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San Diego County Wildfire Prompts Evacuations Northeast Of Campo

06/17/12 11:38 PM ET  AP

CAMPO, Calif. — Authorities are evacuating about 150 homes in eastern San Diego County as firefighters battle a wind-driven wildfire that has destroyed one structure.

The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection says the fire began Sunday afternoon in a rural area northeast of Campo and near the Golden Acorn Casino. It has consumed 200 acres of brush.

Capt. Daryll Pina said the fire has destroyed one structure, but he hasn't been able to confirm what it was.

Officials shut down the road to the casino and patrons are being urged to stay inside.

Meanwhile, a 2,200-acre wildfire that erupted Saturday in a remote area of Riverside County is 70 percent contained. Authorities say they expect full containment of the blaze burning between Beaumont and San Jacinto Monday morning.

Also on HuffPost:

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  • Gila National Forest Fire

    This image provided by the U.S. Forest Service shows a May 29, 2012 photo, of the massive blaze in the Gila National Forest is seen from Cliff, N.M. Fire officials said Wednesday the wildfire has burned more than 265 square miles has become the largest fire in New Mexico history. (AP Photo/U.S. Forest Service)

  • Gila National Forest Fire

    In this Tuesday, May 29, 2012 photo provided by the U.S. Forest Service, a firefighter walks along a burn out line as part of an effort to contain the nation's largest wildfire in the Gila National Forest in New Mexico. More than 1,200 firefighters are battling the blaze that has charred 340 square miles, or 218,000 acres, of terrain in the rugged mountains and canyons of southwestern New Mexico. (AP Photo/U.S. Forest Service, Mark Pater)

  • Little Bear Fire

    Smoke billows from the Little Bear fire in southeastern New Mexico near Ruidoso, Saturday, June 9, 2012. Spanning only a few acres on Wednesday, the Little Bear fire began to grow Friday as spot fires formed outside established fire lines due to windy conditions. By Saturday morning, about 10,000 acres had been charred northwest of the mountain community of Ruidoso. (AP Photo/Roswell Daily Record, Mark Wilson)

  • Luce County, MI Fire

    In this Saturday, May 26, 2012 photo provided by the Michigan Department of Natural Resources, a wildfire burns in Michigan's Upper Peninsula. The fire that began last week has burned 95 structures, with a third of them being homes or cabins. The Michigan Department of Natural Resources said Monday, May 28, 2012, that the Duck Lake Fire has burned more than 22,000 acres, or 34 square miles, in Luce County. (AP Photo/Michigan Department of Natural Resources)

  • San Bernardino Fire

    Firefighter Scott Abraham, of the San Bernardino County Fire Department, sprays water as his crew tries to keep the fire from crossing a San Diego County road Friday, May 25, 2012, near Julian, Calif. The blaze broke out Thursday afternoon east of Julian near Banner Grade. About 100 homes were temporarily evacuated in the Shelter Valley area along Highway 78 during the early stages of the fire but that order was lifted late Thursday. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

  • Gardnerville Fire

    CORRECTS DATE - Firefighters battle a wind-driven fire that has destroyed at least two homes and a number of outbuildings in Topaz Ranch Estates, south of Gardnerville, Nev., on Tuesday, May 22, 2012. (AP Photo/Cathleen Allison)

  • Hewlett Wildfire

    Fire burns through trees on the Hewlett wildfire in the Poudre Canyon northwest of Fort Collins, Colo., on Thursday, May 17, 2012. More than 50 homes were evacuated on Thursday. The fire has grown from 1.5 square miles to 8 square miles in the last day as erratic wind gusts of up to 50 mph moved into the area fueled by thunderstorms that didn

  • Gladiator Fire

    Smoke from the wild fire can be seen from Spring Valley as the sun goes down and firefighters try to protect the town of Crown King Wednesday, May 16, 2012 in Crown King, Ariz. (AP Photo/The Arizona Republic, Tom Tingle) MARICOPA COUNTY OUT; MAGS OUT; NO SALES

