The Reporter (Vacaville)

New Mexico residents warned they may need to flee blaze

- By Cedar Attanasio and Kathleen Ronayne

Firefighte­rs in New Mexico's Rocky Mountain foothills prepared Monday to excavate new firebreaks and clear brush to create more defensive lines aimed at preventing a massive wildfire from destroying more homes and tinder-dry pine forests.

The fire that is largest in the U.S. has burned nearly 300 structures including homes, commercial buildings and barns. The tally is likely to be higher since authoritie­s have been unable to access some areas to survey the damage.

The fire jumped a highway late Sunday — taking hold in rugged areas difficult for firefighte­rs to reach and prompting a warning for more residents of rural villages to be prepared to flee quickly.

Another New Mexico wildfire in the mountains surroundin­g one of the federal government's key facilities for nuclear research prompted Los Alamos National Laboratory and community officials to prepare for possible evacuation­s. Officials stressed there was no emergency, but the fire was within about 3 miles of the lab and was growing.

“If you don't have to be at work, it's time to prepare to telework,” lab director Thom Mason told employees in a video. “Conditions can change quickly, it has been very dry, very windy, and we have to be respectful of that risk and ready for what comes next.”

There was no letup Monday to the gusty winds that complicate­d firefighti­ng efforts over previous days. The wind has fanned the New Mexico fires for weeks with only brief interrupti­ons and the most recent wave of consecutiv­e days of extremely dangerous wildfire conditions are unpreceden­ted, weather forecaster­s said.

Nearly 1,700 firefighte­rs were battling the biggest blaze burning northeast of Santa Fe, New Mexico. It has charred more than 296 square miles, an area nearly the size of New York City. After fighting it for nearly a month, firefighte­rs had contained almost half of the blaze by Monday, a feat that operations section chief Todd Abel said was significan­t given the challenges crews have faced.

The region's largest population center — Las Vegas, New Mexico, home to 13,000 people — was declared largely safe from being burned after firefighte­rs mostly stopped the fire on that front. But thousands of people living in smaller, outlying communitie­s were still under evacuation orders.

The northern and southern flanks of the wildfire have proven trickier to contain as wind gusts over the weekend topped 50 mph (80 kph). On Monday, the wind was too strong to launch aircraft to help with the firefighti­ng effort.

The aircraft are used to drop water directly on flames or lay retardant ahead of the blaze's expected direction so that bulldozers and ground crews can dig firebreaks in places where there are no roads that function as firebreaks.

The National Interagenc­y Fire Center has said more than 20,000 New Mexico structures were threatened by the fire.

Authoritie­s late Sunday told residents in small villages on the northern front of the fire to evacuate, saying it was approachin­g quickly after jumping a road.

People who wait too long to leave could face lifethreat­ening situations fleeing because of heavy smoke and congested roads, said Dave Bales, the incident commander of the team fighting the fire.

That sort of scenario makes the smoke “so thick you can't see, you can't drive, you can't see the engine ahead of you,” he said.

The threatened communitie­s are along roads that runs from Las Vegas, New Mexico, up to skiing and other resorts in far northern New Mexico. People in some parts Taos County were told to prepare for possible evacuation­s.

 ?? ROBERT BROWMAN — THE ALBUQUERQU­E JOURNAL VIA AP ?? The Calf Canyon/Hermits Peak Fire burns in the hills outside of Las Vegas, N.M., on Saturday.
ROBERT BROWMAN — THE ALBUQUERQU­E JOURNAL VIA AP The Calf Canyon/Hermits Peak Fire burns in the hills outside of Las Vegas, N.M., on Saturday.

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