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The Latest: California wildfire grows, threatens 6,500 homes

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Firefighters work to extinguish a blaze in Hidden Valley, California. Wildfires are endemic to the California wilderness, but they have the potential to occur almost anywhere.

The Latest on California wildfires (all times local):

Pacific Gas & Electric says it is exploring giving credits to Northern California customers affected by an Oct. 9 power shut-off intended to prevent strong winds from damaging equipment and sparking fires.

PG&E president Bill Johnson said Tuesday he agrees with Gov. Gavin Newsom's suggestion that the company credit its customers. But Johnson said details still need to be hammered out.

Newsom had suggested $100 per household, or $250 per business. Johnson said customers deserve credits because the utility handled the outage poorly — with a faulty website, inaccurate maps and unreliable lines of communication.

As of 5 p.m Tuesday, PG&E says about 435,000 customers — or nearly 1.1 million people — were without power.

The overall weather picture in northern areas is improving, as powerful, dry winds bring extreme fire weather to Southern California.

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4:45 p.m.

Officials say a tree branch striking a power line ignited a wildfire that destroyed a dozen homes in a star-studded area of Los Angeles this week.

The Department of Water and Power said Tuesday that strong winds drove the branch into the line, causing it to arc and spark the fire.

The fire that ignited on a hillside near the J. Paul Getty Museum drove celebrities like LeBron James and Arnold Schwarzenegger from their homes.

The blaze is only smoldering but about 10,000 people remained under evacuation orders as firefighters warned that hot, gusty Santa Ana winds were expected to return Tuesday night.

Meanwhile, Southern California Edison announced Tuesday that it believes its equipment caused the Woolsey fire last year north of Los Angeles that killed three people and destroyed more than 1,600 homes and other buildings.

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2:25 p.m.

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti says the Getty Fire has destroyed 12 homes and damaged five.

The increase from a previous count of eight homes destroyed is from better accounting, not from any additional losses since Monday.

The mayor says the fire is measured Tuesday about 1 square mile (2.6 sq. kilometers) and containment has increased to 15%.

Garcetti says there is no open flame but firefighters are still working to extinguish embers throughout the burned area.

Authorities are concerned about the possibility that predicted strong winds overnight could pick up embers and start new fires.

The mandatory evacuation zone encompasses more than 7,000 homes.

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1 p.m.

A cannabis attorney says blackouts in Northern California have affected legal marijuana dispensaries and distributors who cannot comply with some state regulations without electricity.

Lauren Mendelsohn, of Santa Rosa, says some farms are running on generators but distributors and dispensaries may not have backup power for the state's track-and-trace system for inventory. She says they may also have lost the ability to control temperature within facilities.

One million people remain without power as Pacific Gas & Electric tires to prevent wildfires by cutting electricity.

Mendelsohn lost power in her Santa Rosa apartment Saturday evening. She says she believes PG&E needs to be addressed by state lawmakers because the public's voice will not do enough.

Gov. Gavin Newsom and top utility regulators have accused the utility of mismanaging its power system.

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11:30 a.m.

Forecasters say all the elements are in place for a powerful new round of Southern California's notorious Santa Ana winds, the withering gusts with a long history of turning sparks into infernos.

The National Weather Service says the winds are expected to develop late Tuesday, sweeping from the interior out to sea.

Meteorologists predict "a remarkable and dangerous event" with 60-70 mph (96-112 kph) gusts in the mountains and some valleys.

Authorities are worried the winds could hurl embers from the smoldering Getty Fire on the west side of Los Angeles and start new fires.

About 9,000 homes remain evacuated. City Councilman Mike Bonin says that's because experts have analyzed the paths burned by two Santa Ana-spawned disasters — the 1961 Bel Air Fire and the 1978 Mandeville Canyon Fire.

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10:30 a.m.

California's largest utility says 1 million people remain without power after a weekend shut-off to try to prevent wildfires left nearly 2.7 million people without electricity.

Some of those still in the dark are unlikely to get their power restored as Pacific Gas & Electric Co. initiates another round of blackouts Tuesday in Northern California because of dry, strong winds.

PG&E spokeswoman Monica Tell said Tuesday that the utility started cutting power to customers at 5 a.m. Tuesday in the Sierra Nevada foothills.

This is the third planned shut-off in a week and the fourth this month.

She said 1.5 million people are expected to lose electricity in this round.

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9:30 a.m.

Pacific Gas & Electric has started shutting off power to parts of Marin County north of San Francisco even before expected restorations of power from a previous shut-off had been completed.

Virtually all customers of the wealthy suburb on the northern end of the Golden Gate Bridge lost power Oct. 26 as part of planned blackouts by PG&E to prevent wildfire amid hot, gusty winds.

The county has about 260,000 people and some have been without power since Saturday afternoon.

PG&E spokeswoman Deanna Contreras said in a tweet that the new round of shut-offs started around 8 a.m. Tuesday, earlier than estimated because of weather and "impacts on our transmission system" from a fire in wine country.

The PG&E power shut-offs Tuesday are the third in a week and the fourth in one month.

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8:25 a.m.

A wildfire burning in Northern California's wine country increased in size overnight but fire crews have kept pace containing the flames.

California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection officials said Tuesday that the fire in Sonoma County north of San Francisco is now 118 square miles (305 square kilometers). That's up from 103 square miles (267 square kilometers) Monday morning.

The fire started last week and remains at 15% contained, which is the same percentage as Monday night, when the fire was smaller.

About 156,000 people remain under evacuation orders after about 30,000 people who had been evacuated were allowed home Monday.

About 90,000 structures are under threatened, most of them homes.

The fire has destroyed 124 buildings, including 57 homes.