Bonny Doon Residents Can Go Home

Cost of fire stand at $6.2 million

Cal Fire crews on the Lockheed wildfire lines reported significant progress Sunday.  They have the Santa Cruz County fire 50-percent contained. 

And that was only the beginning of the good news Sunday.  Starting at 3 p.m. residents of Bonny Doon were allowed back to their homes.  Law enforcement set up shop at Alba Road and Empire Grade, Empire Grade and Ice Cream Grade and Bonny Doon at Pine Flat to check IDs and say "welcome home."   The threat of the fire to town of 2,400 is no longer immenent.

Among those who have been out of their homes are Laurie and Joel Spray.  They live on Bonny Doon Road and have been staying with friends in the nearby Ben Lomond area.

The couple spent Saturday in the Felton and Scotts Valley area, Joel Spray said, nearly 10 miles from the site of the fire.

"It was so smoky and acrid," he said. The view of the mountains was entirely obscured by smoke, he said.

Cal Fire still estimates the fire will take another week to fully contain.  It is called the Lockheed fire because Lockheed has a facility near the area where the fire is burning.

Smoke continues to fill the air through much of Santa Cruz and Monterey Counties as firefighters continued to battle the blaze in steep, rugged terrain.   Smoke could be seen and smelled in the Santa Clara Valley over the weekend, but it was coming from a fire burning east of Livermore and not the Santa Cruz fire.  Smoke from the Lockheed fire is traveling south and away from the Bay Area.

The fire in the Santa Cruz Mountains has blackened close to 10 square miles of remote wilderness since Wednesday and prompted mandatory evacuations for Bonny Doon as well as several mountain wineries.

Major problems and concerns for Cal Fire continue to be the weather, steep terrain and limited access to the fire's perimeter. "Conditions continue to be very fluid and may change quickly based on weather factor," according to a press release.

The fire has cost $6.2 million to fight so far and it is still not known how it started.

In June 2008, the Martin Fire burned more than 600 acres and  forced the evacuation of 1,500 Bonny Doon residents.

On Saturday the state's action star turned governor promised to put the flames out.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger got an up close look at the Lockheed fire in Santa Cruz County as fires continued to rage across the state. Schwarzenegger promised swift action and support from the state to put the fires out.

The Governator promised to terminate the flames by sending more than 6,800 fire personal statewide to battle flames across California. He also said 68 helicopters, 711 fire engines and 46 fixed winged aircrafts would be deployed to help fight the fires aross the state.

“My administration is doing all we can to ensure the state has the emergency response resources in place to respond quickly to the Lockheed fire and to fires that continue to burn throughout the state,” the governor said. “California has the best and bravest firefighters working on the front lines to protect our citizens and I am confident that they will beat back these fires like they have done in years past.”

The governor's office said on Saturday that more than 117,152 acres have burned across California since Aug. 1 and as many as 3,100 residents have been evacuated from their homes.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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