Crime & Safety

Red Flag Warning Issued; Extra Fire Trucks Sent to Malibu

National Weather Service forecasters said winds might peak at 70 miles per hour on mountaintops, and in the canyons

Los Angeles County was sending extra fire trucks to Malibu on Sunday, as Santa Ana winds of 70 miles per hour were forecast, and a Red Flag Warning was posted for the mountains and canyons Sunday night.

National Weather Service forecasters said winds might peak at 70 miles per hour on mountaintops, and in the canyons, from the Hollywood Hills west through the Santa Monica Mountains.

The Santa Clarita Valley, including the tangle of freeways in the Newhall pass, was also predicted to see maximum wind gusts above 60 miles per hour tonight, the NWS said.

Find out what's happening in Malibufor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Temperatures above 80 degrees were also in the cards, and the desert air being compressed through the mountains would drop the humidity to below 10 percent, the forecasters said.

“Given this combination of strong offshore winds and low relative humidity, critical fire weather conditions are expected for most of Ventura and Los Angeles counties,” the NWS said in a statement issued at 9 a.m. It elevated the conditions from a fire watch to a full-fledged Red Flag Warning, to be in effect from 6 p.m. tonight to 6 p.m. Monday.

Find out what's happening in Malibufor free with the latest updates from Patch.

County firefighters said an additional strike team -- five fire trucks, 25 firefighters and a battalion commander -- were being sent to Malibu today. And extra crews were being called in today to fully staff all of the fire department’s water trucks.

Maximum gusts of 70 miles per hour were predicted for the hills, and 50 mph maximum gusts for the flatlands of the San Fernando Valley and the Los Angeles area south of the Hollywood Hills.

--City News Service

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.