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5 years years ago the Labor Day fires scorched Oregon. What has the state learned?
5 years years ago the Labor Day fires scorched Oregon. What has the state learned?
5 years years ago the Labor Day fires scorched Oregon. What has the state learned?

Published on: 08/26/2025

This news was posted by Oregon Today News

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FILE - Homes leveled by the Almeda Fire are seen at Bear Lake Estates in Phoenix, Ore., on Sept. 15, 2020.

Five years ago, Oregon saw the deadliest wildfire season in state history. Eleven lives were lost, skies turned orange, more than 4,000 homes burned and tens of thousands of Oregonians evacuated as multiple fires scorched more than a million acres.

Global temperatures had been rising for decades leading up to the Labor Day fires. The western side of the Cascade Mountains, once virtually untouched by major fires, had seen more serious blazes and worsening drought since at least 2015. Across the state, fires were igniting more often and burning more terrain. As hot winds raced across a parched Oregon landscape over the 2020 Labor Day weekend, those changing conditions converged to set the state on fire.

That year also transformed how Oregon thinks about and responds to fire. Some who lost their homes are still fighting for stability. Others have won multimillion-dollar court judgments and settlements. But Oregon still lacks a long-term plan to pay for the next big conflagration.

As Labor Day 2025 approaches, OPB is looking back at the long, fiery weekend that changed thousands of lives, and forced Oregon to take a closer look at fire in a changing world.

What happened

Firefighters at the incident command center for the Beachie Creek wildfire work to extinguish the blaze that started when high winds blew trees into power lines on Sept. 7, 2020. About a hundred members of the Beachie Creek firefighting team were forced to evacuate their camp at Gates School that night and relocate their command center to Salem.Ellie Owens, 8, looks at fire damage Friday, Sept. 11, 2020, in Talent.Jackson County District 5 firefighters Captain Aaron Bustard, front right, and Andy Buckingham work on a smoldering fire in a burned neighborhood in Talent, on Sept. 11, 2020.Beth Deleo holds her dog as Ben Quaempts loads donated items into their van at the Milwaukie-Portland Elks Lodge, Sept. 13, 2020, in Oak Grove. The two have been living in their van for the past several days after evacuating from Molalla, Oregon, which was threatened by the Riverside Fire.Carrie Rhodes and Richard Pickle, evacuees from the Santiam Canyon Fire, at the Linn County fair grounds evacuation center in Albany, Sept. 8, 2020.Ashlynn Davis, center, helps unload donations at the Linn County fair grounds evacuation center in Albany, Sept. 8, 2020.Smoke and smoldering fires in a neighborhood in Talent, Sept. 11, 2020.A burned cat temporarily named Chestnut is seen recovering from her injuries at the Southern Oregon Veterinary Specialty Center, a 24/7 hospital dealing with rescued animals from the wildfires in the region on Sept. 12, 2020, in Central Point.Sheryl Christian rests on a cot with her mother Pat Skundrick at the evacuation center set up at the Jackson County Fairgrounds on Sept. 12, in Central Point. They lived together at the Glenwood Mobile park and lost their home to the wildfires.Four wildfires continued gaining ground, aided by high winds in Molalla, Sept. 9, 2020.The remains of a home destroyed in the Santiam Fire near Gates, Sept. 9, 2020.Roxane Emerson hugs her grandson after finding her home safe from the Santiam Fire near Gates, on Sept. 9, 2020.Chelsea DeVos scrambles to salvage possessions from her home as the Santiam Fire approaches near Gates, Sept. 9, 2020.A partially burned American flag flutters in the breeze in front of the remains of a mobile home in Talent, Sept. 10, 2020. More than 50 mobile homes in this park were completely destroyed by the Almeda Fire which came through the area Tuesday.Leslie Butlovich stands with two of her seven rescue dogs in a parking lot shelter in Clackamas County, on Sept. 10, 2020. Evacuation zones expanded as two of the four fires burning in Clackamas County might possibly merge. Jim Furlow's son gives him a hug on Sept. 10, 2020, in a parking lot shelter in Clackamas County. Jim and his wife Tracy were getting ready to evacuate further north as fire officials expanded the county's evacuation zones.The charred husk of a car in a neighborhood burned in the Santiam Fire near Gates, Sept. 9, 2020.Chance Johnson hugs Sarah Hunter after as they help evacuate animals Sept. 9, 2020, in Canby.Kyle St. Clair and his wife Kerina, at their home in Molalla, prepare to evacuate on Sept. 9, 2020.Bridgette Noce took in horses and people who had been evacuated from nearby areas in Canby, Sept. 9, 2020.Animals evacuated from nearby areas are sheltered at Bridgette Noce's farm on Sept. 9, 2020, in Canby.Kyle St. Clair and his wife Kerina prepare to evacuate their home, Sept. 9, 2020 in Molalla.Firefighters give directions during the Santiam Fire near Gates, on Sept. 9, 2020.Evacuees from the Santiam Fire at the state fairgrounds in Salem, Sept. 10, 2020, where county officials and the American Red Cross have established an aid center.Mary Thomson, left, from Phoenix gets assistance from Salvation Army officer Tawnya Stumpf at the evacuation center at the Jackson County Fairgrounds on Sept. 12, 2020, in Central Point. Don and Carrie Rascal from Phoenix rest on a cot with their dog at the evacuation center set up at the Jackson County Fairgrounds on Sept. 12, 2020, in Central Point.

