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Wildfire burns hundreds of homes in Colorado, thousands flee

SUPERIOR, Colo. (AP) — Tens of thousands of Coloradans driven from their neighborhoods by a wind-whipped wildfire anxiously waited to learn what was left standing of their lives Friday as authorities reported more than 500 homes were feared destroyed.

At least seven people were injured, but there were no immediate reports of any deaths or anyone missing in the aftermath of the blaze that erupted outside Denver on Thursday and swept over drought-stricken neighborhoods with terrifying speed, propelled by gusts up to 105 mph (169 kph).

“We might have our very own New Year’s miracle on our hands if it holds up that there was no loss of life,” Gov. Jared Polis said, noting that many people had just minutes to evacuate.

By first light Friday, the towering flames that had lit up the night sky were gone, leaving smoldering homes and charred trees and fields. The winds had died down, and light snow soon began falling, raising hopes it could snuff out hot spots.

The fire erupted in and around Louisville and Superior, neighboring towns about 20 miles (32 kilometers) northwest of Denver with a combined population of 34,000. Residents were ordered to flee as the flames closed in and cast a smoky, orange haze over the landscape.

The wildfire broke out unusually late in the year, following an extremely dry fall and amid a winter nearly devoid of snow so far.

Cathy Glaab found the Superior home she shares with her husband, Richard, had been reduced to a charred and twisted pile of debris, the mailbox about the only thing still standing. It was one of seven houses in a row burned to the ground.

“Just hard. So many memories,” Glaab said, holding her head as she took in the scene. Despite the devastation, she said, they intend to rebuild the house, which had a view of the mountains from the back.

Boulder County Sheriff Joe Pelle said more than 500 homes were probably destroyed. He and the governor said as many as 1,000 homes might have been lost, though that won’t be known until crews can assess the damage.

“It’s unbelievable when you look at the devastation that we don’t have a list of 100 missing persons,” the sheriff said.

The sheriff said some communities were reduced to just “smoking holes in the ground.” He urged residents to wait for the all-clear to go back, warning that it was still too dangerous in many neighborhoods because of fire and fallen power lines.

Sarah Owens, her husband, adult son and their dog got out of their Superior home within 10 minutes of learning about the evacuation from a Facebook post. But as everyone tried leaving by way of the winding streets of the affluent Rock Creek neighborhood, it took them 1 ½ hours to go 2 miles (3.2 kilometers).

Once they safely found their way to a pet-friendly hotel, their cellphones and computers could not provide them with the only thing they wanted to know: Was their house still standing?

“The good news is I think our house may be OK,” Owens said.

But from now on, she said, she plans to have a bag packed in case of another fire.

“I never thought a brush fire could cause this kind of destruction,” Owens said. “I want to stay here. No matter where you live, there are always going to be natural disasters.”

Mike Guanella and his family were relaxing at their home in Superior and looking forward to celebrating a belated Christmas when reports of a nearby grass fire quickly gave way to an order to leave immediately.

Instead of opening presents, Guanella and his wife, their three children and three dogs were staying a friend’s house in Denver, hoping their house was still standing.

“Those presents are still under the tree right now — we hope,” he said.

Sophia Verucchi and her partner, Tony Victor, returned to their apartment in Broomfield, on the edge of Superior, to find that it was spared any serious damage. They had fled the previous afternoon with just Victor’s guitar, bedding and their cat, Senor Gato Blanco.

“We left thinking it was a joke. We just felt like we were going to come back. At 5 o’clock, we thought, maybe we’re not coming back,” Verucchi said. But they got an email in the morning saying it was OK to return.

“Seeing the news and seeing all the houses burnt, we just feel very lucky,” Verucchi said.

The two towns are filled with middle- and upper-middle-class subdivisions with shopping centers, parks and schools. The area is between Denver and Boulder, home to the University of Colorado.

By late morning Friday, the blaze had burned at least 9.4 square miles (24 square kilometers) but appeared to be contained, the sheriff said.

Scientists say climate change is making weather more extreme and wildfires more frequent and destructive.

Typically, Colorado wildfires have not been as headline-grabbing as those in California that have destroyed thousands of homes. But last year, the state saw an unprecedented wildfire season, with three of the largest fires in state history. Those were primarily in mountainous areas, not in suburban subdivisions.

