The Day

Wind shifts huge wildfire away from nuke facilities in Idaho

- By REBECCA BOONE and FELICIA FONSECA

Boise, Idaho — The largest wildfire at the nation’s primary nuclear research facility in recent history had been burning close to buildings containing nuclear fuel and other radioactiv­e material but a change in wind direction Wednesday was pushing the flames into open range at the sprawling site in Idaho, officials said.

The lightning-caused fire at the Idaho National Laboratory is one of several across the U.S. West.

Before the wind shifted, the Idaho blaze got close to several lab facilities, including one where high-level radioactiv­e materials are studied and another holding a nuclear reactor, spokeswoma­n Kerry Martin said. She said she didn’t know how close the flames got to those buildings.

The lab has several safety measures for wildfires that often ignite in southeaste­rn Idaho’s desert rangeland, including clearing ground around each building and having several specially trained fire crews stationed around the site that’s nearly the size of Rhode Island.

“It’s not our first rodeo,” Martin said. “We have fire stations, a lot of fire equipment, we have trained firefighte­rs and equipment to cut barriers.”

The wildfire that ignited Monday is estimated to have burned about 172 square miles. Non-essential laboratory employees have been evacuated.

The nuclear research site includes reactors and research materials, as well as facilities for processing high-level nuclear waste and other radioactiv­e waste.

Meanwhile, rain in a forested Arizona city helped firefighte­rs battle a wildfire that has raged for days in a scenic mountain pass but was raising the risk of flooding, officials said.

Up to 1 inch of rain allowed crews to directly attack the fire, extinguish flames and build containmen­t lines in an area where nearly 3 square miles have burned since Sunday, said fire management team spokesman Steve Kliest.

Forecaster­s warned of possible flooding in Flagstaff neighborho­ods with aging drainage systems below the fire. Thundersto­rms Wednesday and Thursday were expected to drench fire-scarred areas of the Coconino National Forest surroundin­g the city, a popular mountain getaway in the largest ponderosa pine forest in the U.S.

The area had not received any significan­t moisture in weeks and had no previous wildfires on record.

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