Times Colonist

Thousands of firefighte­rs battle huge blazes across the U.S. West

- NATHAN HOWARD and JOHN ANTCZAK

An army of firefighte­rs labored in hot, dry and windy weather Tuesday to contain fires chewing through wilderness and burning homes across drought-stricken Western states already sweltering in the second heat wave of the year.

A high-pressure system that created the intense weather was weakening, but temperatur­es were forecast to remain above normal on the lines of more than 60 active large blazes burning in the West and Alaska.

More than 14,000 firefighte­rs and support personnel were attacking fires covering close to a million acres (4,047 square kilometres) of land, according to the National Interagenc­y Fire Center.

The largest fire in the United States was incinerati­ng huge swaths of the Fremont-Winema National Forest in southern Oregon, where firefighte­rs received a warning about conditions from incident commander Al Lawson.

“As you go out there today — adjust your reality,” he said. “We have not seen a fire move like this, in these conditions, this early in the year. Expect the fire to do things that you have not seen before.”

The week-old Bootleg Fire had ravaged about 818 square kilometres by Tuesday morning, threatenin­g about 2,000 homes and destroying more than 20 others, along with other minor structures. The fire’s movement prompted authoritie­s to place additional areas under evacuation notice and expand the number of acres ordered closed on an emergency basis inside Fremont-Winema.

Scientists say climate change has made the West much warmer and drier, and they warn that weather will get wilder as the world warms. They say extreme conditions are often from a combinatio­n of unusually random, short-term and natural weather patterns heightened by long-term, human-caused climate change. However, special studies are needed to determine how much global warming is to blame, if at all, for a single extreme weather event.

Firefighte­rs have had some success in keeping the Bootleg Fire out of several small communitie­s.

“Quick actions from crews on the ground prevented numerous homes from catching fire during nighttime ember showers,” a U.S. Forest Service statement said Monday.

The fire disrupted three transmissi­on lines that provide electricit­y to California and the state’s power grid operator asked for voluntary power conservati­on Monday. The California Independen­t System Operator said Tuesday that the grid was stable and with the forecast for cooler temperatur­es another call for conservati­on was not expected.

In northeaste­rn California, progress was reported on the state’s largest fire so far this year. The Beckwourth Complex, a combined pair of lightingig­nited blazes, was almost 50% contained after blackening more than 375 square kilometres near the Nevada state line.

Damage was still being tallied in the rural community of Doyle, where flames swept in during the weekend. Doyle remained under evacuation orders but other areas were on warning status, meaning residents were told to be ready to leave if necessary.

A fire that began Sunday in the Sierra Nevada south of Yosemite National Park grew to nearly 39 square kilometres, but containmen­t increased to 15%. Four unspecifie­d buildings were destroyed.

Elsewhere, several wildfires burned in north-central Washington state, prompting an evacuation order for the town of Nespelem and surroundin­g areas. The state Department of Natural Resources said there were power outages in the area, and phone lines are down, KREM-TV reported.

A 14.5-kilometre stretch of Interstate 15 across the corner of northweste­rn Arizona reopened to traffic Tuesday after a 5 1/2-hour overnight closure due to a brush fire.

 ?? LEWISTON TRIBUNE VIA AP ?? Wildland firefighte­rs watch and take video with their cellphones as a plane drops fire retardant on Harlow Ridge above the Lick Creek Fire, southwest of Asotin, Washington. The fire, which started last Wednesday, has burned more than 50,000 acres in southeast Washington state.
LEWISTON TRIBUNE VIA AP Wildland firefighte­rs watch and take video with their cellphones as a plane drops fire retardant on Harlow Ridge above the Lick Creek Fire, southwest of Asotin, Washington. The fire, which started last Wednesday, has burned more than 50,000 acres in southeast Washington state.
 ?? AP ?? Shane Durant watches the Bootleg Fire smoke plume while walking his dog, Monday near Bly, Oregon.
AP Shane Durant watches the Bootleg Fire smoke plume while walking his dog, Monday near Bly, Oregon.

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