In anticipation of a long fire season this year, Colorado lawmakers set aside millions for more equipment and other resources, including extending contracts for air tankers and helicopters.

Colorado’s Front Range, where most of the state’s population lives, had an extremely dry and mild fall, and winter has been mostly dry so far. Denver set a record for consecutive days without snow before it got a small storm on Dec. 10, its last snowfall before the wildfires broke out.

Ninety percent of Boulder County is in severe or extreme drought, and it hasn’t seen substantial rainfall since mid-summer.

Guanella said he heard from a firefighter friend that his home was still standing Thursday night. But all he could do was wait.

“You’re just waiting to hear if your favorite restaurant is still standing, if the schools that your kids go to are still standing,” he said. “You’re just waiting to get some clarity.”

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Nieberg is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on under-covered issues. Associated Press writer Brady McCombs contributed to this story from Salt Lake City.

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The Associated Press receives support from the Walton Family Foundation for coverage of water and environmental policy. The AP is solely responsible for all content. For all of AP’s environmental coverage, visit https://apnews.com/hub/environment.

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‘Absolutely devastating’ Colorado wildfire burns hundreds of homes near Boulder

Hundreds of homes burned and tens of thousands of people were evacuated after a rare wind-driven wildfire tore through suburban neighborhoods in Colorado on Thursday, authorities said.

Gov. Jared Polis declared a state of emergency in the area, calling the blaze — which ballooned to 1,600 acres in a few hours amid 100-mph winds — “absolutely devastating.” 

After toppled power lines started the grass fire around 11 a.m. south of Boulder, the flames quickly spread through the towns of Louisville and Superior, Boulder County Sheriff Joe Pelle said during a news conference.  

“This was consuming football field lengths of land in seconds,” Pelle said. “This was a horrific event.”

No deaths or missing persons had been reported, though he said he wouldn’t be “surprised if we find casualties.” One police officer was injured by flying debris, he said.

By 5 p.m., the fire had incinerated an entire subdivision of 370 homes in Superior and likely destroyed another 210 homes in the community’s old town neighborhood, he said. A hotel burned, a shopping center was in flames and the blaze was blocks from a hospital.

Video broadcast by NBC affiliate KUSA of Denver showed huge flames roaring toward a Superior subdivision with dozens of homes. At least one was on fire. In a Louisville subdivision, video from the station showed several more homes consumed by flames.

A second blaze north of Boulder also ignited Thursday morning, though firefighters quickly extinguished it, the sheriff said.

The conditions prompted the evacuations of tens of thousands of people from Louisville and Superior, Pelle said. They also caused road closures and hundreds of power outages, and the winds toppled multiple “high profile vehicles,” the Colorado State Patrol said in a tweet.

Video from an evacuated Home Depot showed a parking lot that appeared to be engulfed by wind-whipped smoke. A similar scene was captured at a Costco in Superior.

Smoke covers the skyline as a wind-driven wildfire forced the evacuation of the Superior suburb of Boulder, Colo., on Thursday. Trevor Hughes / USA Today Network via Reuters

Daniel Swain, a climate scientist and extreme weather expert at UCLA, said it was “genuinely hard to believe this is happening in late December in Boulder.”

But a combination of events — a downslope windstorm with 100-mph blasts and a fall that saw record heat and just 1 inch of snow — prompted fires that Swain called “extremely fast moving” and “dangerous.”

High wind warnings were canceled Thursday night, the National Weather Service said. Emergency management officials warned residents not to try and return to the area.

The vast majority of Boulder County is experiencing extreme or severe drought, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor, and experts have partly attributed the West’s increasingly intense wildfires to climate change.

The governor said the state recorded its three largest wildfires in recent history last summer, with each topping 200,000 acres. While some structures burned in those fires, he said, each ignited on wildlands far from suburban neighborhoods.

The section of Boulder County where Thursday’s fire broke out is filled with subdivisions and stores, he said.

“It’s like the neighborhood you live in,” he said. “It’s like the neighborhood that any of us live in. So 1,600 acres near a population center can be — and is, in this case — absolutely devastating.”

Phil Helsel contributed.



