There is no timeline as to when residents will be allowed to return home, according to a release from the Florida Forest Service.
Another fire even closer to Panama City, the Adkins Avenue fire in Bay County was 40% contained as of Monday, FFS said. Two homes have been destroyed and 12 more were damaged.
Damage from a 2018 hurricane was hampering the firefighting.
Hurricane Michael was a Category 5 storm and “left 2.8 million acres of trees broken, uprooted,” state Commissioner of Agriculture and Consumer Services Nikki Fried said Saturday.
“The blowdown timber from Michael makes it very difficult to fight wildfires in our area,” Bay County Emergency Services said in a statement. “Fires that would normally be contained quickly grow rapidly as there is so much fuel on the ground.”
More materials arrive to combat the flames
Additional resources have been brought to the area to combat the fires, DeSantis said, noting some first responders had suffered injuries.
“We’ve got four National Guard air assets: two Black Hawks and two Chinooks. They are working, and they have a positive impact,” DeSantis said Sunday. Crews have dropped more than 103,000 gallons of water on the Adkins Avenue fire since Friday, officials said.
“Firefighters and emergency personnel are working around the clock to help fire suppression efforts, including seven aircraft,” Bay County Emergency Services said on Monday afternoon.
“Additionally, a strike team of heavy bulldozers is focusing on building fire lines and defensible space around the communities near Bear Creek,” the agency said.
The situation on the ground remains dynamic and changes are called for very quickly, Bay County Sheriff Tommy Ford said Sunday.
“Last night, we had to initiate an evacuation in the area of Bear Creek that was due to the fire up there moving closely. We’ve had to initiate some additional evacuations today due to a fire in the area of Tram Road,” Ford said, adding crews are “still fighting that as we speak.”
Ford said the Bay County Jail is “not in immediate danger, but we do have a very robust plan in place” and will have buses on “standby should that (evacuation) become necessary.”
An additional fire in the area, the Star Avenue Fire, was at 250 acres Monday and 45% contained. A veterans nursing home in the area was evacuated because of it, FFS said. No houses or other structures have been damaged, according to the agency.
Chief of Bay County Emergency Services Brad Monroe said Sunday his county’s situation remains serious and encouraged residents to heed evacuation orders.
“It is just hard to believe that something could be that big. If you fly around it, it is just incredible. It is hard to comprehend just how big, strong and fierce this fire is, and the winds have been variable throughout the last few days. We expect that again tomorrow,” Monroe said.
Investigators are working to determine the cause of the fire and a burn ban has been issued for Bay County. There are currently 171 wildfires burning more than 15,000 acres throughout Florida, FFS said.
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