Associated Press/AP Online
PALM BAY, Fla. - Wildfires that have gutted at least 40
homes along the state's Atlantic coast are believed to have been
started by arsonists, but they got help from two classic Florida
phenomenon: rampant development and a year-round growing season.
Experts said the fires reported in Brevard County that have
burned roughly 10,000 acres - or more than 15 square miles - have
found ample fuel because the state has not been able to hold
controlled burns near development to cut back vegetation.
That means firefighters are battling palmetto palms that
should be knee-high, but have been allowed to grow for 20 or 30
years, said Dale Armstrong, senior forester with the state's
Division of Forestry.
Florida's endless growing season and waxy plants that can
burn while still green are also culprits, said Ken Outcalt, a
research plant ecologist with the U.S. Forest Service.
"The fuels in Florida are mostly live plants, unlike in
the West where it's usually dead fuel that's accumulated underneath
the trees," he said.
The Brevard County fires present two kinds of firefighting
challenges simultaneously because the vegetation is mixed so closely
with homes. The buildings impede traditional forest firefighting
techniques such as plowing lines of dirt in the flames' path or
lighting backfires, Outcalt said.
Police have set up a special task force to catch the suspect
or suspects who set the fires. They profiled "a trophy
person," likely to brag of his or her work at some point.
"It's unconscionable that somebody would do this to
another man or woman, put them in jeopardy," Gov. Charlie Crist
said shortly after flying over the damaged areas where he declared a
state of emergency.
The Florida Division of Forestry said 40 homes in the Palm
Bay area were destroyed and about 120 other structures, including
homes and outbuildings, were damaged. Officials said the total
damage estimate was approximately $9.6 million.
Authorities said Tuesday they had "a majority" of
the Palm Bay fires contained and were getting better control over
the fires in nearby Malabar, where firefighters slept in shifts on
cots lined up in the volunteer fire station.
The destruction was hard for Veda VanFleet to fathom as she
stood amid the charred remains of the two-story home her husband,
Butch, built almost 30 years ago in Malabar. She remembered the
treehouse her three boys used to play in out back and the basketball
hoop in the front yard.
"It's gone. It's all gone," said VanFleet, who
cried all day Monday and awoke with resolve Tuesday to pick through
the ashes where she and her husband planned to rebuild.
Palm Bay schools were to be closed again Wednesday. Smoke
and the proximity of the flames have caused the intermittent closure
of major highways in the area, including a 34-mile section of
Interstate 95 that was closed midmorning Tuesday.
"This really won't be over until it rains. Until it
rains, the threat is going to be ever-present," said State
Emergency Management Director Craig Fugate. Forecasts show little
chance of rain until at least the weekend.
Associated Press writers Travis Reed in Palm Bay and
Jennifer Kay in Miami contributed to this report.