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Colorado Fires: Hundreds of Homes Are Destroyed

Video
The authorities are urging tens of thousands of people across parts of Boulder County, Colo., to leave as quickly as possible as the grassfires continue to burn.CreditCredit…Trevor Hughes/USA Today Network via Reuters

Fast-moving wildfires in Colorado swept through suburban areas near Denver on Thursday, prompting the evacuation of tens of thousands of people in Boulder County and burning at least 500 homes, a shopping complex and a hotel, the authorities said.

The wildfires came unusually late in the year for Colorado, where severe drought conditions in recent months have set the stage for such blazes to easily spread.

As the sky above Boulder County turned orange on Thursday, ash swirled in the wind and buildings were engulfed in flames. The local authorities announced evacuation orders for Superior and Louisville, and for some residents of Broomfield and Westminster. All of those communities lie between Boulder and Denver, the state capital.

Traffic was heavy in some areas as residents fled approaching flames.

“It’s really smoky, and there are some areas where it’s been hard to breathe outside, and you can see flames depending on where you’re at in the city,” Emily Hogan, a spokeswoman for Louisville, said on Thursday. “The situation is continuing to evolve rapidly and we want everyone to be prepared to take action, if needed.”

Gov. Jared Polis declared a state of emergency, allowing the state to tap emergency funds and to deploy state resources, including the Colorado National Guard. He said wind gusts of up to 110 miles per hour had pushed the fires with astonishing speed across suburban subdivisions.

“This fire is, frankly, a force of nature,” Mr. Polis said at a news conference on Thursday. “For those who have lost everything that they’ve had, know that we will be there for you to help rebuild your lives.”

The fires started on Thursday morning, officials said, and more than 1,600 acres had burned by the evening. The specific cause was unclear as of early Friday morning.

Though a number of small blazes burned through Boulder County, some converged into two larger ones that state authorities named the Marshall and Middle Fork fires. The Marshall unleashed the most damage.

Sheriff Joe Pelle of Boulder County described the fires on Thursday as a “horrific event.” He said he believed both of the main fires had been caused by downed power lines and said he would not be surprised if there were deaths or injuries. As of Thursday night, only one minor injury had been reported: a police officer who got debris in his eye.

As several communities were warning their residents to prepare to evacuate on Thursday night, the National Weather Service reported good news: The high wind warnings in the Boulder area had all been canceled, even though some gusty winds remained.

The police in Broomfield lifted an evacuation order for the city just before midnight local time. The three communities where evacuation orders were still in place early Friday have a combined population of more than 150,000, including about 116,000 people who live in Westminster.

The fires left thousands of people anxiously wondering if their homes would survive the night, and disrupted essential services across several counties.

Avista Adventist Hospital, a 114-bed hospital in Louisville, said on Thursday that it had evacuated its intensive care units and its emergency department, moving patients to two other hospitals. Staff members were sheltering in place and nearby roads were closed, the hospital said.

And Xcel Energy, a utility company with millions of customers in Colorado and other states, said on Thursday afternoon that high winds had caused outages in the Boulder area. The company said it was also intentionally cutting power in some areas because wildfires had affected its natural gas infrastructure.

As midnight neared, the company said it was ending the controlled outages but that its crews would work overnight and into Friday to restore power to other homes.



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‘Christmas of our dreams’ turns to nightmare as Brazil floods level homes

ITAMBE, Brazil, Dec 28 (Reuters) – Juliana Reis, a 37-year-old from the isolated Brazilian town of Itambe, was finally reuniting for Christmas with her parents after months apart due to the pandemic.

“We really hoped it would be the Christmas of our dreams,” she told Reuters on Tuesday.

Soon their reunion turned to nightmare, however, as dramatic floods ripped through this portion of Bahia state in northeast Brazil.

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Late on Dec. 25 a dam collapsed some 27 km (17 miles) away, turning the nearby Verruga River into a violent torrent. read more

Reis and her parents survived only by swimming out of her house as it filled with water.

“When midnight arrived, this catastrophe happened,” she recalled of their panicked Christmas, while picking through the ruins of her now-flattened home.

“I just wanted everyone to stay alive.”

