The Red Flag Warning expired in San Diego and SDG&E has restored the power to areas shut off during the warning.
A red flag warning has been issued through Wednesday in Southern California because of potentially dangerous fire conditions.
San Diego County has slipped back into severe drought conditions, with a new round of Santa Ana winds and critical fire weather conditions exacerbating the risk for wildfires to spread rapidly.
San Diego Gas & Electric implemented power shutoffs to some customers Thursday night but warned that fire risk remains high.
San Diego Gas & Electric resumed public safety power shutoffs in stretches of San Diego’s backcountry overnight into Tuesday as a Red Flag Warning for critical fire danger took hold.
Red flag warnings have been extended multiple times, but meteorologists are confident that conditions will improve in California.
Parts of San Diego County will be dealing with more Santa Ana winds starting Monday afternoon, and the fire weather conditions could mean potential San Diego Gas & Electric power shutoffs for many communities.
San Diego County, which is in the midst of one of the driest periods on record, will be lashed by unusually cold and expansive Santa Ana winds early Wednesday that could spark wildfires, snap
Forecasters expect Wednesday will be noticeably windier than Tuesday and firefighters warned that vegetation is critically dry.
The National Weather Service has issued a Red Flag Warning for most of San Diego County amid another round of Santa Ana winds.
Cal Fire crews are responding to the scene of a brush fire in Ramona that broke out early Tuesday morning, threatening at least one structure.