  • Gladiator Fire

    The Gladiator Fire burns in the Bradshaw Mountains in Prescott National Forest, Ariz. on Wednesday, May 16, 2012. Authorities are worried that flames from the Gladiator Fire will get past a fire line that's about a mile west of the historic mining town of Crown King, fire incident spokeswoman Loretta Benavidez said Tuesday night. (AP Photo/The Arizona Republic, David Wallace) MARICOPA COUNTY OUT; MAGS OUT; NO SALES

  • Lower North Fork Wildfire

    Smoke envelops trees on a ridge in the Lower North Fork Wildfire as it burns in the foothills community of Conifer, Colo., southwest of Denver on Tuesday, March 27, 2012. Firefighters are now able to actively battle the blaze on the ground that started on Monday and has already destroyed at least 16 homes in the rugged terrain. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

  • Reno WIldfire

    Emergency personnel respond to a wildfire in Reno, Nev. Friday, Nov. 18, 2011. Nevada firefighters are battling a wind-whipped wildfire that has already burned several homes and caused several injuries. Reno Fire Chief Michael Hernandez sayfire crews are having a tough time "getting ahead of" the 400-acre blaze. He also says flames broke off into two areas in Caughlin Ranch. Hernandez says about a dozen homes have burned. (AP Photo/The Reno Gazette-Journal, Tim Dunn)

  • Reno Wildfire

    A firefighter tries to keep back the flames, whipped by strong winds, in Reno, Nev. Friday, Nov. 18, 2011. Nevada firefighters are battling a wind-whipped wildfire that has already burned several homes and caused several injuries. Reno Fire Chief Michael Hernandez sayfire crews are having a tough time "getting ahead of" the 400-acre blaze. He also says flames broke off into two areas in Caughlin Ranch. Hernandez says about a dozen homes have burned. (AP Photo/The Reno Gazette-Journal, Tim Dunn)

  • Reno Wildfire

    A tree burns in the ravine along Manzanita Lane near Broken Arrow in Reno, Nev. Friday, Nov. 18, 2011. Nevada firefighters are battling a wind-whipped wildfire that has already burned several homes and caused several injuries. Reno Fire Chief Michael Hernandez sayfire crews are having a tough time "getting ahead of" the 400-acre blaze. He also says flames broke off into two areas in Caughlin Ranch. Hernandez says about a dozen homes have burned. (AP Photo/The Reno Gazette-Journal, Liz Margerum) NEVADA APPEAL OUT; NO SALES

  • Smithville Fire

    In this Sept. 5, 2011 file photo firefighters battle a wildfire on Highway 71 near Smithville, Texas. Despite a recent lull in fire activity statewide, the threat remains in parts of Texas, so the Texas Forest Service is not declaring an end to the wildfire season that started Nov. 15, 2010. (AP Photo/Erich Schlegel, File)

  • Smithville Fire

    File - In this Sept. 5, 2011 file photo, firefighters battle a large wildfire near Smithville, Texas. Long before this month's historic wildfires in Texas, the state's forest service came up with a $20.4 million plan to stop the flames from starting or tamp them out before small blazes grew deadly and destructive. Three years later, the plan is still only half-funded. (AP Photo/Erich Schlegel, File)

  • Smithville Fire

    File - In this Sept. 5, 2011 file photo firefighters battle a wildfire on Highway 71 near Smithville, Texas. Scorching temperatures, strong winds and dry vegetation are turning Texas wildfires into fast and furious dangers that hop from place to place within hours, even minutes, and give residents little time to flee. Now it

  • Okefenokee Swamp Fire

    In this June 9, 2011 photo provided by the US Fish and Wildlife Service, the Honey Prairie fire is seen burning in the Okefenokee Swamp in southeast Georgia. A wildfire started by lightning in the Okefenokee Swamp is still smoldering and sputtering six months after it started. (AP Photo/ US Fish and Wildlife Service, Howard McCullough)