Juliana Reis, 37, stands near the rubble of her home which was destroyed by floods in Itambe, Bahia state, Brazil December 28, 2021. REUTERS/Amanda Perobelli

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Her home was one of some 5,000 destroyed in this state of 15 million. The flooding has displaced nearly 50,000 people and killed at least 20.

The state of Bahia has been suffering from flooding for weeks, as record rains followed a severe, months-long dry spell. The situation has deteriorated significantly in recent days, and more rain is forecast for some regions.

Rui Costa, Bahia’s governor, has called the floods the “worst disaster” in the state’s history and said vast swathes of the state looked as if they had been “bombarded.”

The federal government on Tuesday released 200 million reais ($35.5 million) in disaster relief funds and said more was on the way.

In Itambe alone, a town of roughly 22,000 people, 60 houses have collapsed so far, according to the mayor’s office.

Vitoria Rocha, 81, another Itambe resident whose house was destroyed, said it was hard to believe what she experienced was real.

“I can’t accept this. I can’t, because all this seems like a lie to me. My house completely destroyed, all my things destroyed,” she said in tears.

“Here is everything to me,” she said, gesturing to what was left of her house. “Because the only thing I have is my house, and it’s over.”

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Reporting by Leonardo Benassatto; Additional reporting by Patrícia Vilas Boas in Sao Paulo; Writing by Gram Slattery; Editing by Sandra Maler

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Patrick Kinahan: Ohio State does the impossible by tainting Rose Bowl

Ohio State receiver Garrett Wilson, right, celebrates his touchdown against Michigan State with teammate Chris Olave during the first half of an NCAA college football game Saturday, Nov. 20, 2021, in Columbus, Ohio. (AP Photo/Jay LaPrete)

Estimated read time: 4-5 minutes

LOS ANGELES — Plain and simple, there’s no other way label it, the choice of several Ohio State players has tainted the greatest tradition in college football.

In a disheartening move, even if it is justified, four Buckeyes have opted out of playing in the Rose Bowl against Utah on Jan. 1. The decades-long dream for players in two conferences has morphed into a worthless consolation prize.

One month ago, one-loss Ohio State had visions of making the four-team playoff for the third consecutive year. But those dreams crashed hard after Michigan crushed the Buckeyes to close the regular season, rendering them bound for Pasadena, California, as the Big Ten representative in the Rose Bowl.

Skipping one last chance to play with their teammates, four Ohio State starters — receivers Chris Olave and Garrett Wilson, along with offensive tackle Nicholas Petit-Frere and defensive tackle Haskell Garrett — have decided not to play. All four have declared for the NFL.

Bummer, indeed.

In recent years, players have opted out of participating in second-tier bowls — which most bowls now are — rather than risk injury in an otherwise meaningless game. But this is the first time the trend has impacted the stature of the Rose Bowl.

“This is the Rose Bowl,” perplexed ABC analyst Kirk Herbstreit said during media availability Monday.

“Are we going to pick and choose where a game has meaning. Your team is playing an (expletive) game. It matters. You go play and you go compete your ass off. I don’t get meaningless and I never will.”

For their part, the Utes are ecstatic to play in the program’s first Rose Bowl. Not coincidentally, no Utah player has opted out even though several will forgo eligibility to pursue the NFL next season.

Beginning in 1920, Ohio State is making its 16th appearance in the Rose Bowl. The program has made the college football play six times since the current format began in 2014.

“I just don’t buy into this narrative of meaningless bowl games,” said Herbstreit, a former Ohio State quarterback. “The high-profile teams have always had goals to get to the championship or get to a certain bowl and it doesn’t happen all that often, but you don’t throw in the towel.”

An otherwise apparent ho-hum win for Ohio State could end up being Utah’s most significant achievement in the program’s strangest season.

Crazy as it is, given the tragic deaths of running back Ty Jordan and defensive back Aaron Lowe only 10 months apart, the Utes somehow managed to work through the unimaginable emotional upheaval to win their first Pac-12 championship. And now here they are, only a few days away from securing the best win in program history.

There’s no doubt beating sixth-ranked Ohio State in the Rose Bowl — the most glamorous bowl game that doesn’t require some committee’s approval — would go down as Utah’s finest moment. The Granddaddy, as it is affectionally called, carries more prestige than any game in which Utah has participated.

