Update: Willow Fire in San Bernardino County remains 100% contained as of Tuesday afternoon
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Updated: 4:28 p.m. May 19
First discovered: 5 hours ago, 11:06 a.m. May 19
Initial location: 4600 Soquel Canyon Pkwy, Chino Hills, San Bernardino County, Calif.
Fire unit: Cal Fire San Bernardino Unit
Fire type: Wildfire
Fire name: Willow Fire
Willow Fire initially started today at 11:06 a.m. at 4600 Soquel Canyon Pkwy, Chino Hills in San Bernardino County, California.
After being active for five hours, it has burned 2.6 acres. As of Tuesday afternoon, the fire crew successfully encircled the entire perimeter of the fire in control lines. The cause is, however, still being investigated.
Fire containment
What does 100% containment mean?
Note that full containment doesn't mean the fire is completely out. In this case, it means that the whole perimeter of the wildfire has been surrounded by a control line and it is now stopped from spreading. A fully contained wildfire may continue to burn within the containment perimeter but is not likely to spread.
However, there's a significant difference between containing and controlling a wildfire. After the fire is fully contained, the next step is to control it. Controlling a fire means ensuring that the fire can't spread or cross the containment line.
Containment is part of a larger plan for managing a wildfire. It is normally expressed as a percentage and it refers to how much of the fire perimeter has been surrounded/enclosed by a control line that firefighters create. The containment percentage indicates a certain level of control, but it doesn't always correlate to safety level. Also, it's important to note that containment doesn't mean a fire is out.
How is containment measured?
The incident's central command constantly receives progress reports from firefighters on the ground. As the fireline is constructed, inspected or reinforced, mappers record those details to adjust the containment percentage. The percentage tells the public how much of the fire perimeter is believed to not go beyond the control lines.
Source: Cal Fire
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This story was originally published May 19, 2026 at 11:58 AM.