UPDATE: ON Monday morning, November 17, Montecito Fire Department Chief Kevin Wallace clarified the situation regarding the Sycamore Canyon Road gate. The fire was first reported at 5:45 p.m. Fire Marshall Jim Langhorn arrived at and opened the bottom gate at Sycamore Canyon Road at 6:03 p.m., according to Wallace, and Curtis Vincent was at the top gate “shortly thereafter.” Some people were trying to get up into the canyon from the bottom gate, which was supposed to be used exclusively for evacuation; so at 6:06 p.m., the Montecito Fire Department asked the Santa Barbara Police Department to help direct traffic. (This story was originally published Friday, November 14, at 10:03 p.m.)
Outside San Marcos High School’s Red Cross shelter Friday, sitting with homeowners’ insurance agents under makeshift tents, people whose homes burned to the ground Thursday night were grappling with reality. A handful of those who live on Conejo Road, at the intersection of Sycamore Canyon Road and Stanwood Drive, recalled hair-raising exits from their neighborhood that they said could have been easy if a controversial gate blocking Sycamore Canyon Road had been immediately opened as promised. The gate was installed in 2004 because the hillside along Sycamore Canyon Road repeatedly, and dangerously, slid down over the pavement. Residents complained at the time that the gate was a fire hazard, yet were assured it would be opened by Caltrans, who has authority over the Santa Barbara end of Sycamore Canyon Road, including the gate, in the event a fire erupted. That was not borne out Thursday.
Katie Ingersoll was one such resident. She’d just returned home from a Bank of America appointment where—ironically enough—she had completed a refinance negotiation for her house at 533 Conejo Road. (The documents were to be signed Monday, though Ingersoll wonders if the arrangement holds now that the house is gone. Bank representatives had yet to return her calls regarding the question.) After finishing dinner with her son Grey, 12, Ingersoll got a call alerting her that a fire was very close. Just how close she could never have imagined. Checking outside, the sound of sirens ripped through the air and enormous flames were immediately visible beyond the adjacent hill. They ran inside to begin collecting essentials: lap tops, memorabilia, the odd piece of art. Grey grabbed his electric guitar and trombone and a friend’s amplifier he’d borrowed.
Ingersoll was in the process of grabbing a box of legal documents-crucial papers relating to her recent divorce. “They were exceedingly well organized,” she lamented. In just that moment, a gush of hot air and embers blasted through her window, “I dropped [the box] and said, ‘We gotta get outta here.’” At the very last second, with the car loaded up, their cat escaped from the passenger side door and there was no time to chase her. Their escape was complicated by news from a stranger-a man in a Volvo she did not recognize—that the gate through Sycamore Canyon Road was locked. Ingersoll opted instead to drive up Conejo, to Mission Ridge, ultimately connecting to Foothill Road, a much longer and more dangerous route.
Ingersoll and her son stayed with friends. Later that evening, her boyfriend talked his way back to the property to find the cat. What he found instead was the entire neighborhood burned to the ground, Ingersoll recalled, and no sign of the cat.
Ingersoll met with a Farmer’s Insurance representative outside the Red Cross shelter at San Marcos High School for nearly an hour. She described the whole experience as an almost Kali-like transformation, where you walk through fire and come out stronger. “You kind of fear death no longer because you’ve already died,” she said. Grey missed school today but didn’t seem overly despondent because of it. Ingersoll added, “For the fist time since I came to town in 1976, everything I have fits into my car.”
Barry and Jenelle Ford’s house, at 447 Conejo Lane, was close to Ingersoll’s and their story every bit as dramatic. Standing on his deck around 5:40 p.m., Barry Ford noticed a glow on the mountain above them. Looking through his binoculars, he found it was actually a raging-out-of-control blaze. The wind was blowing away from them, in an eastward direction, so he wasn’t worried. Still, Ford, his wife, and son began getting ready to evacuate. After a few minutes, however, the wind shifted and there was “flame and ash everywhere,” he said. Loading his truck, he considered hitching his boat to his car and saving it. At the very moment he turned to look at the boat, a wall of flame rose just 15 feet behind it. “Forget it,” he thought, “we’re outta here.” He and his wife and 10-year-old son drove their two cars away from the house.
Getting out was scarier, and more challenging, than it had to be, they said, because they were also informed Sycamore Canyon gate was closed. “We had to climb the hill [road] behind our house, to get out,” he said. The traffic was bottle necked, he said. Janelle Ford acknowledged they did not know definitively that their house is gone, though all the neighboring houses are confirmed burned. “There’s always the slim possibility that we have the one house that didn’t get hit,” she said.
Seeing the silhouettes of his son and wife in the car behind him, with the fire in the background-on their way to safety-was all he needed, Ford said. “If I hadn’t experienced such a close call, I never would be this happy.”
A third Conejo Road resident-Don Fritzen-lost his home at 327 Conejo Road. He and his wife were in Carpinteria when the Tea fire broke out. Driving home around 6:15 p.m., they saw the flames consuming the mountainside by their house. Their first thought was of their dog, Mulligan-stuck at home.