Forget about comparing the New Year’s Day game to any other tradition in college football. Yes, winning the national championship game carries more weight than the Rose Bowl, but getting into the playoff has morphed into something of a beauty contest that is heavily slanted toward certain programs and the Southeastern Conference, which plays by a different set of parameters than the Pac-12.

Every year, unless it has been part of a playoff, the Rose Bowl is usually played on Jan. 1 in the most exotic setting college football has to offer. As if a higher power is involved, the conditions almost always are perfect with the winter sun glistening off the crystal-clear San Gabriel mountains. Extended forecasts call for rain much of the week in Southern California before giving way to another sun-splashed kickoff.

For now, Utah’s best accomplishment is beating Alabama in the 2009 Sugar Bowl to culminate an undefeated season. But there’s greater traction to winning the Rose Bowl as a Pac-12 team than going undefeated in the Mountain West.

In that era, Alabama under Nick Saban was more one dimensional on offense with a heavy emphasis on the run. With future NFL star Julio Junes at receiver, quarterback John Parker Wilson threw for only 2,243 yards with a completion rate of 57.9%.

This season, Heisman Trophy winner Bryce Young passed for 4,322 yards and completed 68% of his throws. The Crimson Tide had a runner exceed 1,000 yards in the 2008 season, as they did this year, but had no receiver go over 1,000 yards compared to two receivers who did it this year.

Ohio State’s offense this season is more dynamic than the Alabama team Utah beat in New Orleans. The Buckeyes still have a 1,000-yard rusher (Treveyon Henderson) and a 1,000-yard receiver (Jaxon Smith-Njigba), but losing Wilson and Olave is a huge disadvantage.

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Utah researchers worked on James Webb Space Telescope, plan to use it

Utah State University researchers contributed work to NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope, which launched on Dec. 25. (Mike Anderson, KSL TV)

Estimated read time: 2-3 minutes

LOGAN — NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope launched just a few days ago on Christmas Day and some Utah researchers played a role in bringing it to reality and signed up for research time on it.

Researchers at Utah State University spent about five years studying different types of mirrors and composites inside a high-tech vacuum chamber that exposed them to different charges and light sources.

Now that the telescope is off in space, it’s time to wait for the real excitement when astronomers get to see if the $10 billion telescope works.

“It’s just going to blow people’s minds,” said J.R. Dennison. He worked with about 30 researchers at Utah State University over the past five years to study different types of mirrors and composites to be used for the telescope.

They had to make sure the telescope stays cold, at about 40 kelvins — “Which is, I think, minus 380 degrees Fahrenheit,” Dennison said.

The super-cold temperatures are needed because any heat given off could interfere with the infrared light that the Webb telescope will be taking in from deep space.

Dennison and his team used a high-tech vacuum chamber to test the materials where they could shoot ions and electrons at them, among other tests.

“And then we measure currents and energies and so on, coming off the samples to determine how they charge up, what kind of things get, get given off,” Dennison explained.

Now that their work is done, it’s time for others to do the really exciting stuff.

“There are these big black holes, like the one at the center of our Milky Way Galaxy,” said Anil Seth. The University of Utah researcher is one of just over 250 researchers selected to use the telescope. He will study black holes.

“So, 4 million times the size of the sun. It’s a black hole sitting at the center of our galaxy and we don’t know how it got there,” Seth said.

Right now, he’s crossing his fingers that the Webb telescope works as planned, hopefully showing us far beyond what we’ve seen with the Hubble telescope.

“Definitely if it all does work, it’s going to be really amazing.”

There is now a 29-day wait for the Webb to get to its destination, about 930,000 miles away, towards Mars.

Then it will be time to cross your fingers and hope that the nearly 180 release mechanisms fold out correctly.

Mike Anderson

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Dams burst in northeastern Brazil as region hit by floods

An aerial view shows a neighborhood during flooding caused by the overflowing Cachoeira river in Itabuna, Bahia state, Brazil on Sunday. (Leonardo Benassatto, Reuters)

Estimated read time: 2-3 minutes

ITABUNA, Brazil — Two dams gave way in the northeastern Brazilian state of Bahia after weeks of heavy rains, swamping already swollen local rivers as flooding hit towns across the region, authorities said on Sunday.