COVID-19 had already marked 2020 as an exceptional year by the spring. A global pandemic left people isolated and cut off. Death tolls climbed in Oregon and lockdowns kept people away from their communities. By the late days of summer, more than 100 days of protests over George Floyd’s murder and clashes between protesters and federal officers in Portland had frayed the city’s image and deepened political divides. Many people sought sanctuary in Oregon’s outdoors that year.

Then the sky started to turn red.

That summer, Oregon was a tinderbox, dried out by years of intermittent drought. As Labor Day weekend approached, weather officials took note of the unusual forecast for hurricane force winds and warned of dangerous fire conditions. Some power companies braced for the worst and turned off their power lines ahead of time. All it would take to ignite a fire was a spark — and there were sparks aplenty.

Witnesses south of Ashland called police to report an arsonist lighting fires. In the Santiam Canyon, high winds downed power lines and sent sparks flying as embers from the nearby Beachie Creek Fire kicked up and drifted miles through the air. In Washington County, a campfire on private property began to spread. A lightning-sparked fire that had smoldered for weeks on the Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs Indian Reservation blew up as hot, dry winds fueled its spread.

FILE - Remains of the devastation from the 2020 Beachie Creek Fire were still evident in the small town of Gates, Ore., Feb. 26, 2021.

Even regions of the state safe from the flames could not escape the fires’ reach. Smoke tinted skies orange and choked the air with soot, prompting air quality alerts that broke historic records. Residents of New York and Washington, D.C., expressed concern as their skies darkened from smoke drifting across the country.

By one tally, some 16 fires that charred a thousand or more acres each were burning simultaneously across Oregon by the end of the weekend, with devastating and unprecedented consequences. The Almeda Fire destroyed more than 2,600 homes in Talent, Phoenix, Medford and Ashland. The South Obenchain Fire burned 33 other Jackson County homes. Three roaring fires merged into a conflagration in the Santiam Canyon, destroying 1,500 structures and decimating Detroit. In the McKenzie River corridor, the Holiday Farm Fire razed thousands of structures and wiped out most of the community of Blue River.

With so much of the state aflame, there were not enough firefighting resources in Oregon that weekend to respond to it all.

“This could be the greatest loss of human lives and property due to wildfire in our state’s history,” Gov. Kate Brown said on Sept. 9, 2020, as the state began to grapple with the scale of the loss.

Survivors filled evacuation centers and hotels, or bunked with friends and family, and began the long journey to rebuilding their lives.

OPB video teams documenting the Oregon wildfires on September 10, 2020, encountered over 300 miles of hazardous smoke and pockets of total destruction.

