California fire evacuees spend sleepless nights at shelters
SANTA ROSA, Calif. — Barking dogs, loud snorers and a woman who appears to have dementia crying out every night. Trying to sleep on a cot in a shelter for fire evacuees is not easy.
Nicole Lonefight spent her nights at a Red Cross shelter on fairgrounds in Sonoma County after flames consumed her prefabricated home in Santa Rosa that she finished putting together with her husband and best friend days before the fire struck.
The hardest part of life at the shelter is seeing other people who were devastated by the blaze, particularly older people who don’t look like they’ll recover from the trauma, she said.
“It’s already overwhelming to get through what you did,” she said. One older woman at her shelter, she said, woke people up every night, shouting, “Everybody’s gone. They left me here. I don’t want to be here.”