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Camp Fire Victims Race To Find Housing Before The Last Shelter Closes

Nicholas Soto, who has chronic health issues including diabetes, has been living outside a Red Cross shelter at the fairgrounds in Chico, Calif. since early December.
Kirk Siegler
/
NPR
Nicholas Soto, who has chronic health issues including diabetes, has been living outside a Red Cross shelter at the fairgrounds in Chico, Calif. since early December.

For survivors of last fall's deadly Camp Fire that destroyed nearly all of Paradise, Calif., there is a deadline looming: the last shelter will soon close in nearby Chico. Disaster relief officials are racing to find temporary shelter or housing for dozens of people at the Red Cross shelter now facing homelessness.

Many of the folks who are left at the shelter at the Chico fairgrounds were already living on the economic margins when the Camp Fire destroyed whole towns and rural mountain neighborhoods.

Nicholas Soto, one victim of the fire, has been moving from shelter to shelter. Since early December, he and his wife have parked their RV along a fence crammed with other campers abutting a Chevron station.

"You get tired of being pushed from one place to another, told you can't be here, you can't be there, it's a little tiring," said Soto. "We fled the fire only to jump into hell."

Soto suffers from chronic lung disease and diabetes. At almost 70, with long salt and pepper hair pulled back in a ponytail, he often has to use a wheelchair.

We fled the fire only to jump into hell.

The Sotos also rescue dogs. With four dogs and two cats, they're crammed inside the camper. It weighs heavily on Soto.

"Mentally, it's hard on the mind, you know," he says.

The shelter's closure deadline isn't completely set in stone. If it were, local officials worry this would exacerbate an already bad homelessness crisis in Chico.

"They will all have a plan before they leave the shelter," assures Cindy Huge, a spokesperson for Red Cross. "Whether that be a permanent house, temporary housing, they will all have a recovery plan. We just don't put them out and say we're closing the shelter — Red Cross doesn't do that."

Earlier this week, Butte County received a million-dollar grant that will go to help those who remain here find new housing – likely out of state. There was already a housing shortage in this rural area before 14,000 homes burned overnight. Even before the Camp Fire, vacancy rates fell between 1 and 2 percent most of the time.

Aside from the aid Red Cross is giving to victims, FEMA has processed about 26,000 applications for California fire victims since last November, the bulk coming from Butte County and the Camp Fire, including Soto. FEMA extended its deadline to apply for aid to Feb. 15.

With the aid he'd get from FEMA, Soto hopes to leave the shelter and drive up to Oregon.

"There's worse things that could have happened to us," said Soto. "We got our lives and we got our fur babies."

Hafsa Quraishi adapted this story for the Web.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

As a correspondent on NPR's national desk, Kirk Siegler covers rural life, culture and politics from his base in Boise, Idaho.
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