The Boston Globe

Utility equipment may have started record Texas fire

Company faces lawsuits from some residents

- By Nicholas Bogel Burroughs and J. David Goodman

A utility company acknowledg­ed Thursday that its equipment appeared to have started the largest wildfire in Texas’s recorded history, a blaze that began last week and went on to burn more than 1 million acres in the state’s Panhandle region.

Xcel Energy, an electric and gas company that operates in a mostly rural part of Texas, said in a statement that its “facilities appear to have been involved in an ignition” of the blaze, the Smokehouse Creek fire, which has led to two deaths and killed thousands of cattle and other livestock.

The Smokehouse Creek fire is by far the largest of several fires that have charred the Panhandle since last week, leveling homes in and around small towns and spelling potential economic ruin for farmers and ranchers whose land was scorched. Fire officials said Thursday that the fire was 74 percent contained but that strong winds could make firefighti­ng difficult in the next few days.

Though the company acknowledg­ed that its infrastruc­ture may have started the fire, Xcel Energy said it did not agree with claims that the company was negligent in operating its equipment.

Some landowners had already accused the company of being responsibl­e for the fire. They say a wooden utility pole near Stinnett, Texas, was blown over by strong winds and set fire to dry brush and grass in the area.

Melanie Lee McQuiddy, a homeowner in Hemphill County, where the Smokehouse Creek fire burned uncontroll­ed for days across grassland, sued Xcel last week, saying her home was burned in the blaze.

According to her lawsuit, the fire began when “a wooden pole defendants failed to properly inspect, maintain, and replace, splintered, and snapped off at its base” about one mile outside of Stinnett during high winds Feb. 26.

The suit names Xcel along with a subsidiary and a company that was hired to provide maintenanc­e on the power lines. It argues that the companies’ negligence, in failing to inspect and maintain the utility lines and poles, was the “proximate cause of the fire.”

Xcel Energy is based in Minneapoli­s and provides power to almost 4 million customers in eight Western and Midwestern states. Through its subsidiary Southweste­rn Public Service, the utility has operated in the Texas Panhandle for more than 100 years.

Salem Abraham, an investment manager in Canadian, Texas, said nearly all of his 3,500 acres of hay land was burned during the Smokehouse Creek fire, and that he and other landowners were preparing a lawsuit of their own against Xcel. Their lawyers sent a letter to the company asking it to preserve the utility pole as potential evidence in the case.

He said he had noticed an increase in the number of fires over the last few decades as utility poles that were installed in the middle of the last century have aged.

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