Back Bay fire extinguished quickly
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Mathis Winkler
UPPER NEWPORT BAY -- Twenty-one firefighters from Newport Beach, Costa
Mesa and Orange County battled a half-acre brush fire on the bluffs near
the intersection of Irvine Avenue and Santiago Drive on Saturday.
Unlike a December 1998 fire -- Newport Beach’s biggest -- in almost
the same location, which spread over 10 acres and threatened 20 homes, no
homes were in danger during Saturday’s blaze, said Capt. John Blauer, a
spokesman for the Newport Beach Fire Department. He added that department
officials are still investigating the cause of the fire.
It took six fire engines and two helicopters about 25 minutes to get
the flames under control, Blauer said. He added that residents had first
called about the fire at 4:23 p.m.
The last flames, some of them reaching heights of six feet, were
extinguished less than an hour later, Blauer said.
An engine from Newport Beach fire station No. 6 arrived first on the
scene, closely followed by firefighters from fire station No. 7 in Santa
Ana Heights, Blauer said.
Firefighters began battling the fire with water hoses and later used
shovels and rakes to put out the flames. The two helicopters assisted
with water drops from the air.
Blauer said that the fire had been brought under control swiftly
because the three agencies involved coordinated their efforts. Having two
fire engines respond almost at the same time also helped, he added. Fire
station No. 7 celebrated its grand opening earlier on Saturday.
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