  • Tuscarora Wildfire

    In this photo taken Oct. 3, 2011, fire and smoke cast a glow as a wildfire burns behind Tuscarora, Nev. about 52 miles northwest of Elko, Nev. (AP Photo/Elko Daily Free Press, Ross Andréson)

  • Tuscarora Wildfire

    In this photo taken Oct. 3, 2011, a firefighter takes a photograph of a crew member as they wait to for orders to move in for ground work as the Dunphy Complex Fire burns just outside Tuscarora, Nev., about 52 miles northwest of Elko, Nev. (AP Photo/Elko Daily Free Press Ross Andréson)

  • Pagami Creek Fire

    In this aerial photo, an area of the Pagami Creek wildfire shows active burning and creates a large smoke plume on Tuesday Sept. 13, 2011 in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness in Northeastern Minnesota. The haze from the fire was heavy enough that some people reported burning eyes and difficulty breathing in the Chicago area, 600 miles south of the forest fire, the National Weather Service said. (AP Photo/The Duluth News-Tribune, Clint Austin)

  • Brasilia Fire

    A wildfire is seen at a national reserve in Brasilia, Brazil, Monday, Sept. 9, 2011. Drought, high temperatures and low humidity have caused wildfires at several places around Brasilia, according to officials. (AP Photo/Eraldo Peres)

  • Tehachapi Fire

    A large wildfire to the southwest of Tehachapi, Calif. burns on Sunday, Sept. 4, 2011. A single-engine Cessna 210 went down in Blackburn Canyon near the small community of Tehachapi, sparking a raging brush fire that sent up a huge plume of smoke visible for miles around, according to Kern County fire department spokesman Cary Wright. (AP Photo/Dave Mills)

  • Possum Kingdom Lake Fire

    A wildfire roars through dry trees near Possum Kingdom Lake, Texas, Wednesday, Aug. 31, 2011. Texas and Oklahoma are in the grips of a record-setting drought, and a summer of soaring temperatures and little rain has meant the wildfire season, which usually ends in spring, didn't end this year. (AP Photo/LM Otero)

  • Edmond Wildfire

    A wildfire burns near 63rd and Sooner Road on Tuesday, Aug. 30, 2011, in Edmond, Okla. (AP Photo/The Oklahoman, Chris Landsberger)

  • Air Depot Wildfire

    Cattle move to avoid the flames of a large grass fire in a farm off of Air Depot between 63rd and Wilshire in Oklahoma City, Tuesday, Aug. 30, 2011. Authorities have evacuated a larger area in Oklahoma City where a stiff winds and dry conditions fueled a wildfire that destroyed several homes. (AP Photo/The Oklahoman, Paul Hellstern)

  • Santa Barbara Wildfire

    In this Nov. 14, 2008 file photo, a firefighter sprays water on the flames as a mansion burns during a wildfire in Santa Barbara, Calif. As part of the recently approved California budget, owners of rural homes will be assessed a $150 annul fee for fire protection covered by the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill, File)

  • The Monument Fire

    The Monument fire burns Thursday afternoon June 16, 2011 near Hereford, Ariz. Authorities say the Monument fire has charred more than 9,300 acres or 14 square miles. (AP Photo/The Arizona Republic, Pat Shannahan)

  • Sierra Vista Wildfire

    Fire trucks escape the flames near South Andalusian Way after the fire jumped State Route 92 as a wildfire burns on Thursday, June 16, 2011 near Sierra Vista, Ariz. (AP Photo/Arizona Daily Star, Dean Knuth)

  • Wallow Fire

    The Wallow fire burns towards Eagar, Ariz, north of Greer, Ariz,, Wednesday night June 8, 2011. The fire in eastern Arizona that already forced thousands from their homes headed Wednesday for a pair of transmission lines that supply electricity to hundreds of thousands of people as far east as Texas. (AP Photo/Rob Schumacher/The Arizona Republic)

