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July 21, 2017 CapitalPress.com 7 Another Carlton wildfi re three years later By DAN WHEAT Capital Press Capital Press FRESNO — New product awards and a keynote address by “Supermarket Guru” Phil Lempert will highlight the seventh annual Fresno Food Expo on July 26-27. Introduced in 2011 by city leaders to promote San Joa- quin Valley agriculture, the expo aims to put producers from the eight-county region in touch with food service company buyers from around the world. Organizers have since add- ed an awards program for new products, varietals and pack- aging concepts, which this year has 28 entries. Winning last year’s Peo- ple’s Choice Award provided a boost to Terra Bella, Ca- lif.-based ARO Pistachios, chief executive offi cer Adam Orandi said. “Since our participation in the 2016 Fresno Food Expo, our e-commerce site has seen a 30 percent boom in activity and our company and rep- utation have been elevated into the international arena,” Orandi said in an email. “We are excited about the great opportunities this year’s expo will bring.” Winners of this year’s Buyer’s Choice and People’s Choice awards will be an- nounced at the July 26 open- ing reception for pre-regis- tered buyers and sponsors. Kicking off the expo at the Fresno Convention and En- tertainment Center will be a speech by Lempert, a food trends expert who hosts a weekly radio show. Lempert will discuss the new retail environment and the role of millennials and technology in the changing marketplace, according to or- ganizers. A trade show July 27 will showcase more than 140 area growers, producers, brewers and winemakers for entered buyers. Later that evening, a public portion, called Expo- licious, will allow local res- idents to sample foods from local producers. Participation by buyers has grown fi ve-fold since the ex- po’s inception, with more than 900 attending last year’s event, organizers say. “We have the most agricul- turally rich region in the nation, which has spurred the creation of innovative food companies and products that are unique to our region,” expo general manager David Nalchajian said in an email. “It just feels right to talk about that ... and the Fresno Food Expo gives us a local, national and interna- tional platform to do so.” Tickets for the public por- tion are $50. Visit www.fres- nofoodexpo.com. Courtesy Fresno Food Expo Attendees sample foods with ingredients grown in the San Joaquin Valley during the Fresno Food Expo in 2016. The seventh annual expo will be July 26-27. WASH. OKANOGAN NATIONAL FOREST 20 Area in detail Canyon Creek Fire, active* Okanogan Twisp 20 97 Carlton OKANOGAN 17 Carlton Complex Fire, 2014 Alt 97 Bridgeport 174 er By TIM HEARDEN Courtesy of Okanogan Emergency Management Canyon Creek Fire burns alongside State Route 153 north of Carlton, Wash., the evening of July 15. Firefi ghters hoped to contain the fi re at 1,200 acres. ia R iv Awards, speaker highlight seventh Fresno Food Expo C olu mb Courtesy of Fresno Food Expo Buyers from food service companies talk with San Joaquin Valley producers during the 2016 Fresno Food Expo. The seventh annual expo will be July 26-27. CARLTON, Wash. — Wildfi re burned about 1,200 acres north of Carlton in the Methow Valley July 15 and 16, destroying rangeland cat- tle grazing, a vacant house and recalling memories of the devastating Carlton Fire that occurred on the same dates three years earlier. The Canyon Creek Fire was reported at 12:18 p.m. July 15 about a mile north of Carlton along State Route 153, said Maurice Good- all, director of Okanogan County Emergency Manage- ment. That’s 23 miles up the Methow River from Pateros and six miles downriver from Twisp. “The cause hasn’t been determined but the thinking is it may have been sparks off a vehicle,” Goodall said. The fire spread up a steep hillside of tall, dried grass and sparse pine trees, burn- ing to the south, east and north, he said. It jumped the highway and the Methow River but was quickly stopped in that direction by firefighters of Okanogan County Fire Dis- trict No. 6, he said. A house was destroyed that had been vacant since it was damaged in flooding after the 2014 fire, Goodall said. An out building also burned. Helicopters, retardant planes and ground crews fought the fire and cool weather and shifting winds helped bring it moderate- ly under control by Sunday evening, July 16, he said. The main threat July 17 was expansion to the east, he said. The fire was 75 percent contained that evening with containment lines built with bulldozers and hand crews, according to the Southeast Washington Interagency In- cident Management Team. State Route 153 closed at the fire scene but was re- opened Monday and power was restored to most areas that lost power when power lines and poles