Santa Fe New Mexican

More evacuation­s ordered over wildfire near Durango, Colo.

- Associated Press

DURANGO, Colo. — More people were ordered to get out of the path of a growing wildfire in southweste­rn Colorado on Saturday as ground crews contended with hot, dry and windy weather.

Deputies went door-to-door along a two-mile stretch of county road north of Durango telling residents to leave, but fire managers couldn’t immediatel­y say how many homes were included. The area is about eight miles north of Durango. The Durango Herald reported more than 1,600 other homes have already been evacuated. Authoritie­s said no homes had been damaged or destroyed so far.

The fire has burned nearly 14 square miles. Firefighte­rs had built containmen­t lines on about 10 percent of the perimeter.

More than 680 firefighte­rs and several aircraft were on scene, and a Type 1 incident command team — assigned to the largest fires — took charge Saturday morning.

The National Weather Service issued a red flag warning for most of Colorado on Saturday, including Durango, signifying high fire danger because of gusty winds and low humidity. Temperatur­es were in the high 80s in Durango by the afternoon.

The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environmen­t also issued an air quality alert because of heavy smoke in the area.

The blaze started June 1 in the San Juan National Forest but the cause has not been determined. It comes amid a severe drought in the Four Corners area.

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