The Igua dam, on the Verruga river near the city of Vitoria da Conquista in southern Bahia, collapsed on Saturday night, forcing authorities to evacuate residents, mainly in the town of Itambe.

A second dam gave way to rising water levels in Jussiape, 100 kilometers to the north, on Sunday morning, bringing more alerts for residents to move to safer ground.

There were no reports of deaths or injuries caused by the dam failures, though bridges and roads were damaged.

Further towards the coast in Itabuna, a city of 200,000 inhabitants, fire brigade teams rescued residents trapped in their homes in the downtown area that was under water, Reuters reporters said.

“It’s crazy by the bridge, there are waves almost 2 meters high,” shopkeeper Luiz Constancia told Reuters.

Rescuers rowed dinghies along flooded streets to reach trapped families or take them supplies. One man paddled on an inflatable mattress to reach a home.

A man uses an inflatable mattress during flooding caused by the overflowing Cachoeira river in Itabuna, Bahia state, Brazil, on Sunday. (Photo: Leonardo Benassatto, Reuters)

Residents said the level of the Cachoeira river that runs through the town located 30 kms from the coastal port city of Ilheus was the highest in 50 years.

In Vitoria da Conquista, Mayor Sheila Lemos, said all residents close to the collapsed Igua dam had been evacuated.

In a posting on the city’s website, Lemos said the flooding threatened to cut off the BR-116 highway, a major truck route between northeastern and southern Brazil.

Bahia Gov. Rui Castro said at least 400,000 people have been impacted by the heavy rains and thousands evacuated from some 67 towns facing emergency situations due to floods caused by heavy rainfall for almost two months.

“Thousands of people have had to leave their homes because the water rose one or two meters, even three meters in some places,” he told reporters on Saturday.

The rains have caused 18 deaths in Bahia since the beginning of November, including a 60-year-old ferry owner who drowned on the swollen Rio das Contas river, civil defense officials said.

In the state capital of Salvador, weather officials said December rainfall has been six times greater than the average.

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China Evergrande reports progress completing homes

Evergrande is the world’s most indebted property developer, with over $300 billion in liabilities. It is struggling to repay bondholders, banks, suppliers, and deliver homes to buyers, epitomizing a bloated industry suffering from the Chinese government’s deleveraging campaign.

Company chairman Hui Ka Yan stressed during a meeting on Sunday that no one at Evergrande would be allowed to “lie flat,” urging employees to fight day and night so that sales can be resumed and debts repaid, Evergrande said in a statement.

“With the company resuming construction work at full steam, the group plans to deliver 115 projects in December,” Hui said in the statement. “With five days left this month, we must go all out to ensure we meet the goal of delivering 39,000 units this month.”

His pledge came a day after China’s top real estate regulator told the official Xinhua News Agency the government would resolutely tackle risks stemming from overdue delivery of residential properties by some top developers.

Also on Saturday, China’s central bank said it would safeguard the legal rights of home buyers.

The statement said Evergrande had resumed cooperation with more than 80% of decoration companies and long-term suppliers, having signed 6,869 contracts with material suppliers.

The Chinese government has in recent months marginally eased property financing to prevent a hard landing of the sector, but has not reversed its property curbs designed to reduce leverage and discourage speculation.

Chinese authorities are scrutinizing the assets of Evergrande and its wealthy chairman but expect no fire sale for now, two sources with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters in mid-December.

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Christmas highs reach July levels in South; much of West could see at least a foot of snow

More than 6 million people across the Western U.S. are under a winter storm warning. (CNN Weather)

Estimated read time: 3-4 minutes

ATLANTA — Christmas Day doesn’t feel much like winter for much of the South and Southeast.

More than 200 records may be broken Christmas Day through Wednesday from Texas to the southeastern U.S. as warm air pushes into the region, bringing spring- and summerlike temperatures. Many locations, including Dallas, Houston and Austin are expected to break daily record highs, but high-temperature records for the entire month of December could also be broken.

Specifically, Dallas has a forecast high for Christmas of 83, which is only 6 degrees under its July 4 high; Houston has a forecast high of 81, which is 9 degrees below its July 4 high.