With Sycamore Canyon gated, the Fritzens had to take a circuitous route home. It was a very tense drive; past Parma Park, which was completely engulfed in flames, embers and ash flying around, and confused motorists stopping in the middle of the road, hesitating, and changing directions. The couple had to talk their way past two checkpoints to get to their house, temperatures rising outside from 70 degrees to more than 90 degrees Fahrenheit as they approached their house, where flames got to between 200 and 300 yards from the house. “We had only 10 or 15 minutes to get our things,” Fritzen said. “You try to look and you have to assess what do you need to take and what do you not need to take. My wife and I are both golfers and we both took our golf clubs. I got my hole-in-one trophy.” He learned the house burned completely while speaking to an Allstate Insurance agent over the phone. The agent told him, “I have your neighbor sitting right here, and he says your whole hillside is gone.” Allstate Insurance representatives gave Fritzen and his wife a voucher for five days lodging at a hotel and meals. “[When] it runs out, we can save our receipts and they’ll reimburse us,” he said.
City officials did not immediately return calls regarding the Sycamore Canyon gate. Other residents evacuating from the area found the gate closed as late as 7 p.m., an hour and 14 minutes after the fire erupted. The Ingersoll and Ford families left around 6:15 p.m. The question is sure to be a source of much discussion in the days and weeks ahead.
Related Links
This story was originally published on Friday, November 14, at 10:03 p.m.



Print friendly
E-mail story
Tip Us Off
Comments
Share Article
Myspace




Previous Month



Comments
More perfect examples of how inefficient the fire department is.
Rant_Abarbara (anonymous profile)
November 14, 2008 at 11:32 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Actually, if you read the story, CalTrans had promised to open it.
The fire department was a little busy I would suppose trying to put out the fires, saving our lives and our houses.
And at most this would be ONE incident not a group of "examples"
So should I say a this is a perfect example of why you dubbed yourself RANT-abarbara?
[[[A rant or harangue is a speech or text that does not present a well-researched and calm argument; rather, it is typically an attack on an idea, a person or an institution, and very often lacks proven claims. Such attacks are usually personal attacks. Compare with a dialectic. ]]]
firedervish (anonymous profile)
November 15, 2008 at 12:58 a.m. (Suggest removal)
I have heard the residents of this area voice concerns over this issue for many years and it turns out they were correct. Luckily no one was killed due to this, but the fact remains, a situation was created that endangered many people needlessly. You are correct it was not the fire department fault, but why weren't a few people in the area given keys so they could open it. In an emergency, you cannot rely on outside people to get there in enough time to take care of business.
torotoro (anonymous profile)
November 15, 2008 at 6:23 a.m. (Suggest removal)
UPDATE & CORRECTION FROM THE FORDS- House is confirmed lost by aerial photos. It looks like The McLaughlin's, the one owned by Mike and April and the McNall's are still standing . Every other house on the street appears to be gone, most of the houses in the neighborhood. The aerial shot doesn't really show Todd McNall's house, Chuck's or the Weighhill's.
We actually left the house closer to 7:00p. After Barry spotted the fire, I called 911 then both of us spent a few minutes notifying the nearest neighbors as well as calling some others.
We immediately began to pack up the essential's just in case. We assumed we were packing for just a couple of days. We were able to get a couple of chamges of clothes for each of us. I found out later that I grabbed some weird things while evacuating (3 watches of rmy husband, empty prescription bottles, a bag of individual sized bags of nuts?!?!?!?). We were also able to get the main computer, our small file cabinet, the personal video tapes, and most importantly ourselves and our animals. We had about an hour or so to evacuate which is not nearly enough time but way more than others had so we're fortunate.
Not sure of the timing but sometime after 6:30 the wind shifted back towards SB and began coming towards us. We continued loading the cars. The fire hit the top of the hill above Stanwood and flames just shoot up. We grabbed the suitcases that I filled with photos, moved the cute little convertible that Barry gave me for our anniversary into the garage, shut the door and jammed. Our neighbors, John and Emily and their baby girl were right behind us as we left. We didn't see any other neighbors evacuating.
Before it was our time to go the line of cars along Stanwood trying to get out was a continuous, moving line of cars. SCARY.
sbgal (anonymous profile)
November 15, 2008 at 7 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Continued...
One rant - If there is another fire for the sake of those trying to evacuate STAY AWAY. These moutainside roads are small and very twisty. There were cars and people all over the roads as we were evacuating and the last thing any of us needed were a bunch of curious people. There were residents trying to get back to their homes to gather their animals and things as well. The cars of by-standers impedes that progress.
Ok another one - The fire gate!!!!! The residents were originally told that gate would be open on Red Flag days, then we were told that the Fire Department could open it. Then it was Cal-Trans that would open it. We knew this would happen. We knew there would be a fire and that no one would be coming in to open that gate. Imagine that the fire started at the APS roundabout and all the residents living between the roundabout and the closure got stuck waiting for the darn gate to be opened. DISASTER!!! At the very least this shows that another viable option must be found.
