The Commercial Appeal

Unpreceden­ted gusts expected to fan N.M. fires

- Cedar Attanasio and Susan Montoya Bryan

LAS VEGAS, N.M. – Weather conditions described as potentiall­y historic were on tap for New Mexico on Saturday and for the next several days as more than 1,400 firefighte­rs and a fleet of airplanes and helicopter­s worked feverishly to bolster lines around the largest fire burning in the U.S.

Many families have been left homeless and thousands of residents have evacuated because of flames that have charred large swaths of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains in northeaste­rn New Mexico.

Residents on the fringes of the shifting fire front were holding out hope that all the work done over recent days to clear brush, install sprinklers, run hose lines and use bulldozers to scrape lines will keep the fire from reaching the small city of Las Vegas and other villages to the north and south.

“There’s uncertaint­y and there’s fear about how the winds are going to affect the fire from day to day,” said Elmo Baca, chairman of the Las Vegas Community Foundation. “Once the people are evacuated out of an area, they can’t go back, so they’re just stuck worrying.”

Las Vegas was like a ghost town earlier in the week, with restaurant­s and grocery stores closed, schools closed or pivoting to remote-only options, and the tourist district empty but for resting firefighte­rs. By Saturday, after the days of work to protect the city of 13,000, some businesses reopened as residents stayed cautious while trying to return to something resembling regular life.

The recent work by fire crews to protect Las Vegas was “looking really good” but continued Saturday, said Todd Abel, a fire operations official. “We want to make sure this is all going to hold.”

The blaze, now a month old, has blackened more than 267 square miles – an area larger than the city of Chicago.

The April 6 start of the conflagrat­ion has been traced in part to a preventive fire initiated by the U.S. Forest Service to reduce flammable vegetation. The blaze escaped control, merging with another wildfire of unknown origin.

Nationwide, close to 2,000 square miles have burned this year, with 2018 being the last time this much fire had been reported across the country, according to the National Interagenc­y Fire Center. And prediction­s for the rest of the spring do not bode well for the West, where long-term drought and warmer temperatur­es have combined to worsen the threat of wildfire.

Forested areas in southern New Mexico, Arizona and Colorado also saw an early start with blazes forcing evacuation­s and destroying homes last month.

Another large wildfire burning in New Mexico was within 5 miles of Los Alamos National Laboratory, one of the nation’s key facilities for nuclear research and production of plutonium components for nuclear weapons.

Crews have burned vegetation ahead of the fire to reduce its intensity and the potential for spot fires. At the lab, water tankers, a helicopter and heavy equipment are in position and firefighte­rs will patrol the perimeter if flames gets closer.

Lab officials said Friday that radiologic­al and other potentiall­y hazardous materials are stored in containers engineered and tested to withstand extreme environmen­ts, including heat from fire.

 ?? ROBERT BROWMAN/THE ALBUQUERQU­E JOURNAL VIA AP ?? A wildfire seen from Cochiti, N.M, burns in the Jemez Mountains.
ROBERT BROWMAN/THE ALBUQUERQU­E JOURNAL VIA AP A wildfire seen from Cochiti, N.M, burns in the Jemez Mountains.

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