Wichita Falls, Texas, hit 91 Friday — warmer than its July 4 high of 88, and Grandfield, Oklahoma, reached 89, which also beats its July 4 high of 88.

Along with the warm temperatures, level 2 of 3 critical fire danger has been issued by the Storm Prediction Center for parts of west Texas and Oklahoma and east Colorado on Sunday due to minimal rain chances, sustained winds up to 25 mph and very low relative humidity that will raise wildfire concerns. The warm weather trend will continue through Wednesday before temperatures lower slightly, but highs will remain above average all week.

The West faces rain and heavy snowfall

Contrasting the spring- and summer-like temperatures across the South, the West is seeing rounds of coastal rain and heavy high elevation snowfall.

Multiple rounds of snow are impacting the West from a Christmas Day system, contributing to significant mountain snowfall and lower elevation rainfall on the West Coast.

More than 6 million people across the Western U.S. are under a winter storm warning.

Winter storm warnings are reaching as far south as the San Bernardino and Riverside County Mountains.

This is due to Arctic air pushing into the Pacific Northwest, which is causing winter storm alerts to reach near the coast, producing a rare White Christmas for places like Seattle and Portland.

Seattle has only seen measurable snow on Christmas Day nine times in 127 years of records. Holiday weekend travel conditions in the region could be dangerous due to tall snowdrifts and whiteout conditions.

Oregon is in a state of emergency through Jan. 3 due to the potential for hazardous winter weather conditions and sustained subfreezing temperatures.

Portland may see up to 4 inches of snow for Christmas Day. This system is also bringing heavy rainfall to Southern California on Christmas with much of the California coast seeing up to 4 inches of rainfall throughout the next five days.

The system that is causing heavy snow and rainfall to the West will head toward the upper Midwest, bringing heavy snowfall to much of the area. Winter weather watches have already been issued, and some places can see up to a foot of snowfall.

Winter weather advisories issued for the Northeast

The Northeast is also not free from inclement weather. Winter weather advisories are in effect for parts of the Northeast, largely due to freezing rain.

Freezing rain may create slippery and hazardous road conditions in major cities like Boston. New England could see more widespread snowfall by Saturday night. Some parts of the northeast could see up to half an inch of ice accumulation.

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Arnold Schwarzenegger donates 25 tiny homes to homeless California veterans

Former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger on Thursday donated 25 tiny homes to homeless veterans in West Los Angeles.

Schwarzenegger coordinated with Village for Vets, a nonprofit dedicated to providing food and shelter to homeless and at-risk veterans, as well as Veterans Affairs Secretary Denis McDonough and volunteer organization American Veterans (AMVETS) to build the tiny homes.

“Today, I celebrated Christmas early. The 25 homes I donated for homeless veterans were installed here in LA,” the former governor wrote in a Thursday tweet. “It was fantastic to spend some time with our heroes and welcome them into their new homes.”

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Village for Vets said in a Thursday tweet that Schwarzenegger’s $250,000 donation to the nonprofit “made it possible” for the organization “to purchase and build the remaining 25 shelters” at the Los Angeles VA’s Care Treatment Rehabilitative Services (CTRS) site.

Former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger on Thursday donated 25 tiny homes to homeless veterans in West Los Angeles. (FOX 11 Los Angeles)

“I’ve made and have this great success because of America,” the former bodybuilder and actor born in Austria told Elex Michaelson, host of FOX 11 Los Angeles’ show “The Issue Is.” “If it isn’t bodybuilding, if it isn’t business, if it isn’t show business, movies and politics — whatever I tackled I achieved because of America, so to me, it’s always great to give something back.”

Veteran Bruce Henry Cooper personally thanked Schwarzenegger in an interview with FOX 11 Los Angeles.

“Its been a life-saver for me,” Cooper, who lives in one of the tiny homes, told the outlet, adding that the former governor “has not forgotten…anybody.”

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AMVETS member Rob Reynolds told FOX 11 that the homes are equipped with electricity, heating and air conditioning.

Donations to Village for Vets go toward the organization’s tiny shelters, which “provide an elevated standard of living from tent encampments while veterans are on their journey to find permanent housing and stability,” and other programs providing essential services to homeless and at-risk veterans, according to the nonprofit’s website.

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