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  • SANTA CRUZ - AUGUST 25: Nickey Joe Atchison, right, stands...

    SANTA CRUZ - AUGUST 25: Nickey Joe Atchison, right, stands across the street from the evacuation center at the Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium where he is currently staying at in Santa Cruz, Calif., on Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2020. (Randy Vazquez/ Bay Area News Group)

  • CALISTOGA, CA - AUGUST 24: A sign thanking firefighters is...

    CALISTOGA, CA - AUGUST 24: A sign thanking firefighters is seen in Calistoga, Calif., on Monday, Aug. 24, 2020. The LNU Lightning Complex Fire is now the third largest wildfire incident in California history. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

  • SANTA CRUZ - AUGUST 25: Christine Pascoe, right, pets their...

    SANTA CRUZ - AUGUST 25: Christine Pascoe, right, pets their cat Ozzy, left, as roommate Angel Cruz, center, watches, while parked outside of the evacuation center at the Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium in Santa Cruz, Calif., on Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2020. Both Pascoe and Cruz are Ben Lomond residents and are staying at the shelter while evacuation orders are in place. (Randy Vazquez/ Bay Area News Group)

  • CALISTOGA, CA - AUGUST 25: Cal Fire Battalion Chief Chris...

    CALISTOGA, CA - AUGUST 25: Cal Fire Battalion Chief Chris Waters gives a media briefing at the Cal Fire LNU Lightning Complex Fire incident command center at the Calistoga Fairgrounds in Calistoga, Calif., on Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2020. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

  • SANTA CRUZ - AUGUST 25: Nickey Joe Atchison stands outside...

    SANTA CRUZ - AUGUST 25: Nickey Joe Atchison stands outside of the evacuation center at the Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium where he is currently staying at in Santa Cruz, Calif., on Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2020. (Randy Vazquez/ Bay Area News Group)

  • SANTA CRUZ - AUGUST 25: Paul House, left, and Beverly...

    SANTA CRUZ - AUGUST 25: Paul House, left, and Beverly Fleming, right, sit outside of the evacuation center at the Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium where they are both staying in Santa Cruz, Calif., on Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2020. (Randy Vazquez/ Bay Area News Group)

  • HEALDSBURG, CA - AUGUST 25: Russ Messing leaves after checking...

    HEALDSBURG, CA - AUGUST 25: Russ Messing leaves after checking on his home along Chemise Road in Healdsburg, Calif., on Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2020. The home, which he's lived in for 44 years, was spared as the Walbridge Fire, part of the LNU Lightning Complex Fire, continues to burn. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

  • SANTA CRUZ - AUGUST 25: Beverly Fleming, right, looks in...

    SANTA CRUZ - AUGUST 25: Beverly Fleming, right, looks in the direction of partner Paul House, left, outside of the evacuation center at the Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium where they are both staying in Santa Cruz, Calif., on Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2020. (Randy Vazquez/ Bay Area News Group)

  • SANTA CRUZ - AUGUST 25: Christine Pascoe, right, pets their...

    SANTA CRUZ - AUGUST 25: Christine Pascoe, right, pets their cat Ozzy, left, as roommate Angel Cruz, left, watches, while parked outside of the evacuation center at the Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium in Santa Cruz, Calif., on Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2020. Both Pascoe and Cruz are Ben Lomond residents and are staying at the shelter while evacuation orders are in place. (Randy Vazquez/ Bay Area News Group)

  • SANTA CRUZ - AUGUST 25: People line up before entering...

    SANTA CRUZ - AUGUST 25: People line up before entering the evacuation center at the Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium in Santa Cruz, Calif., on Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2020. (Randy Vazquez/ Bay Area News Group)

  • SANTA CRUZ - AUGUST 25: Christine Pascoe pets their cat...

    SANTA CRUZ - AUGUST 25: Christine Pascoe pets their cat Ozzy while parked outside of the evacuation center at the Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium in Santa Cruz, Calif., on Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2020. Pascoe and roommate Angel Cruz are Ben Lomond residents and are staying at the shelter while evacuation orders are in place. (Randy Vazquez/ Bay Area News Group)

  • CALISTOGA, CA - AUGUST 25: Sonoma County Sheriff Mark Essick...

    CALISTOGA, CA - AUGUST 25: Sonoma County Sheriff Mark Essick gives a media briefing at the Cal Fire LNU Lightning Complex Fire incident command center at the Calistoga Fairgrounds in Calistoga, Calif., on Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2020. Several evacuation orders were lifted. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

  • HEALDSBURG, CA - AUGUST 25: Resident Kelly Dicke watches as...

