EVACUATION INFORMATION UPDATE Plumas County Sheriff 8272020 at 10 am
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Publication Type: Announcement
EVACUATION AND ROAD CLOSURE INFORMATION
MANDATORY EVACUATION ORDERS have been issued for the following areas:
• QUINCY LAPORTE ROAD from Thompson Creek south to Red Bridge (Middle Fork of the Feather River.
• Highway 70: From Massack Rest Area to Spring Garden
• COMMUNITY OF SPRING GARDEN
• COMMUNITY OF GREENHORN RANCH
EVACUATION ADVISORIES ARE IN EFFECT for the following areas:
• EAST QUINCY, south of Lee Road from Radio Hill Road east.
o To include EAST QUINCY, south of Highway 70 between Millcreek (to include Mill Creek Road and Forest View Drive) extending east to Quincy LaPorte Road.
• Chandler Road (east e11)d, from Highway 70 east to Carol Lane East.
• COMMUNITY OF SLOAT
• COMMUNITY OF CROMBERG
• Bucks Lake: Big Creek Road from the Mount Ararat Road to Bucklin Road (to include Countryman Drive and Grizzly Loop) and Bucks Lake Road south of the Old Transfer Station Rd (Timberline Lodge) extending to the area of the On Top Mine to include the BucksHighlands area.
• Quincy LaPorte Road from Highway 70 south to Thompson Creek.
• Quincy LaPorte Road from Quincy LaPorte Road & Highway 70 to Massack.
ROAD CLOSURES AND INFORMATION
• NEW Quincy LaPorte Road fro1n Hwy 70 to Tho1npson Creek is open to RESIDENTS ONLY
• Quincy LaPorte Road fro1n Tho1npson Creek to Red Bridge is CLOSED
• Peppard Flat Road (The dirt portion) is CLOSED
SHELTER INFORMATION
None at this time; however, we are prepared to open one at any time.
If you need assistance with animals, contact Plumas County Animal Services at 283-3673. Large animals/livestock can also be accommodated.
THE ABOVE INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE AT ANY TIME
Claremont Fire AM UPDATE 8272020
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Publication Type: News
AUGUST 27, 2020 8 am
Claremont and Bear – Morning Update
Acres: 26,013 combined (Claremont 20,697; Bear 5,176) Contained: Claremont 30%; Bear 0%
Resources: 11 dozers, 74 engines, 7 hand crews, 7 helicopters, 9 water tenders, and 551 total personnel. These resources are shared with the North Complex.
Current Situation on the Claremont: Firefighters made significant progress yet again and containment on the Claremont Fire is up to 30% as crews work to pinch the fire off and steer it into manageable terrain. With protection of local communities one of the top priorities, personnel are working to button up the eastern section of the fire as winds shift today and become more westerly and humidity drops today.
Current Situation on the Bear: The Bear fire remains active. Firefighters are working to build line north of the fire to prevent any push toward Quincy. The fire is actively burning in an area with little to no fire history – north of the Middle Fork of the Feather River, 1 mile northwest of Butte Bar Campground and 1.5 miles southeast of Lookout Rock.
Evacuations: Mandatory Evacuations are in place for the following locations according to the Plumas County Sheriff’s Office: Quincy Laporte Road from Thompson Creek south to Red Bridge (Middle fork of the Feather River.); Highway 70: From Massack to Spring Garden; Spring Garden Community; Greenhorn Ranch Community.
Evacuation Advisories are in effect for the following: Bucks Lake Big Creek Road from the Mount Ararat Road to Bucklin Road (to include Countryman Drive and Grizzly Loop) and Bucks Lake Road south of the Old Transfer Station Rd (Timberline Lodge) extending to the area of the On Top Mine to include the Bucks Highlands area; Quincy Laporte Road from Highway 70 south to Thompson Creek; Quincy Laporte Road from Highway to Massack; East Quincy, south of Lee Road from Radio Hill Road east. (to include East Quincy, south of Highway 70 between Mill Creek (to include mill Creek Road and Forest View Drive) extending east to Quincy Laporte Road; Chandler Road (east end) from Highway 70 east to Carol Lane East; Sloat Community; Cromberg Community.
