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The Getty Center Fire Now 90 Percent Contained

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The Getty Center Fire Now 90 Percent Contained

Fire Now 90 Percent Contained

 Slideshow: Brush Fire Burns Near The Getty Center

LOS ANGELES (AP) ― A wildfire that was touched off accidentally by a brush-clearance crew scorched about 80 acres in the Sepulveda Pass today, prompting the evacuation of the famed Getty Center and Mount St. Mary's College, but no homes were threatened and only one minor injury was reported.

The fire erupted at 12:44 p.m. and quickly grew to 80 acres above the Getty's parking facilities. About 250 firefighters and seven helicopters were fighting the blaze with water drops. Some of the helicopters were able to reload from nearby Stone Canyon Reservoir.

A huge plume of white smoke rose over the western side of Los Angeles as the fire burned northward toward an area still scarred by a fire last fall. Helicopters were able to reload water from a nearby reservoir.
 
Fire Chief Douglas Barry said the fire began about three-quarters of a mile from the Getty and was moving away to the east as winds blew out of the west.

The Getty Center fire is 90 percent contained, says Lauren deRosier of the Los Angeles Fire Department. Weather has helped and aircraft will continue to operate until the last of daylight is gone, he says.

"We feel very confident we'll have this fire under control very shortly," Barry said about three hours into the fire.

The origin of the blaze was not known but arson investigators are on the scene, said Battalion Chief Patrick Butler.

About 800 employees and an unknown number of visitor to the J. Paul Getty Museum and other parts of the hilltop complex were being shuttled to the center's south building as a precaution, Getty Center spokesman Ron Hartwig said.

A tram was to take people down the hill to parking lots so they could drive out the south gate, he said. The center would be closed for the rest of the day.

Hartwig said the fire was burning on Getty property. Ventilation systems also were shut down to prevent smoke from damaging the priceless artwork, he said.

To the north, Mount St. Mary's College was evacuated as a precaution even though the fire was a mile away and a canyon lay between it and the school, spokeswoman Sarah Scopio said.

College was not in session but 100 staff members were being evacuated along with about 200 other people attending a conference, Scopio said.

The school was using campus shuttles to take them out until the all-clear was given, Scopio said.

"Right now the fire is not threatening the college directly," she said.

City Fire Department spokesman Erik Scott said residents of the area also were being urged to leave, but no homes were immediately threatened.

The Getty and Mount St. Mary's are prominent landmarks on the rugged mountains above Los Angeles' tony western neighborhoods.

The 100-acre blaze in October burned up to the backyard patios of multimillion-dollar homes before it was extinguished seven hours later.

The Getty Center opened in 1997 on ridges above Interstate 405, which runs through the Sepulveda Pass. It is world-famous for its gardens, conservation and research work and its museum, which holds a number of famous works, including Vincent Van Gogh's painting "Irises."

Mount St. Mary's campus was damaged by the disastrous Bel Air-Brentwood wildfire of November 1961, which destroyed 484 homes and 21 other buildings.

(© 2008 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Wire services contributed to this report.)

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