Barry and I would have considered going out Sycamore Canyon, it was the most direct way to safety. We also had a visit from the stranger in the Volvo (angel perhaps?!?!?!) telling us to go over Conejo because the gate was closed and we wouldn't be able to get out. I don't know who this man was but I give him huge thanks, he saved lives that night, no doubt about it.
I don't know who's fault it is that the gate was not opened and I don't care. I'm very grateful to the fire and police departments were on hand to do their job. Could they have done more??? Probably not, the fire started in a remote area with little access, the winds were fierce and unpredictable.
sbgal (anonymous profile)
November 15, 2008 at 7:01 a.m. (Suggest removal)
torotoro, or anyone, can I ask where you found the aerial photos? I am trying to find out what happened to my Dad's house (the house I grew up in) up near cold springs school.
adamold (anonymous profile)
November 15, 2008 at 7:58 a.m. (Suggest removal)
There are better ways than a gate to deal with hill side slides. Fires happens more than slides. I would take legal action if that gate doesn't come down. It's like being in a house with bars on the window and only the owner has the keys in the master bedroom on the other end of the house. I think that the odds of people being caught in a slide vs the odds of them trying to escape a fire should be obvious in that area.
catlady4444 (anonymous profile)
November 15, 2008 at 8:03 a.m. (Suggest removal)
torotoro - I just googled Conejo Lane Tea Fire and came up with the aerial over my neighborhood. I haven't seen any aerials from the Cold Springs area.
sbgal (anonymous profile)
November 15, 2008 at 8:54 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Carrie McCracken .... thinking of you and hoping you spot this. I learned your Dad is gone now, but I still hope his home didn't go up in flames.
Contact me ~ Take care
Lisa
1CaliGirlRanch (anonymous profile)
November 15, 2008 at 9:30 a.m. (Suggest removal)
I was involved with this gate issue in 2005 and 2006.
During meetings at Salud Carbajal's office, public safety parties, including Caltrans, Pedro Nava's office, Montecito Fire, City Fire, the Sheriff's Department, City Police, and I think even Highway Patrol PROMISED that gate would be opened on all, and every,red flag alert. If that did not happen on Thursday, which MUST have been a Red Flag Day, the gate should be removed--- NOW, as it is a public safety danger.
J'Amy Brown, past-president, Montecito Association
JAMY (J'Amy Brown)
November 16, 2008 at 5:24 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Can someone clarify the timing of the gate being opened (or not)? At the beginning of the article, Kevin Wallace is quoted as saying the gates were opened at a little after 6, but many of the evacuees still drove out Stanwood at 6:15 - 7:00.
Was this because they mistakenly believed the gate closed? Or is Chief Wallace incorrect?
The bottom line is, the fire department shouldn't have to be worrying about opening a gate, they should be fighting the fire. Nor should the residents have to guess at the status of the gate being opened or not. If we have to guess, it might as well be closed.
This is a serious issue for ALL of the residents in the area, not just those in the lower Sycamore and Conejo areas.
What if Mission Canyon had been on fire last Thursday at the same time the Tea Fire was rolling down Coyote and through Parma Park? Where would people have gone? Up Hillcrest? We need as many escape routes as possible, and we need to know that they are open. A wrong guess in a situation like this can cost lives. Thankfully it didn't on Thursday night.
mjdaysb (anonymous profile)
November 17, 2008 at 12:31 p.m. (Suggest removal)
We were told at about 5 minutes until 7:00 that the gate was closed and the police were directing people the other direction, we didn't even attempt to go that direction so we're not actual eye witnesses. The man who told us came flying up our street having just come from that direction, I'm sure he was correct. There was a line of headlights continuously driving down Stanwood as we were leaving. I'm assuming that if the gates were open they would have gone that direction lightening the load on Stanwood where the fire was already jumping the canyon to Conejo Lane.
sbgal (anonymous profile)
November 17, 2008 at 3:23 p.m. (Suggest removal)
You want more examples of a piss poor fire department...there is over 100 of them in Montecito and over a 1000 of them in California in the last two years alone. There called totally destroyed houses. The cause....inadequate Fire Department. Your heroes.
Rant_Abarbara (anonymous profile)
November 20, 2008 at 12:49 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Oh boo hoo.... You rich people want to live behind locked gates all the time how do you like it now.
Rant_Abarbara (anonymous profile)
December 9, 2008 at 2:42 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Rant_Abarbara - Whatever!!! Get a clue and read the darn story. We don't want to be behind any sort of locked gate that closes down an integral escape route for anyone living in that area. Most of us don't want to behind gates of any sort.
Rich people you say - obviously you don't know much about the area do you? Most of the homes that burned were single family homes, no larger than 1000-1300 square feet. They were built in the early 60's and for the most part haven't changed.
You can sit on your throne and complain all you want about the "rich" people or get off your a$$ and help out the people who lost their homes. The renters with no insurance living in a slum because it's what they could afford. The older, retired couple who bought their house brand new in 1961 and planned to die there (they almost did).
sbgal (anonymous profile)
December 11, 2008 at 1:16 p.m. (Suggest removal)