Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

N.M. asks U.S. for more wildfire help

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SANTA FE, N.M. — New Mexico’s governor is asking for additional federal assistance to respond to wildfires burning across the state’s north, including one that is the second-largest in the state’s history and that officials estimate has destroyed hundreds of homes.

Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham said Friday in a letter to President Joe Biden that New Mexico needs more help than is being provided under the president’s recent disaster declaratio­n.

The needed response, including immediate funding for debris removal and “a full range of emergency protective measures,” exceeds the state’s capabiliti­es and the federal government should bear 100% of the costs because one part of the fire was ignited by wind-blown embers from a prescribed burn on the Santa Fe National Forest, the governor said.

That fire has since merged with another blaze and grown to 437 square miles. The 5-week-old combined fire for a time threatened the small New Mexico city of Las Vegas before being stopped just outside town. Fire crews continue to work to keep the fire from multiple rural communitie­s.

Officials said Saturday that weather conditions still included high temperatur­es and low humidity, but that less smoke had allowed firefighti­ng aircraft to take to the skies for a second straight day to battle the blaze.

Wildfires have broken out this spring across multiple states in the western U.S., including California, Colorado and Arizona. Prediction­s for the rest of the spring do not bode well for the West, with drought and warmer weather brought on by climate change worsening wildfire danger.

Nationwide, more than 2,000 square miles have

burned so far this year — the most at this point since 2018, according to the National Interagenc­y Fire Center.

In Colorado, a fire burning southwest of Colorado Springs grew to 1.5 square miles overnight and is 10% contained, officials from the Teller County sheriff’s office said Saturday morning.

The blaze, now known as the High Park Fire, broke out Thursday near the former mining town of Cripple Creek. The cause of the fire remains unknown.

By Thursday evening at least 120 people from 40 residences evacuated the area, the Teller County sheriff ’s office posted on Facebook.

Officials say the fire could continue to grow as wind gusts are expected to reach as high as 35 mph. Winds are expected to die down around 2 p.m. which could help firefighti­ng efforts.

In New Mexico, the largest wildfire has a 500-mile perimeter, longer than the distance between San Francisco and San Diego, and was just 27% contained. Another fire to the west near Los Alamos has burned 71 square miles and was 23% contained.

Nearly 3,000 firefighte­rs and other personnel are fighting the two fires.

Fire officials said the largest fire has destroyed at least 473 structures, including homes and other buildings. Lujan Grisham’s office on Friday provided an updated estimate that 262 homes had been destroyed but stressed that authoritie­s have been unable to safely enter many burned areas to assess damage.

In other developmen­t, New Mexican House Republican leaders on Friday called for the state to join a federal investigat­ion into the handling of the prescribed burn that started the worst blaze.

“It is our sincerest belief that the people of northern New Mexico deserve an impartial and detailed investigat­ion conducted by parties other than those employed by the federal government,” the GOP lawmakers said in a letter to Lujan Grisham, a Democrat.

 ?? (AP/Morgan Lee) ?? A haze of wildfire smoke hangs over the Upper Rio Grande valley and the mesa-top city of Los Alamos, N.M., on Thursday.
(AP/Morgan Lee) A haze of wildfire smoke hangs over the Upper Rio Grande valley and the mesa-top city of Los Alamos, N.M., on Thursday.

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