Plumas County launched a Claremont Fire Evacuation Information website as an online resource to view the fire map, current evacuation zones, sign up for Code Red, follow links to USFS fire incidents pages, and find the Sheriff’s Office Facebook page. http://mgo.ms/s/yokm6
The evacuation shelter in Quincy has been closed.
Road Closure: Highway 70 currently is open in both directions with a police escort from Quincy La Porte Road to Spring Garden. Quincy La Porte Road from Highway 70 to Red Bridge and Peppard Flat Road (dirt portion) remain closed. The Pacific Crest Trail from Onion Valley to Bucks Summit remains closed as does Thompson Creek Road (Forest Road 24N26) and Red Bridge Campground. For further information on closures go to: https://www.fs.usda.gov/alerts/plumas/alerts-notices.
For immediate text notifications sign up for the Plumas County’s CodeRed Emergency Alert System on their website at https://www.plumascounty.us/2163/. Visit CalTrans at quickmap.dot.ca.gov or call 1-800-427-7623 for the latest maps and information of road closures in your area.
Weather: Today brings a change in the weather pattern as hotter, drier conditions move in. With lower humidity and increased heat comes the potential for increased fire activity and the likelihood residents and visitors will see larger smoke columns than in recent days. While humidities will dip into the 15-25% range, winds will remain relatively calm and be west in the morning, shifting to northwest later in the day.
Air Quality: Quincy and Susanville can expect continued higher levels of smoke while other areas near the North Complex should see moderate and “unhealthy for sensitive groups” levels of smoke. Widespread haze continues to linger but improved mixing heights should help dissipate some of the smoke. Terrain driven winds are expected to turn westerly in the afternoon and west-northwest in the evening. Smoke is expected to spread around quite a bit.
COVID-19: California Interagency Incident Management Team 1 has implemented precautionary measures to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in both fire camp and the surrounding communities.
Claremont Fire PM UPDATE 8262020
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Publication Type: News
AUGUST 26, 2020 8 pm
Claremont and Bear – Evening Update
Acres: 25,324 combined (Claremont 20,423; Bear 4,901) Contained: Claremont 7%; Bear 0%
Resources: 11 dozers, 74 engines, 7 handcrews, 7 helicopters, 9 water tenders, and 551 total personnel. These resources are shared with the North Complex.
Current Situation on the Claremont: Residents in the La Porte Road area were allowed to return to their homes as the evacuation order for that section reduced from mandatory to an advisory as crews continued to gain ground in terms of building containment line. Highway 70 is open to traffic in both directions with law enforcement escort. Fire activity increased during the afternoon hours with the primary growth in the southwest corner of the fire south of Highway 70 and west of Spring Garden. Firefighters will continue to patrol and mop up and reinforce firelines where applicable overnight.
Current Situation on the Bear: Crews continued to build a defensive line along Slate Creek Spur on the north side of the fire in an effort to catch any threat of it moving north toward Quincy as well as build indirect line on the west side of the fire. The fire remains active and is backing through significant fuels in an area that has little to no fire history. The fire currently is north of the Middle Fork of the Feather River 1 mile northwest of Butte Bar Campground and 1.5 miles southeast of Lookout Rock.
Evacuations: Evacuation Advisory Alerts remain in effect for the communities of Cromberg and Sloat. Residents there should make preparations to evacuate. The mandatory evacuation order was MODIFIED to ADVISORY STATUS Tuesday for East Quincy, south of Highway 70 between Mill Creek (to include Mill Creek Road and Forest View Drive) extending east to Quincy La Porte Road. All other evacuation orders and advisories remain in effect.
Plumas County launched a Claremont Fire Evacuation Information website as an online resource to view the fire map, current evacuation zones, sign up for Code Red, follow links to USFS fire incidents pages, and find the Sheriff’s Office Facebook page. http://mgo.ms/s/yokm6
The evacuation shelter in Quincy has been closed.
Road Closure: Highway 70 is currently open in both directions with a police escort from Quincy La Porte Road to Spring Garden. Quincy La Porte Road from Highway 70 to Red Bridge and Peppard Flat Road (dirt portion) remain closed. The Pacific Crest Trail from Onion Valley to Bucks Summit remains closed. For further information on closures go to: https://www.fs.usda.gov/alerts/plumas/alerts-notices.
