 I'm Brian May in the state's emergency operation center at Cal OES headquarters. For the fifth day in a row, this room has been staffed around the clock as local, state and federal leaders continue to respond to three major wildfires still burning in California. There are over 8,000 firefighters currently fighting fires throughout the state and that includes hundreds of mutual aid firefighters from nine states across the country. A map of the United States titled November 2018 wildfires, California is receiving mutual aid from the following states, Oregon, Idaho, New Mexico, Utah, Washington, Montana, Texas, Nevada, Arizona and South Dakota. To date, over 209,000 acres have burned close to a quarter of a million Californians have been evacuated since these fires began last week. Here's the latest on the three largest fires currently burning in California starting with the Camp Fire in Butte County, now the most destructive fire in California state history. The camp fire has now burned over 113,000 acres, containment up slightly to 25 percent. More than 6,700 structures have been lost in this fire with now 29 fatalities. Two fires continue to burn in Southern California. The Wolsey fire covering both Ventura and Los Angeles counties now closing in on 100,000 acres, containment still at 20 percent. More evacuations around the Wolsey fire today as some 57,000 structures are still threatened. And firefighters do continue to make good progress on the hill fire in Ventura County. Containment up again, now to 80 percent. Many dangerous fire conditions though will remain through Wednesday, so residents are urged to remain on alert and heed evacuation warnings immediately if told to do so. Air quality will remain poor across much of the state due to the smoke, so if you need information on where to get free N95 masks, you can find a link under the info and video tab on our website wildfirerecovery.org. We've also got links there on how to protect yourself from the smoke. And if you'd like to make a donation to the survivors of the wildfires, you can find that information on the volunteer and donate link. Again that website is wildfirerecovery.org.