    HEALDSBURG, CA - AUGUST 25: Resident Kelly Dicke watches as as a backfire burns near her home in Dorman Canyon off Chemise Road in Healdsburg, Calif., on Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2020. Firefighters lit the backfire to protect several homes in the area as the Walbridge Fire, part of the LNU Lightning Complex Fire, continues to burn. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

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John Woolfolk, assistant metro editor, San Jose Mercury News, for his Wordpress profile. (Michael Malone/Bay Area News Group)Ethan Baron, business reporter, San Jose Mercury News, for his Wordpress profile. (Michael Malone/Bay Area News Group)Annie Sciacca, Business reporter for the Bay Area News Group is photographed for a Wordpress profile in Walnut Creek, Calif., on Thursday, July 28, 2016. (Anda Chu/Bay Area News Group)
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Favorable weather helped firefighters battling three epic Northern California wildfires, but tens of thousands of people still under evacuation orders Tuesday from the North Bay to the Santa Cruz Mountains were left wondering: When can we go home?

California Health and Human Services Agency Secretary Dr. Mark Ghaly said Tuesday 136,000 residents have been evacuated statewide, many of whom were forced to flee in the days after a freak lightning storm Aug. 16 sparked hundreds of fires across Northern California.

Some North Bay evacuees were allowed to return home Tuesday, but although the weather looks good over the next few days for the effort to corral the blazes, firefighters had no clear answer for nearly 80,000 residents forced last week to leave their homes in the Santa Cruz Mountains.

“Please be patient with us, we’re doing the best we can with the resources we have,” said Ian Larkin, chief of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection’s CZU unit in Santa Cruz and San Mateo counties. The CZU Lightning Complex is the smallest of the three fires but had also been the least contained. It had burned 79,640 acres and was 19% contained Tuesday evening, up from 17% Monday morning. “We’re in this for the long haul. We have never seen fire like this in the recent history we have any records for.”

On Tuesday evening, SCU Lightning Complex Fire evacuation orders were reduced to warnings in parts of Santa Clara and Alameda counties, and evacuation warnings were lifted in parts of Alameda County.

Evacuation ordersreduced to warnings for the following areas of Santa Clara and Alameda counties:

  • East of Sierra Road and Felter Road, east of the Milpitas and San Jose city limits to the fire perimeter (Zone 2B)
  • North of Mt. Hamilton Road to the Alameda-Santa Clara county line (Zone 2B)
  • West of San Felipe Road to the San Jose city limits (Zone 3B)
  • North of Metcalf Road to the San Jose city limits (Zone 3B)
  • East of the San Jose city limits to San Felipe Road (Zone 3B)
  • South of the San Jose city limits to Metcalf Road (Zone 3B)
  • Quimby Road north to Highway 130 (Zone 3C)
  • East of the San Jose city limits to Mt. Hamilton Road (Zone 3C)
  • South of Mt. Hamilton Road to Quimby Road (Zone 3C)
  • Mt. Hamilton Road west to the San Jose city limits (Zone 3C)
  • South of Welch Creek Road to the fire perimeter and the Alameda-Santa Clara county line (Zone 15B)
  • East of Calaveras Road at Welch Creek Road to the fire perimeter (Zone 15B)
  • Inside the Ohlone Fire perimeter (Zone 19)

Evacuation warnings were lifted for the following areas of Alameda County:

  • 100-9000 block of Mill Creek Road (Zone 15C)
  • East of Mission Boulevard, from the Mission Boulevard and Mission Road intersection, south to the Mission Boulevard and Curtner Road intersection
    Mission Boulevard and Curtner Road intersection (Zone 15C)
  • East of Curtner Road south along Interstate 680 to the Scott Creek Road-Santa Clara County line (Zone 15C)
  • Tesla Road, north to I-580 between Greenville Road and the Alameda-San Joaquin county line (Zone 15D)
  • Calaveras Road, west to Mill Creek Road, south of I-680 to the Ohlone Fire perimeter (Zone 15E)

An evacuation map is available here.

Evacuees have been staying with family, friends, in hotels and shelters, a trying experience in normal times made even more difficult during the coronavirus pandemic. Rita Mancera, executive director of Puente, a nonprofit helping evacuated San Mateo County families, had to leave with her own family from the coastal town of Pescadero last week, and while their home is still standing, it’s unclear when they can return.

