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New Wildfire Scorches 700 Acres Near Simi Valley as L.A. Mayoral Race Heats Up

New Wildfire Scorches 700 Acres Near Simi Valley as L.A. Mayoral Race Heats Up

The Sandy Fire’s eruption just two weeks before the June 2 mayoral primary is a clear sign that wildfire prevention and preparedness should be on forefront of any political discussion related to Southern California.

Southern California is once again staring down the consequences of policies that prioritize optics over infrastructure and safety.

As the Los Angeles region continues to grapple with the aftermath of the catastrophic 2025 wildfire season…where mismanagement, fuel overload, and infrastructure failures converged…a new wildfire has sparked in Simi Valley.

And while Simi Valley is in Ventura County, the blaze is a stark reminder that the conditions that fueled last year’s disaster haven’t been meaningfully addressed at either the state or local levels.

A brush fire in Simi Valley moved into a neighborhood and burned at least one home and another structure after igniting Monday morning.

The Sandy fire broke out before 11 a.m. and was being driven by the wind. It covered some 184 acres Monday morning and triggered evacuation orders for a wide swath of homes in southern Simi Valley, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

Evacuation warnings also stretched west into northern Thousand Oaks. The fire was 0% contained as of early Monday afternoon.

Dry Santa Ana winds were expected to continue until around 4 p.m., then shift to onshore winds that would ease by the evening.

As of the early afternoon Pacific time, Ventura County and CALFIRE firefighters have managed to direct the flames away from residential areas.

At least 200 firefighters are on the scene, including from Ventura County, L.A. County and CAL FIRE. They’re actively engaged in structure defense efforts, including dropping water and coordinating with ground resources to try to bring control lines in and around the fire before it spreads into the thicker vegetation in the Simi Hills.

It appears as of 1 p.m., crews have managed to steer the majority of this fire away from residential areas in Simi Valley and into unoccupied brush.

There have been no reports of any injuries at this time.

Sky5 has been over the scene since 11 a.m., where the fire could be seen spreading quickly, burning several structures and sending a large plume of grey smoke into the air.

Sky5 has been over the scene since 11 a.m., where the fire could be seen spreading quickly, burning several structures and sending a large plume of grey smoke into the air.

Evacuations include the iconic Ronald Reagan Presidential Library.

As of the time of preparation of this report, the wildfire was at 0% containment and had incinerated 700 acres. Additional fire crews have now responded.

The Ventura County Fire Department said the fire is still threatening structures, and evacuation orders and warnings remain in place.

Approximately 500 firefighters are assigned to battle the blaze, and firefighting aircraft are continuing to douse flames with retardant and water to support crews on the ground.

Those who relocated to Ventura County after their homes in the Los Angeles area were destroyed in the 2025 blazes are especially troubled by the developments.

While the winds are likely to die down in the evening, they are expected to pick up again tomorrow.

CBS LA Meteorologist Alex Biston said the offshore Santa Ana winds should subside by the late afternoon. She added that the winds are causing dry conditions, which can contribute to the fire behavior.

The National Weather Service said the gusty northeast Santa Ana winds will weaken overnight, but another round is expected to arrive early Tuesday morning and continue through the afternoon.

Hopefully, the fire crews will have substantial containment before tomorrow.

The Sandy Fire’s eruption just two weeks before the June 2 mayoral primary is a clear sign that wildfire prevention and preparedness should be at the forefront of any political discussion related to Southern California.

Los Angeles voters heading to the polls will do so with fresh smoke in the air and the memory of last January’s catastrophe still raw, a reminder that the region’s wildfire crisis is not a past-tense event but an ongoing emergency demanding urgent accountability.

Incumbent Mayor Karen Bass is already staggering into the primary under fire (literally and politically) after facing sharp criticism for being out of the country when the Palisades Fire ignited, for allegedly watering down the city’s own after-action report, and for a rebuilding effort widely panned as too slow. Her challengers, including city councilmember Nithya Raman and Palisades Fire survivor Spencer Pratt, have made wildfire preparedness and infrastructure failure central to their campaigns.

But no candidate’s stump speech makes the argument as viscerally as today’s images from Simi Valley. Southern California does not need another commission report or campaign promise. It needs leaders who will act before the winds arrive — and on June 2nd, voters will have their say on whether the current leadership is capable of being those leaders.

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Comments


 
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Milhouse | May 19, 2026 at 7:45 am

Well, that should help focus voters’ attention on what matters in this race!


     
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    Drewsome in reply to Milhouse. | May 19, 2026 at 8:04 am

    Banning backyard barbecues, of course…


     
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    RITaxpayer in reply to Milhouse. | May 19, 2026 at 9:00 am

    Free diapers for rich parents?


       
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      Tiki in reply to RITaxpayer. | May 19, 2026 at 2:35 pm

      Its not just the Santa Ana wind – a very strong north wind (gusting whip) is blowing down the state entire.

      The chaparral is mixed green and dry – turning to dry now. There’s still snow on northern sierra north facing slopes and in shaded southern exposures.

      All that to say this – this time of year fires generally happen by homeless arson or some dope weed whacking a fence line.

      There’s no sensible excuse for operating a flail mower during a wind storm.

      I’d sue the tractor driver for every penny he has, plus take his damn tractor away.


     
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    patchman2076 in reply to Milhouse. | May 19, 2026 at 9:48 am

    I’ve learned Californians are one point up on the IQ scale against Hawaiians.
    Not very bright.


 
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RITaxpayer | May 19, 2026 at 8:59 am

Winds don’t CAUSE fires. How did this one start? BBQ? Someone burning brush on their property? Another downed power line?

Maybe some serious repercussions, like working on a chain gang clearing fire breaks for a couple weeks if you start a fire with Santa Ana winds in the forecast.

The only reason I can think of that isn’t to blame on human error (stupidity) is a lightning strike.


 
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destroycommunism | May 19, 2026 at 9:30 am

pratt: lets put out the fires with water

bass: lets put out the fires with millionaires homes

Can’t we all just get along? 🙂


 
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MoeHowardwasright | May 19, 2026 at 9:59 am

The cause is nice to know. That however is not the issue. Not allowing brush clearing in the canyons is the ISSUE!! Commiefornia DNR had treated brush clearing as a sin worse than pedophilia.


     
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    Tiki in reply to MoeHowardwasright. | May 19, 2026 at 2:49 pm

    In this instance it’s an imbecile flail-mowing chaparral during a windstorm.

    The last thing I’m inclined to do is write apologia for inept county and state agencies.

    Our city/county hire goat contractors to clear river/creek bottoms; the grass is just now getting dry enough for goat-grazing. Graze too early and the grass simply regenerates.


       
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      henrybowman in reply to Tiki. | May 19, 2026 at 3:56 pm

      Traditional solutions are surprisingly satisfying.
      I haven’t mowed my lawn in 20 years.
      (I do have to pick up a lot of donkey poop, but it’s a trade I’m happy to make.)

And of course the reservoir needed to fight the fire is empty, seems liked they planned it


 
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henrybowman | May 19, 2026 at 3:57 pm

Don’t think of this as a natural disaster, think of it as a Clio-winning campaign ad.

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