 Hi, I'm Rayner Navarro, Chief of Police with the City of Santa Rosa. I'm here in the City's Emergency Operations Center, which is staffed 24 hours a day during this event. Strong winds are forecasted to impact the concaved fire, Santa Rosa, and much of the North Bay. In addition to the more than 4,500 firefighters working out of the base camp at the Sonoma County Fairgrounds, additional fire departments from across Sonoma County have converged on Mark West Springs Road and Old Redwood Highway to protect our communities from the threat of the fire. Public safety officials have increased staffing to be prepared, and the Santa Rosa Police Department is asking everyone in the community to do their part and be prepared too. All evacuation orders are still in place within the Santa Rosa City limits due to concerns of the weather and fire threat. If you have not evacuated from an area where evacuation orders are already in place, you need to do so now. During a wildfire, firefighters' first priority is life safety and then the protection of property. Public safety officials have evacuated certain areas out of concern for the nearby fire threat and to ensure the first priority is met early on so that firefighters can focus on the next priority, protection of your property. If the fire threat crosses into the city, spending time rescuing those who are trapped because they did not evacuate sooner hinders firefighters' efforts to protect property like your homes and businesses. Please evacuate immediately for your own personal safety and for the protection of everyone's property. For all other community members, it is important to get prepared, remain vigilant and keep your phones close by with the ringer on should evacuation notices for new areas be issued. For more information on preparing for an evacuation, visit SRCity.org forward slash Know Your Ways Out. Thank you for doing your part to help keep our community safe.