Rebuilding, resilience and blame

As soon as the scope of the crisis became clear, Oregonians stepped up to help. A group of cyclists brought food and water to Talent and Phoenix as supplies ran low. Community members brought water, blankets, food and animal feed to the Linn County fairgrounds where evacuated Mill City residents sought help.

But good will and community support went only so far. In Blue River, which was nearly leveled by the 2020 fires, the hills are still charred and not even half the 500 homes that were destroyed have been rebuilt, according to KLCC. The manufactured homes built for survivors of the Almeda Fire were later deemed uninhabitable, prompting the state to sue the manufacturers, according to Jefferson Public Radio.

Listen: OPB news partner KLCC visits Blue River nearly five years after the town was leveled.

As communities have worked to rebuild, some focused on resilience. Latino and Indigenous community members displaced by the Almeda Fire have banded together to build a resident-owned community for survivors, Coalicion Fortaleza. McKenzie River Trust has been working to restore a fire-damaged ecosystem and to make it more resilient to future wildfires.

Others wanted accountability. Residents of Gates, Oregon — which was hit hard by the Santiam Canyon fires — started asking questions about Pacific Power’s failure to turn off its electric lines ahead of Labor Day wind storms. They were among the first to sue the power company. Thousands of others followed.

What caused the fires that burned through Gates, Oregon on Labor Day in 2020? Ilie Mitaru

Pacific Power has paid out more than 2,000 claims associated with 2020 Labor Day fires, totalling more than $550 million owed to fire survivors. Other litigation continues, including a federal lawsuit over the company’s role in sparking the Archie Creek Fire, which burned on federal land in Douglas County.

What has changed

Five years later, much has changed and much remains the same. Oregon’s wildfire risk continues to worsen.

In 2024, Oregon broke new records with 2.4 million acres burned, this time largely in Eastern Oregon. It was the state’s most expensive fire season ever. Fewer homes and lives were lost than in 2020, but that’s because the flames ignited in remote areas and less populated corners of the state. The devastation in those communities still lingers.

As the smoke clears, ranchers in Eastern Oregon face uncertainty

Wildfire risk is a reality state lawmakers have tried to grapple with, but it’s also a problem they have not been able to solve. In December 2024, the Legislature had to convene for a one-day special session just to find a way to pay for the previous summer’s firefighting bills.

Despite some legislators’ hopes that Oregon would chart a path toward stably funding wildfire fighting and prevention efforts this year, they took only small steps in this year’s session, leaving some of the biggest policy and financial challenges that wildfires pose unsolved.

Federal actions are adding to those challenges. The Trump administration has rescinded and scaled back funding for fire mitigation programs. And federal job cuts have left the U.S. Forest Service with fewer firefighters.

This year’s fire season has been manageable so far. The Rowena Fire destroyed 56 homes in June but the damage from fires since then has been more limited than the 2024 season.

Destroyed homes seen on Aug. 20,. 2025, from the unincorporated community of Rowena, outside of the The Dalles, where the Rowena Fire destroyed 56 homes.

Forecasts suggest the state will continue to see hotter than average temperatures this summer, however, and much of the state is in drought. In July, Gov. Tina Kotek declared a wildfire state of emergency that will continue through the calendar year.

“We have to be prepared for worsening conditions,” Kotek said.

Editor’s note: In the days ahead, OPB will explore the lessons learned and journeys taken since Labor Day 2020, when fires swept across the state in Oregon’s deadliest wildfire season to date. We’ll dive into the science of natural resilience, hear from survivors of the Labor Day fires to see how they are adapting to a world that changed around them and follow the epic battle to preserve an iconic Oregon landmark. We’ll also meet a group of migrants who came to the state to replant millions of trees by hand.

Resources: Stay safe and informed during wildfire season with OPB’s wildfire guide at opb.org/wildfires. This resource offers essential safety tips and preparedness guidance to help you navigate fire and smoke events. This resource was created as part of our commitment to serving the public as wildfire seasons become longer and more dangerous.

News Source : https://www.opb.org/article/2025/08/26/labor-day-wildfires-anniversary-oregon/

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