Los Angeles Times

Disaster after disaster, California keeping falling short on evacuating people from harm's way

PARADISE, Calif. - Leigh Bailey, 54, was awakened not by her phone, warning her about an incoming fire that would soon destroy her town, but by a neighbor pounding on her door.

Bailey had no idea how bad the fire was about to become. So she went back inside around 9:15 a.m., had a cup of tea and ate some coffee cake, and slowly packed some clothes and her dog and cat before heading out of her home in Magalia, just north of Paradise.

She escaped - but barely, on a narrow dirt road she stumbled on despite driving through thick smoke and the failure of her GPS.

"We had absolutely no evacuation orders," Bailey said. "No call, no emergency text, nothing - and neither did anyone I know."

This has been a recurring problem.

More than 140 people have died in California over the last 13 months from various calamities, ranging from the fires in wine country to the mudslides in Montecito.

In many of these disasters, officials have acknowledged flaws in the evacuation plans, including the failure to use the latest technology to broadcast Amber Alert-style warnings on cellphones

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