For immediate text notifications sign up for the Plumas County’s CodeRed Emergency Alert System on their website at https://www.plumascounty.us/2163/. Visit CalTrans at quickmap.dot.ca.gov or call 1-800-427-7623 for the latest maps and information of road closures in your area.
Weather: Overnight, winds will be generally west-southwest at 5-10mph in the lower elevations and southwest at 5-10 gusting to 15 on the upper slopes. Hotter, drier weather is forecast to start Thursday and continuing through the weekend with temperatures increasing by roughly 10 degrees throughout the area. Southeast air flow Friday will bring a slight chance of slow-moving thunderstorms. Otherwise, hot and dry will be the theme this weekend into early next week.
Air Quality: Quincy and Susanville continue to be impacted by Unhealthy to Hazardous levels of smoke. Southwest winds should keep smoke moving to the northeast of the fires. For more information on air quality and to see monitors near you, visit Airnow or the California Smoke Blog. For more information on what you can do to protect yourself and loved ones, visit the EPA's site on fires and your health. Your local health department is also a good source of information.
COVID-19: California Interagency Incident Management Team 1 has implemented precautionary measures to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in both fire camp and the surrounding communities.
EVACUATION INFORMATION UPDATE Plumas County Sheriff 82620 900 AM
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Publication Type: Announcement
AUGUST 26 AT 9AM
This is the most current fire, Evacuation and Road Closure information for Plumas County related to the #ClaremontFire and the #BearFire. This post supersedes and/or affirms all earlier posts.The #ClaremontFire made slight progress overnight and fire crews continued to build more dozer line. Significant progress was made to fire line south west of the community of Greenhorn in the area of Squirrel Creek to strengthen its protection. The fire slowly burnt to the north east overnight but made no significant runs or spots. After lengthy discussions with the USFS we are modifying the Quincy LaPorte Road evacuation area to ADVISORY STATUS WITH MODIFICATIONS. RESIDENTS ONLY that reside from Thompson Creek north to Highway 70 will be allowed to return to their homes or access this area. We ask that those residents in this area restrict their travel on LaPorte road to essential travel only and use extreme caution when traveling as there is still increased fire personnel activity on LaPorte road. Reduce travel speeds to insure safe travel. Residents from the intersection of LaPorte road to Massack return to ADVISORY STATUS. Residents in that area may return to their homes. The CHP will be doing increased patrol on Highway 70 and motorists NEED to reduce speed. There will be a reduced speed limit to 35MPH until further notice. *RESIDENTS IN THESE AREAs NEED TO CONSISTANTLY MONITOR LOCAL FIRE INFORMATION AND BE PREPAIRED FOR POSSIBLE CHANGES*The #BearFire has burnt to the west and the north east growing to around 4,800 acres. This morning we issued an evacuation ADVISORY for a portion of the Bucks Lake community: Big Creek Road from the Mount Ararat Road to Bucklin Road (to include Countryman Drive and Grizzly Loop) and Bucks Lake Road south of the Old Transfer Station Rd (Timberline Lodge) extending to the area of the On Top Mine to include the Bucks Highlands area. Today’s weather will be like yesterday with mostly clear skies (aside from smoke) and the smoke will continue to blow in a north, north east direction. Today will be the coolest of the five days with temperatures in a slow rise.Remember we have created an interactive Map Link (induvial addresses can be put into this map to see where it falls)http://mgo.ms/s/yokm6
Smoke Outlook UPDATE August 26
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Publication Type: News
see related file for smoke outlook.
Claremont Fire AM UPDATE 8262020
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Publication Type: News
Acres: 25,324 combined (Claremont 20,423; Bear 4,901) Contained: Claremont 7%; Bear 0%
Resources: 14 dozers, 63 engines, 9 handcrews, 7 helicopters, 9 water tenders, and 527 total personnel. These resources are shared with the North Complex.There will be a virtual community meeting tonight at 5 p.m. Representatives from the Fire Management team will be available to provide updates on the North Complex fires: Sheep, Claremont, & Bear. Join the live Zoom meeting at https://usfs.zoomgov.com/j/1607397992
Current Situation on the Claremont: Crews worked overnight to reinforce gains made throughout the day due to favorable weather conditions and increased crew capacity. Today, crews will continue to work to increase containment by reinforcing dozer line heading around the west and southwest perimeter of the fire. The south side of the fire is moving into an old fire area with less fuel to burn, so is moving slowly. Crews will continue to work on building dozer and hand line in and near Greenhorn and Spring Garden to protect residences in the event of a fire breakover.
