Fires

Update: 10% containment reached for Foothill Fire in Santa Barbara County

Updates on California wildfires.
Updates on California wildfires.

The creation of this content included the use of AI based on templates created, reviewed and edited by journalists in the newsroom. Read more on our AI policy here.

Updated: 10:51 a.m. May 20

First discovered: 17 hours ago, 5:18 p.m. May 19

Initial location: Foothill Road and Kirschenmann Road, Cuyama, Santa Barbara County, Calif.

Fire unit: Santa Barbara County Fire Department

Fire type: Wildfire

Fire name: Foothill Fire

Foothill Fire initially started 5:18 p.m. May 19 at Foothill Road and Kirschenmann Road, Cuyama in Santa Barbara County, California.

After being active for 17 hours, it has burned 400 acres. As of Wednesday morning, the fire crew effectively contained 10% of this fire. The cause of it remains under investigation.

Evacuation information from Cal Fire

Evacuation Orders

Immediate threat to life. This is a lawful order to LEAVE NOW. The area is lawfully closed to public access.

Evacuation Orders issued for the following zones:

SBC-177

SBC-185

Evacuation Warnings

Potential threat to life and/or property. Those who require additional time to evacuate, and those with pets and livestock should leave now.

Evacuation Warnings issued for the following zones:

SBC-187

See live video from the area:

Https://cameras.alertcalifornia.org/?id=Axis-PelatoPeakWest

Fire containment

What does it mean for a fire to be 10% contained?

Containment indicates what percentage of the fire perimeter has been surrounded by a control line. In this case, it means that 10% of the wildfire is halted from spreading, while 90% is still uncontrolled.

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

United Robots Sacramento

This story was originally published May 19, 2026 at 4:47 PM.

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