  • Wallow Fire

    In this June 10, 2011 file photo, a forest burns during a backburn operation to fight the Wallow Fire in Nutrioso, Ariz. The West's 2012 wildfire season exploded in earnest last month with a wind-whipped blaze that killed three people in rugged alpine canyon country near Denver. At its peak, it took a 700-strong federal firefighting team a week of labor, day and night, to tame the blaze _ and other states throughout the West took notice.Fire experts say this year's drought, low snowpack and record-high temperatures in much of the West portend a dangerous installment of what has become year-round wildfire threat. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez, File)

  • Arizona Wildfire Is Largest in State's History

    The massive wildfire in Arizona is now 750 square miles and beginning to threaten towns in New Mexico.

  • Wildfires Sweep Through Colorado

    Firefighters struggle to battle a huge fire in an inaccessible forest near Fort Collins, Colorado.

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CAMPO, Calif. — Authorities are evacuating about 150 homes in eastern San Diego County as firefighters battle a wind-driven wildfire that has destroyed one structure. The California Department ...
CAMPO, Calif. — Authorities are evacuating about 150 homes in eastern San Diego County as firefighters battle a wind-driven wildfire that has destroyed one structure. The California Department ...
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11:29 AM on 06/18/2012
My grandson is helping to fight the fire in Riverside county. I pray for him all the time. He lost his best friend, Danny, in the last big Riverside fire. My grandson will never get over it, but he is helping fire fighters because this is my grandson's passion and to honor and remember his friend, Danny.

Let us never forget out fallen heros. Let's do what we can to prevent fires. Protect the trees, the wild life and human lives and possessions.
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thetxsndn
Man Plans. God laughs.
05:00 PM on 06/18/2012
Daz of Glory, your g-son will be in our prayers. You're so right about never forgeting those heros.
11:19 AM on 06/18/2012
I had heard they cut the budgets for firefighters in those areas that have frequent wildfires.. What the hell were they thinking? That fires wouldnt happen because of buget cuts? Why dont politicians take a pay cut and keep the firefighters? Wouldnt we all benefit from that?
11:52 AM on 06/18/2012
Politicians taken a Pay cut ? Hell will freeze over before that will happen .
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Imago
I thought so.
11:16 AM on 06/18/2012
Lived in SoCal for a dozen years -- my heart goes out to everyone affected. Scary stuff.
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fddragon
09:49 AM on 06/18/2012
In Arizona, we have bad fires, and we also have smokers that throw out their cigarette butts out the window....leaving me to believe smokers can care less about themselves as well as our planet. I think we need to start paying attention these irresponsible and ignorant people who throw their butts out creating fires. Though the article did not state this is how the fire started, it reminds me of rude, careless who just toss their butts out not caring about their world...We need to fine them thousands of dollars if they throw their butts out, only we can prevent fires, and many smokers can careless. This planet is all we have....
10:52 AM on 06/18/2012
I've lived in Ca for a decade and the majority of fires here are started by car fires, electrical sparks and illegals living in the canyons burning crap...Oh, and also by the sickos whe intentionally start them because they like the excitement. I don't smoke, but I think the smokers care as much about the planet as the drinkers who kill on the highway and pot heads who don't care about anything but feeling good...so maybe you should not pick on one segment of the population when you don't have the facts.
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fddragon
11:43 AM on 06/18/2012
So sorry I pinch your nerve... I did not post facts as I did not think it was a requirment. I was posting about a problem and trying to get people to pay attention, though it is clear this is a topic you can care quite less about. I know in AZ it is a Class 3 misdemeanor and can carry a fine up to $500. But if you require facts as it seems you do look at Southern California last year to 50 square foot grass fires caused by a lit cigarette being tossed out the window of a car. Bottom line according to a recent report by the United States Fire Administration, cigarette caused fires killed over 2,300 men, women and children in the United States each year and 9 out of 10 fires are caused by humans...need more facts to help prevent forest fires Try to Google it while you are stuck on semantics...us good Americans will do what we can do prevent wild fires.
09:38 AM on 06/18/2012
Bless our Fire Fighters! With all the dryness and heat this summer, they wil lhave their hands full.
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Beth3
09:34 AM on 06/18/2012
It's truly amazing to me how California is still standing after all the devistating wild fires they continually have. My My!!
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ljsurf322
02:15 PM on 06/18/2012
I don't think you realize how huge this state is ;)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
darlinsass
This is Joey!
09:26 AM on 06/18/2012
I sure wish I could send them rain from here in Oregon! It just doesn't seem hardly right.