Current Situation on the Bear: Crews will continue to strengthen a defensive line along Slate Creek Spur on the north side of the fire in an effort to catch any threat of it moving north towards Quincy. They will also work to keep the fire from moving east where it crossed Little Bear Creek. The fire is currently held north of the Middle Fork of the Feather River. The Bear Fire is located on the Pacific Crest Trail, 1-mile northwest of Butte Bar Campground and 1.5 southeast of Lookout Rock.
Evacuations: Evacuation Advisory Alerts remain in effect for the communities of Cromberg and Sloat. Residents there should make preparations to evacuate. The mandatory evacuation order was MODIFIED to ADVISORY STATUS yesterday for East Quincy, south of Highway 70 between Millcreek (to include Mill Creek Road and Forest View Drive) extending east to Quincy La Porte Road. All other evacuation orders and advisories remain in effect. Plumas County launched a Claremont Fire Evacuation Information website as an online resource to view the fire map, current evacuation zones, sign up for Code Red, follow links to USFS fire incidents pages, and find the Sheriff’s Office Facebook page. http://mgo.ms/s/yokm6 The shelter in Quincy has been closed.
Road Closure: Hwy 70 is currently open with a police escort from Quincy La Porte Road to Spring Garden. Quincy La Porte Road from Hwy 70 to Red Bridge and Peppard Flat Road (dirt portion) remain closed. The Pacific Crest Trail from Onion Valley to Bucks Summit remains closed. For further information on closures go to: https://www.fs.usda.gov/alerts/plumas/alerts-notices.
For immediate text notifications sign up for the Plumas County’s CodeRed Emergency Alert System on their website at https://www.plumascounty.us/2163/. Visit CalTrans at quickmap.dot.ca.gov or call 1-800-427-7623 for the latest maps and information of road closures in your area.
Weather: It will be mostly sunny today with mild temperatures and modest relative humidities. Winds will be terrain driven until early to mid-afternoon, and then will become generally southwest once again. It's likely to become hotter and drier Thursday into the weekend with temperatures jumping 10 degrees for highs. Dry conditions will lead to bigger diurnal temperature ranges later this week into the weekend. Southeast flow Friday will bring a slight chance of slow moving thunderstorms. Otherwise, hot and dry will be the theme this weekend into early next week.
Air Quality: Quincy and Susanville continue to be impacted by Unhealthy to Hazardous levels of smoke. Southwest winds should keep smoke moving to the northeast of the fires. For more information on air quality and to see monitors near you, visit Airnow or the California Smoke Blog. For more information on what you can do to protect yourself and loved ones, visit the EPA's site on fires and your health. Your local health department is also a great source of information!
COVID-19: California Interagency Incident Management Team 1 has implemented precautionary measures to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in both fire camp and the surrounding communities.
Claremont Fire PM UPDATE 8252020
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Publication Type: News
AUGUST 25, 2020 8pm
NorthComplex Information: (530) 316-4487; 7am-10pm Email:2020.northcomplex.info@firenet.gov
InciWeb: Claremont - inciweb.nwcg.gov/incident/6996 Bear - inciweb.nwcg.gov/incident/7025
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/USFSPlumas
Claremont and Bear – Evening Update
Acres: 22,359 combined (Claremont 18,221; Bear 4,138) Contained: Claremont 7%; Bear 0%
Resources: 14 dozers, 63 engines, 9 hand crews, 7 helicopters, 9 water tenders, and 527 total personnel. These resources are shared with the North Complex.
Current Situation on the Claremont: Crews reinforced dozer lines on the north side of the fire below Quincy enough to consider a portion of that line contained. The fire did not move much on the southeast side near Spring Garden, east of Hwy 70. Crews there were prepped to knock down spots if winds picked up and had some activity but were able to hold the fire in place. Crews were also active building dozer and hand line in and near Greenhorn and Spring Garden to protect residences there in the event of a fire breakover. Tonight, crews will continue to reinforce gains made throughout the day due to favorable weather conditions and increase crew capacity.
Current Situation on the Bear: Crews worked to strengthen a defensive line along Slate Creek Spur on the north side of the fire in an effort to catch any threat of the fire moving north towards Quincy. The fire has crossed Little Bear Creek on the west side but has been held on the south side at the Middle Fork of the Feather River. The Bear Fire is located on the Pacific Crest Trail, 1-mile northwest of Butte Bar Campground and 1.5 southeast of Lookout Rock.
Evacuations: Evacuation Advisory Alert remains in effect for the communities of Cromberg and Sloat. Residents there should make preparations to evacuate. The mandatory evacuation order was MODIFIED to ADVISORY STATUS late this morning for East Quincy, south of Highway 70 between Millcreek (to include Mill Creek Road and Forest View Drive) extending east to Quincy La Porte Road. All other evacuation orders and advisories remain in effect. Please remember the Claremont and Bear Fires are still very active with little containment. Please be vigilant to weather and wind conditions in this area, and take any future orders seriously, should they change. For the latest evacuation information, visit the Plumas County Sheriff’s Facebook page - facebook.com/plumascountysheriff. For questions about whether your address is under mandatory, warning, or lifted status, please call NorthComplex Information at (530) 316-4487. The shelter in Quincy has been closed.
Road Closure: Hwy 70 is currently open with a police escort from Quincy LaPorte Road to Spring Garden. Quincy LaPorte Road from Hwy 70 to Red Bridge and Peppard Flat Road (dirt portion) remain closed. The Pacific Crest Trail from Onion Valley to Bucks Summit remains closed. For further information on closures go to: https://www.fs.usda.gov/alerts/plumas/alerts-notices.
For immediate text notifications sign up for the Plumas County’s CodeRed Emergency Alert System on their website at https://www.plumascounty.us/2163/. Visit CalTrans at quickmap.dot.ca.gov or call 1-800-427-7623 for the latest maps and information of road closures in your area.
Weather: Smoke and haze from wildfires will continue to impact air quality and temperatures over interior Northern California for the next several days. Expect, overall dry weather this week, but a few late day storms will be possible over the mountains into mid-week, and slightly above average high temperatures.
Air Quality: Heaviest impacts will again be in areas closest to the fires. Lingering smoke may be dense at times in the valleys but thinning is expected, especially south of fires. As fires become more active later in the day, areas will see heavier impacts in the evening into overnight as smoke settles into valleys and local drainages. For more information on air quality and to see monitors near you, visit Airnow or the California Smoke Blog. For more information on what you can do to protect yourself and loved ones, visit the EPA's site on fires and your health. Your local health department is also a great source of information!
COVID-19: California Interagency Incident Management Team 1 has implemented precautionary measures to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in both fire camp and the surrounding communities
North Complex VIRTUAL COMMUNITY MEETING 8262020
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Publication Type: News
The North Complex is inviting you to a scheduled ZoomGov meeting.
Topic: North Complex Virtual Community MeetingTime: Aug 26, 2020 05:00 PM Pacific Time (US and Canada)
There will be a virtual community meeting tonight at 5 p.m. Representatives from the Fire Management team will be available to provide updates on the North Complex fires: Sheep, Claremont, & Bear.
Join ZoomGov Meetinghttps://usfs.zoomgov.com/j/1607397992
Meeting ID: 160 739 7992One tap mobile+16692545252,,1607397992# US (San Jose)+16468287666,,1607397992# US (New York)
Dial by your location +1 669 254 5252 US (San Jose) +1 646 828 7666 US (New York)Meeting ID: 160 739 7992Find your local number: https://usfs.zoomgov.com/u/acuLVPvhPu
Join by SIP1607397992@sip.zoomgov.com
Join by H.323161.199.138.10 (US West)161.199.136.10 (US East)5261100.140Meeting ID: 160 739 7992
EVACUATION UPDATE INFORMATION Plumas County Sheriff 82520 1000AM
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Publication Type: News
EVACUATION UPDATE INFORMATION - Plumas County Sheriff 8-25-20 10:00AM
The Mandatory Evacuation Order for EAST QUINCY, south of Highway 70 between Millcreek (to include Mill Creek Road and Forest View Drive) extending East to Quincy La Porte Road is being MODIFIED to ADVISORY STATUS.