burned. Evacuation notices to homes from Carlton to Ben- son Creek and into Texas Creek were reduced to be- ready-to-go on July 17, the Interagency team said. Firefighting personnel numbered 200 Sunday and 393 July 18 and were to be reduced because of signifi- cant reduction in fire activ- ity. Some smoky haze in the area Tuesday was from wild- fires in Canada, fire officials said. The terrain that burned was a mix of private, state and federal land with most of it rangeland grazing by the Gebbers family’s cattle, Goodall said. No cattle were lost, he said. A good portion of the acreage was also burned in the 2014 Carlton Fire and brought back memories and put people on edge, 172 DOUGLAS N 5 miles *As of July 18 Capital Press graphic Goodall said. “Today was the day we evacuated three years ago. So it’s sort of deja vu,” Deb Stennes, a Methow orchard- ist, said July 17. The Stenneses lost pow- er for a few hours but were some 10 miles from the fire and did not feel endangered, she said. In 2014, their homes were saved but they lost 20 acres of orchard, some irrigation pumps and 5.8 miles of deer fencing. The Carlton Complex Fire, ignited in several spots in the Methow Valley by lightning on July 14, 2014, spread rapidly on July 17, racing 30 miles down valley, burning numerous homes in Pateros and threatening Brewster. It’s estimated the fire at times covered 4 to 5 acres per second. It burned 256,108 acres, resulted in the deaths of two people, claimed ap- proximately 1,000 cattle and destroyed some 500 miles of fencing and mil- lions of board-feet of timber. It destroyed 277 primary residences, 50 cabins and knocked out electrical power to 3,602 customers for more than a week. The Gebbers family lost patriarch Danny Gebbers and sustained losses in tim- ber, cattle, fences and or- New Carlton Fire lawsuit fi led By DAN WHEAT Capital Press OKANOGAN, Wash. — More than 200 people have fi led a lawsuit over losses they sustained from the 2014 Carlton Complex Fire. The lawsuit was fi led in Okanogan County Superior Court on July 14, three years to the day after the fi re started. Some 206 plaintiffs allege the state Department of Nat- ural Resources was negligent in responding to and fi ghting the fi re, which resulted in the loss of property and timber and emotional distress. The suit seeks damages to be proven at a jury trial. Total losses exceed $75 million, their attorney, Alex Thomason, of Brewster and Seattle, has estimated. The suit is in addition to one Thomason fi led in Novem- ber 2015 on behalf of two plaintiffs after DNR denied all the plaintiffs’ claims. If the initial suit were successful it would establish state liability for the rest of the claims, Thomason said in 2015. He now says liability will be litigated in court. The 2015 suit is proceeding into discovery. He said he has no opinion on whether the two cases will be joined. The Gebbers family of Brewster, owners of large tree fruit, cattle and timber holdings, are not part of either law- suit. The family estimated its losses in the fi re in the millions of dollars. Gebbers’ companies were reimbursed $1.8 million by DNR for fi ghting the 2014 fi re from the ground and air and received government assistance for some of its losses. The lawsuits allege one of several lightning-caused fi res started on DNR property, that neighbors promptly notifi ed DNR and that it was negligent in responding and containing the fi re. Furthermore, the suit alleges that DNR refused local as- sistance and abandoned fi re lines early in an evening and did not return until morning. DNR has denied negligence in the initial lawsuit, saying resources were pulled from the fi re for safety reasons and that it is not liable since it works for the public, not individ- uals or groups. DNR claims any liability that is found is the fault of plaintiffs and any negligence was caused by people not par- ty to the lawsuit. The DNR has asked the court to dismiss the case. Thomason has said the suit presents important political and legal questions, chief among them whether the state is responsible like any landowner or if it has special rules al- lowing it to manage its land however it wants even if it re- sults in the destruction of neighboring property. chards estimated at $15.4 million to $17.8 million. In 2015, 600,000 acres burned and nearly 300 cattle died in wildfires in Okano- gan County. More than 1 million acres, about one-third of the county, burned in the two summers, costing millions of dollars in losses of public and private timber and the loss of thousands of acres of rangeland grazing for several years, causing ranchers to re- duce herds and buy more hay. Ranchers were highly critical of state and federal fi refi ght- ing efforts. Recovery efforts continue. 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