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Thomas Fire: Record-Breaking Wildfire in Ventura and Santa Barbara Counties πŸ“‚ Entry Series

Occurred Dec 4, 2017 | Added Feb 7, 2026 | Updated Feb 13, 2026
πŸ“ Ventura and Santa Barbara Counties, including cities of Ventura, Carpinteria, and Montecito, CA
Tags: Climate & Fire Weather Debris Flow Evacuation National Weather Service SB County Fire Department Southern California Edison U.S. Forest Service
Inclusion Criteria: Wildfire Event
At a Glance
πŸ“° 4 Sources
πŸ‘₯ 1 People
Key individuals: Cory Iverson

Description

Part A: Fire Metrics Fact Sheet

  • Acreage: 281,893 acres
  • Ignition: December 4, 2017, 6:26 p.m.; Southern California Edison power line "line slap"
  • Containment: January 12, 2018
  • Structures Destroyed: 1,063 (plus 280 damaged)
  • Injuries/Fatalities: 2 direct fatalities (1 firefighter, 1 civilian); 21+ indirect fatalities (post-fire debris flows)
  • Lead Agency: Unified Command (U.S. Forest Service & CAL FIRE)

Part B: Brief Summary

Ignited by utility equipment during intense Santa Ana winds on December 4, 2017, the Thomas Fire consumed more than 281,000 acres across Ventura and Santa Barbara counties. At the time of its containment, the blaze stood as the largest wildfire in California's modern history, destroying over 1,000 buildings and necessitating a mobilization of more than 8,500 personnel. The disaster’s legacy was compounded weeks later when heavy rains on the fire's burn scar triggered the catastrophic 2018 Montecito debris flows.

Part C: Detailed Summary

The fire originated in Anlauf Canyon north of Santa Paula when Southern California Edison high-voltage lines arced during a severe wind event. Within 30 minutes, a second ignition occurred on Koenigstein Road in Upper Ojai, eventually merging into a massive firestorm. Sustained Santa Ana gusts exceeding 60 mph, combined with historically low humidity and exceptionally dry fuel beds, propelled the fire 12 miles toward the city of Ventura in just a few hours.

A historic mobilization saw over 8,500 personnel deployed to combat the expansion into rugged backcountry and coastal communities. Firefighters struggled with compromised water infrastructure in Ojai and extreme fire behavior that allowed the flames to jump major transit corridors like Highway 33 and the 101 Freeway. Mandatory evacuations eventually displaced over 100,000 residents as the fire pushed westward into the Santa Ynez Mountains, threatening Carpinteria, Summerland, and Montecito.

The fire destroyed 1,063 structures, including over 500 residences in Ventura during its first night. Direct casualties included Cal Fire engineer Cory Iverson and a resident involved in a flight-related vehicle accident. Beyond property loss, the fire caused an estimated $2.2 billion in damages and suppression costs. The ecological destruction of the chaparral landscape created the conditions for the January 9, 2018, debris flows, which killed at least 21 individuals and destroyed scores of additional homes.

Investigations by the Ventura County Fire Department confirmed utility liability, leading to over $1 billion in settlements between Southern California Edison and public entities. The fire remains a benchmark for Southern California wildfire management, highlighting the risks of utility-caused ignitions during late-season wind events and the enduring threat of post-fire secondary hazards.

πŸ”— Related Entries

Entries in this series (1)
↳ Thomas Fire Prompts Mandatory Evacuation of 30,000 on Santa Barbara's South Coast Dec 16, 2017

Sources (4)

Source: Engilish Wikipedia
Date: January 1, 2024
Read full article β†’ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Fire
People Mentioned (1)
victim 1
β–Ά
πŸ‘€ Cory David Iverson primary victim
Fire Apparatus Engineer at CAL FIRE
Firefighter who died of thermal injuries and smoke inhalation while fighting the fire near Fillmore.
Source: Santa Barbara Bucket Brigade
Date: January 1, 2022
Read full article β†’ https://sbbucketbrigade.org/timeline/2017-thomas-fire/
πŸ“‹

Why This Entry Is Included

Wildfire Event
WILDFIRE_EVENT
definitive
A wildfire or brush fire in Santa Barbara County that resulted in significant acreage burned, structures damaged or destroyed, evacuations ordered, injuries, fatalities, or required multi-agency response. Includes named fires and significant unnamed incidents.
Curator's Justification
Definitive fit based on acreage (281,893) and structural losses exceeding all regional thresholds.

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