Los Angeles Times

1,500 are forced to flee as Utah fire rages

Blaze near Brian Head resort has destroyed 13 homes and at least 49,000 acres. It is still only 10% contained.

- By David Montero david.montero@latimes.com Twitter: @davemonter­o

LAS VEGAS — The largest active wildfire in the country has forced the evacuation­s of more than 1,500 residents, destroyed 13 homes and charred at least 49,000 acres near Brian Head resort in southern Utah, officials said Tuesday.

The blaze that started June 17 is only 10% contained, and fire officials continue to battle hostile conditions that include low humidity and hot temperatur­es. The area will be under a red-flag warning through Thursday.

Elayn Briggs, incident spokeswoma­n for the Brian Head fire, said more than 1,400 firefighte­rs are battling the blaze and include personnel from federal, state and local agencies. Firefighti­ng crews from Idaho and Nevada have also been called in to help.

There have been no casualties aside from a few minor injuries, Briggs said.

“It’s a dynamic situation,” she said. “There’s a lot of issues with this fire, and years of drought have taken their toll.”

She said dead trees left by bark beetle infestatio­ns — as in many areas in the West — have also contribute­d to the fire’s size and fury.

Smoke plumes have been visible from Interstate 15 and from cities as far away as Beaver and Cedar City. In nearby Bryce Canyon National Park, clouds of smoke edged up over parts of it, and nearby campground­s restricted the use of open fire pits.

Burke Wilkerson, Brian Head resort vice president and general manager, said he hoped to open for the busy summer season as soon as possible after the main highway to the town is opened.

“Most of the fire activity has occurred in the areas outside and north of town, and due to the extraordin­ary efforts of firefighte­rs, Brian Head resort, the town of Brian Head and other local businesses have been unaffected by the fire,” Wilkerson said in a statement. “None of Brian Head resort’s land or infrastruc­ture have been burned or otherwise damaged.”

Utah Lt. Gov. Spencer Cox toured the site Monday, and Garfield County and Iron County law enforcemen­t have been involved in restrictin­g access to nearby burning areas.

The fire has also sparked political heat.

Utah Republican state Rep. Mike Noel on Monday blamed environmen­tal groups for the fire.

“When we turned the Forest Service over to the bird and bunny lovers and the tree-huggers and the rocklicker­s, we turned our history over,” he said at a news conference in Brian Head. “We’re going to lose our watershed and we’re going to lose our soils and we’re going to lose our wildlife and we’re going to lose our scenery — the very things you people wanted to protect. It’s just plain stupidity.”

Steve Bloch, legal attorney with the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance, said Noel’s comments were “shameful” in their attempt to politicize a fire.

“I feel his language is indicative of the overheated rhetoric from Utah politician­s pushing their strident, anti-environmen­talist views,” Bloch said in a phone interview. “It is really shameful that Noel and other state and local politician­s would try to seize on this tragedy for political points.”

The fire has reached into remote areas of Dixie National Forest, where heavy fuel is continuing to feed it. Briggs said when it emerges from there, firefighte­rs hope to get a better handle on it as it moves into lighter sagebrush.

Briggs said the cause of the fire is under investigat­ion, but is related to human activity.

 ?? George Frey Getty Images ?? THE WILDFIRE that began June 17 burned up to the edge of this home near Panguitch, Utah. A state politician blamed environmen­talists for conditions that led to the fire, a charge that was denounced as “shameful.”
George Frey Getty Images THE WILDFIRE that began June 17 burned up to the edge of this home near Panguitch, Utah. A state politician blamed environmen­talists for conditions that led to the fire, a charge that was denounced as “shameful.”

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