Firefighters... Be safe.
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keedyk87
09:23 AM on 06/18/2012
If I were a Californian, I would be more worried more about the Incompent Crooks they have for supposed Politicians!
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Cashman Knows All
I Am The Oracle
09:10 AM on 06/18/2012
Where is Elizabeth "Fauxahontas" Warren when you need a good rain dance.
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10:04 AM on 06/18/2012
funny
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
John96
08:32 AM on 06/18/2012
This fire is not unusual, they happen every year. It's just that California had a good year and now we have an abundance of fuel to burn when the fires start. This is a small one by comparison but the real danger will come with the july 4 fireworks which are still legal in most of California and then there are are always those individuals who start fires to watch them burn intentionally. Yes California has a Democratic Governor and it is also true we have a weak budget but the fires will be fought regardless. It is true that a lot of local cities and counties have laid off employees this year as well as the past three years due to losses of funds they would have gotten back from the state had the state not been short. Most of us feel that entitlement programs have to go otherwise it will eventually bankrupt this state. the governor is threatening us now with this if we do not vote him a tax increase in November. What Politicians don't seem to realize is there are no jobs, property taxes are a third of what they were two years ago and more people are losing their jobs everyday as well as their homes so how is taxing the hell out of what is left going to fix their desire to spend what we don't have?
08:04 AM on 06/18/2012
Every year,fires in California.....
07:35 AM on 06/18/2012
its not bad enough that people will lose thier homes but some use this oppertunity to loot other peoples homes. just like the riots there are always those people that could care less about what is going on,to them its just a chance to get something for nothing
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keedyk87
09:28 AM on 06/18/2012
They learned well from our Politicians and Corporate C.E.O's now didn't they!
05:16 AM on 06/18/2012
And I have a firefighter friend in Ca. that was just laid off work a week or two ago. Now who's going to fight the fires?????
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davisboundmarine
05:39 AM on 06/18/2012
Mitt Romney says we have enough firefighters, and since he is so in touch he must be right.
07:24 AM on 06/18/2012
But it's a dem won controls Ca and because if their excessive spending the dems laid them off.
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Pool Guy
Common Sense & Sarcasm used for communication
07:25 AM on 06/18/2012
His opinion didn´t lay that fire fighter off now did it. Look at WHO has been in charge and still is.
07:40 AM on 06/18/2012
How about O & B
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cebu98
Obama won, America lost.
03:12 AM on 06/18/2012
I cannot imagine having to evacuate, and sit and wonder if there will still be a home to return to. I only hope there are, and the entire west will soon see some good rainfall. Godspeed to those firefighters too, they've got themselves one very dangerous job.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
04:34 AM on 06/18/2012
Time for some rain prayers for fall?

Mitt will protect the firefighters. There's too many, and he'll make them safer by firing them.
07:25 AM on 06/18/2012
He can't protect them if the dem controlled state decides to lay them off. Too bad the dems can't control their spending causing this.
08:05 AM on 06/18/2012
Booooooo!
02:44 AM on 06/18/2012
We're in southern Nevada and the forecast for tomorrow is very low humidity and 45 mph winds. California will either experience that velocity first or it is coming their way, which means some serious fire threats. Firefighters, be safe - you're going to have nasty conditions to contend with.