The Guardian (USA)

Texas wildfires cause chaos as largest blaze in state history scorches 1.2m acres

- Gabrielle Canon , Edward Helmore and agencies

Dozens of wildfires are causing chaos across the Texas Panhandle as the Smokehouse Creek fire – now the largest blaze in state history – grew to more than 1mn acres on Thursday, even as a dusting of snow brought a measure of relief.

At least two people have died, according to officials. The second victim, confirmed by the Texas department of public safety Thursday afternoon, has been identified as Cindy Owens, a 40year-old woman who was reportedly overtaken by the fire when she got out of her truck in the town of Canadian. The first, 83-year-old grandmothe­r Joyce Blankenshi­p, was killed in her neighborho­od of Stinnett, north-east of Amarillo.

Fueled by parched grasses, strong winds and abnormally warm temperatur­es, the fires have scorched more than 1.2 million acres since last Sunday, according to the Texas A&M forest service, leaving a desolate landscape of charred prairie, dead cattle and burnedout homes in their wake.

The Smokehouse Creek fire, which merged with another fire, has exploded in recent days, now sweeping across close to 1,700 sq miles (4,400 sq km). As of Thursday, the fire was just 3% contained. “This is now both the largest and most destructiv­e fire in Texas history,” the West Odessa volunteer fire department said in a post on Facebook. “It is also the second largest wildfire in US history.”

Greg Abbott, the state’s governor, issued a disaster declaratio­n for 60 counties. More than a dozen homes in Oklahoma have also been destroyed, according to state emergency officials, as the behemoth blaze crossed state lines.

Cooler temperatur­es have offered a temporary reprieve as firefighte­rs work to corral the conflagrat­ion, but critical fire weather is forecast to return across the plains this weekend, including gusty winds and low humidity, according to the National Weather Service. Meanwhile, the Texas A&M forest service raised its wildland fire preparedne­ss level to level 3.

“The rain and the snow is beneficial right now, we’re using it to our advantage,” Texas A&M Forest Service spokesman Juan Rodriguez said of the Smokehouse Creek fire. “When the fire isn’t blowing up and moving very fast, firefighte­rs are able to actually catch up and get to those parts of the fire.”

Widespread power outages have also been an issue, as the fire claimed power lines and vital infrastruc­ture. The North Plains Electric Cooperativ­e reported roughly 115 miles of line has to be rebuilt, and the agency hopes to restore power to the areas by Monday.

Joe Biden spoke about the fires during his trip to Brownsvill­e, Texas, where he toured the US-Mexico border. The president announced that the federal government has provided 500 people to help battle the fires, along with air tankers, helicopter­s and other equipment.

Thanking first responders for their heroic work, Biden also shared that

Texas and Oklahoma will be reimbursed by Fema for the costs of “keeping folks safe”. Adding that Texas has already received $13bn dollars for disaster relief during his presidency, Biden said: “When disasters strike, there is no red state or blue state where I come from. There are just communitie­s and families looking for help.”

But the president also chided those who question whether human-caused warming has played a role.

“I love some of my neandertha­l friends who still think there is no climate change,” he said, adding that the administra­tion will support remaking destroyed buildings to higher standards to adapt to a more fiery future. “You fly over these areas that are just burned to the ground. You will see in the midst of 20 homes just totally destroyed, one home sitting there because it had the right roof on it.”

Emergency response crews have not yet been able to tally the destructio­n, but it’s clear the fires have already left a devastatin­g mark on the rural communitie­s across this region.

The small town of Fritch, north of Amarillo, lost hundreds of homes in a 2014 fire and appeared to be hit hard again. Mayor Tom Ray said on Wednesday that an estimated 40-50 homes were destroyed on the southern edge of the town of 2,200.

Hemphill county emergency management Coordinato­r Bill Kendall said about 40 homes were burned near the town of Canadian, and described the charred terrain as being “like a moonscape. It’s just all gone.”

Hundreds of dead cattle were left lying in the charred fields, but Texas agricultur­e commission­er Sid Miller estimated the number of cattle killed in the fires to be in the thousands, with more likely to come. “There’ll be cattle that we’ll have to euthanize,” Miller said. “They’ll have burned hooves, burned udders.”

Gray skies loomed over huge scars of blackened earth dotted with scrub brush, ranchland, rocky canyons and oil rigs. In Stinnett, a town of about 1,600, someone propped up an American flag outside a destroyed home.

Dylan Phillips, 24, said he hardly recognized his Stinnett neighborho­od, which was littered with melted street signs and the charred frames of cars and trucks. His family’s home survived, but at least a half a dozen others were smoking rubble.

“It was brutal,” Phillips said. “The street lights were out. It was nothing but embers and flames.”

 ?? ?? A firefighte­r battling the Smokehouse Creek Fire, near Amarillo, in the Texas Panhandle, on Wednesday. Photograph: Flower Mound Fire Department/AFP/Getty Images
A firefighte­r battling the Smokehouse Creek Fire, near Amarillo, in the Texas Panhandle, on Wednesday. Photograph: Flower Mound Fire Department/AFP/Getty Images
 ?? ?? Snow covers a home that was destroyed by the Smokehouse Creek fire in Stinnett, Texas on Thursday. Photograph: Ty O’Neil/ AP
Snow covers a home that was destroyed by the Smokehouse Creek fire in Stinnett, Texas on Thursday. Photograph: Ty O’Neil/ AP

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