon downwind from brush-covered wildlands. A winding web of side streets empties into the same few exits established in the 1920s, when the canyon's population was a fraction of what it is today.

That is a recipe for another Oakland Hills calamity, the 1991 firestorm that destroyed nearly 3,000 structures and killed 25 people, many as they tried to flee in their cars down traffic-choked roads.

But when Ralph Daniel drove his SUV out of the canyon about 4 p.m. Tuesday, the drive "wasn't bad at all."

He had gone to his house after the president of the neighborhood association phoned him about flames. While he packed his car, he got a reverse 911 call advising evacuation.

"I've been mentally conditioning myself to not be so attached to my possessions," Daniel said.

He was impressed with the reverse 911 calls, but "disappointed that there weren't more airplanes sooner."

Franklin shared that disappointment. The fire chief said the state's big DC-10 supertanker "would be completely ineffective in this terrain." But he said he would have liked to see federal air tankers joining the county helicopters and small planes dropping water and retardant Tuesday.

"We haven't declared high fire season yet. We were just about to," Franklin said. "So that means air resources from the federal and state are just gearing up."

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