“We continue asking that same question,” said Mancera, whose husband and 13-year-old son have gone to property the family owns outside the Bay Area while she’s remained in San Mateo County to help evacuees. “But we’ve been told, ‘Not yet.’ So we’re just waiting.”

The county of Santa Cruz on Tuesday afternoon released an online damage assessment map for the CZU Lightning Complex Fire. Inspections are ongoing, the county said, and the map reflects inspections completed to this date.

Since they broke out a week ago, the three fires have combined to burn nearly 800,000 acres — an area more than twice the size of Los Angeles, or more than 25 San Franciscos — destroy more than 1,000 structures and force tens of thousands to flee. Fire crews have recovered six bodies, with more people reported missing.

Some residents of Vacaville and Fairfield evacuated last week from the 356,326-acre LNU Lightning Complex were being allowed to return Tuesday. The LNU Lightning Complex has been the deadliest and most destructive of all the fires. It had burned 356,326 acres and was 27% contained Tuesday evening. Five people have died in Napa and Solano counties, and 1,234 structures have been damaged or destroyed. Some 30,500 structures remained threatened Tuesday, said Cal Fire public information officer Chris Bridger.

Brandon Camber, who lives with his wife and three kids in the English Hills neighborhood of Vacaville, where they fled in the middle of the night a week earlier, was thankful his house was still standing — a miracle in a neighborhood decimated by the fire.

“We still have our lives and a home to go back to,” Camber said. Still, he’s unsure how long it will be before he can return to live in his house, with his neighborhood in ashes. Looters made off with his tools, computer and a generator.

Bridger said it is still day-to-day for residents hoping to return to other areas affected by the LNU fires that surround Lake Berryessa in Napa, Sonoma, Lake, Yolo and Solano counties.

“We don’t want to get hopes up and make promises we can’t keep,” Solano County Sheriff Mark Essick said.

Elsewhere within the LNU Complex, the 54,000-acre Walbridge fire west of Healdsburg remains difficult to tackle because of steep terrain, according to Cal Fire Chief Chris Waters.

In the Santa Cruz Mountains, where the CZU Lightning Complex killed a resident in the mountains east of Año Nuevo State Park, destroyed 330 homes and other buildings and remains a threat to 25,000 houses, 77,000 people remain under evacuation orders in Boulder Creek, Ben Lomond, Felton and Scotts Valley.

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“It’s still actively burning,” said Cal Fire spokesman Daniel Potter, looking out from Scotts Valley to where the mountainsides above Felton and Ben Lomond were on fire just three miles from Scotts Valley neighborhoods. The sheriff’s office in consultation with Cal Fire and utility providers will make the call on when residents can go home.

One threat, from fire-damaged trees, was illustrated Monday when a limb crashed down onto the vehicle of a patrolling deputy sheriff, smashing the windshield, Potter said. Residents returning to areas still closed can hinder the battle against the fire, officials said.

San Lorenzo Valley Unified School District canceled classes for kids from Boulder Creek, Ben Lomond and Felton until Sept. 8, after Labor Day. Jeff Calden, principal at San Lorenzo Valley High School, said that could be extended.

It’s not just the fires that could impede a return home for evacuated residents in fire-ravaged areas. The San Lorenzo Valley Water District reported Sunday that a water main was destroyed by the fire and that an emergency contractor was awaiting clearance to begin repairs later in the week.

Pacific Gas & Electric Co. said it has not been able to gain access to the properties of 10,655 Northern California customers to restore service. There were 3,580 customers impacted by outages related to fires in Lake, Napa, Solano, Sonoma and Yolo counties, and 6,085 customers without power from the fires in the Santa Cruz Mountains.

Evacuee Clara Elliott, of Felton, who’s staying with her husband and two children at a Cupertino hotel while a friend in Watsonville cares for their dog, said she’s just grateful their home survived.

“While I’d definitely love to be home, I understand it’s not safe,” she said. “We’re willing to do whatever it takes to give them the space and time they need until it’s OK for us to return.”

The SCU Lightning Complex has burned the most acres, but the majority have been in rural Stanislaus and San Joaquin counties. It had burned 365,772 acres with 20% containment Tuesday evening. It had destroyed 37 structures and injured three first responders and two civilians but has not resulted in any fatalities. The fire has surpassed LNU as the second-largest fire in state history — just 93,350 acres smaller than the largest 459,000-acre Mendocino Complex fires in 2018.

Bay Area News Group Staff Writers Fiona Kelliher, Emily DeRuy and Evan Webeck contributed.