Residents may return to their homes at this time.
All other Evacuation orders and advisements remain in place.
Claremont Fire AM UPDATE 8252020
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Claremont and Bear – Morning Update
Acres: 21,324 combined (Claremont 17,906; Bear 3,418)
Resources: 14 dozers, 68 engines, 8 hand crews, 7 helicopters, 6 water tenders, and 517 total personnel. These resources are shared with the North Complex.
Current Situation on the Claremont: As the Claremont Fire moved east last night, it spread towards Hwy 70, which triggered a new Evacuation Advisory for the communities of Cromberg and Sloat (about 150 structures threatened). The south side of the fire moving along the Feather River is in very challenging terrain, and is now within ½ mile southwest of Hwy 70. The breakover at Massack Rest Area and Hwy 70 now has good dozer line around the slope. Today, crews will work to reinforce that dozer line as well as a large stretch of completed dozer line on the west side of the fire from Quincy down to Claremont in an effort to keep it from moving north. Expect additional Hwy 70 closures and Union Pacific rail closures today. The Claremont Fire is located south of Quincy, CA and north of the Middle Fork of the Feather River.
Current Situation on the Bear: The Bear Fire continues to move aggressively to the north and west up Bear Creek and along Forest Road 23N19 as it moves around constructed dozer line. There was a spot fire across Little Bear Creek where crews were trying to keep it from moving to the north. The Bear Fire is located on the Pacific Crest Trail, 1-mile northwest of Butte Bar Campground and 1.5 southeast of Lookout Rock.
Weather: Lingering moisture and instability will lead to a slight chance of showers and thunderstorms this afternoon into early this evening. The greatest threat for showers and thunderstorms over the North Complex will be in the afternoon hours. It is most likely, however, that showers and thunderstorms will remain north and east of the area similar to Monday. It's still possible that winds could affect the area in the afternoon and building smoke columns are likely to lead to some erratic and gusty winds in the heat of the afternoon and evening.
Air Quality: Heaviest impacts will again be in areas closest to the fires. Lingering smoke may be dense at times in the valleys but thinning is expected, especially south of fires. As fires become more active later in the day, areas will see heavier impacts in the evening into overnight as smoke settles into valleys and local drainages. For a fire and smoke map, go to https://fire.airnow.gov/
Evacuations: Evacuation Advisory Alert is in effect for the communities of Cromberg and Sloat. Residents there should make preparations to evacuate. Evacuation orders in East Quincy remain in effect. For the latest evacuation information, visit the Plumas County Sheriff’s Facebook page - facebook.com/plumascountysheriff.
Quincy High School remains an Evacuation Center for local residences. No small animals are able to be accommodated at the high school. Portola Station Baptist Church (171 S Guiling St.) is serving as an evacuation center for residents of Greenhorn and Spring Garden.
Road Closure: Highway 70 remained CLOSED between Spring Garden and La Porte Road, but escorted groups were allowed through by the California Highway Patrol as conditions allow. La Porte Road and Thompson Creek Road remain closed. Union Pacific Railroad also has a closure affected by the fire. The Pacific Crest Trail from Onion Valley to Bucks Summit remains closed. For further information on closures go to: https://www.fs.usda.gov/alerts/plumas/alerts-notices
For immediate text notifications sign up for the Plumas County’s CodeRed Emergency Alert System on their website at https://www.plumascounty.us/2163/. Evacuation questions should be directed to your County Sheriff's office non-emergency number. Plumas County Sheriff’s Office: (530) 283-6375.
Visit CalTrans at quickmap.dot.ca.gov or call 1-800-427-7623 for the latest maps and information of road closures in your area.
COVID-19: California Interagency Incident Management Team 1 has implemented precautionary measures to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in both fire camp and the surrounding communities.