Arab Times

Blaze sparks eruption comparison­s

Oregon wildfire smoke chokes US west

-

TROUTDALE, Oregon, Sept 6, (AP): People in Oregon covered their faces with scarves to keep choking ash from wildfires from filling their lungs and wiped the soot from windshield­s, similar to what long-time residents said they had to do in 1980 during the volcanic eruption of Mount St Helens.

The growing blaze east of Portland, Oregon, in the scenic Columbia River Gorge, was one of dozens of wildfires in western US states that sent smoke into cities from Seattle to Denver – prompting health warnings and cancellati­ons of outdoor activities for children by many school districts.

The 16-square mile (41-square kms) fire east of Portland forced hundreds of home evacuation­s. And embers from the fire drifted across the Columbia River – sparking blazes in neighborin­g Washington state. People shielded their faces and authoritie­s in the Northwest urged drivers to use headlights during the day to increase visibility.

"I haven't seen ash fall like this in the Portland metro area in my 18 years as a firefighte­r," said Damon Simmons, with the fire incident management team for the Oregon State Fire Marshal.

Joanna Fisher walked to work Tuesday at a Troutdale, Oregon, naturopath­ic clinic with Calla Wanser, who was wearing a red bandana around her mouth.

"You can't really stand outside without getting rained on" by ash, Fisher said.

The only comparison people could come up with was the eruption of Mount St Helens in nearby southwest Washington more than 35 years ago.

"In 1980, we had a couple of significan­t ash falls here in the Portland area and this is very reminiscen­t of what we saw in the ash fall in those days," said Don Hamilton, a spokesman for the Oregon Department of Transporta­tion. "The particulat­e matter that shows up on the cars, it gets in your hair, it gets in your eyes, it?s all over the place like it was in those days."

A closure of one section of Interstate 84 because of thick smoke and falling ash was extended 30 miles (48 kms) east of Portland while the US Coast Guard closed about 20 miles (32 kms) of the Columbia River in the same area.

The National Interagenc­y Fire Center in Boise, Idaho, a federal agency that coordinate­s wildfire-fighting, said 80 large fires were burning on 2,200 square miles (5,700 square kilometers) in nine Western states.

A fast-moving wildfire in northern Utah swept down a canyon Tuesday morning — destroying structures, forcing evacuation­s and closing highways.

A least five homes burned and more than 1,000 people were evacuated as high winds fed the flames in the canyon north of Salt Lake City. Thick black smoke closed parts of two highways as firefighte­rs struggled to fight the blaze fueled by winds gust at up to 40 mph.

In Washington state the US Department of Defense agreed to assign 200 active-duty soldiers to help fight a wildfire.

Civilian firefighti­ng commanders said Tuesday the soldiers from Joint Base Lewis McChord, Washington, would undergo four days of training and then be sent to a complex of 14 wildfires in southern Oregon's Umpqua National Forest that have burned 47 square miles (120 square kms).

And a wildfire near Mount Rainier National Park in Washington state grew to more than 29 square miles (75 square kms) and heavy smoke blanketed many cities in Washington state. A portion of the park was closed.

Mandatory evacuation­s were called for the fire near Mount Rainier, including the Crystal Mountain ski resort, which closed Monday because of smoke.

The air quality in Spokane, Washington, was rated as hazardous Tuesday morning. The National Weather Service says it was likely to get worse as wind shifts bring in smoke from fires in Canada, Montana, Oregon and Washington.

Air quality alerts were issued for parts of Idaho as well.

In Oregon, people living in about 700 homes in and around the Columbia River Gorge have been forced to evacuate. Others have been warned to get ready as flames burn trees and brush in one of the state's biggest tourist attraction­s.

Authoritie­s say they believe the blaze, which started Saturday, was caused by a 15-year-old boy and friends using fireworks. They've identified a suspect but have made no arrests.

 ??  ?? A wildfire burns near Weber Canyon on Sept 5 in Uintah County, Utah.
A wildfire burns near Weber Canyon on Sept 5 in Uintah County, Utah.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait