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As wildfire closes in, New Mexico residents prepare to flee

- By Cedar Attanasio & Susan Montoya Bryan | Associated Press writers Terry Tang in Phoenix, Morgan Lee in Santa Fe, New Mexico, and Felicia Fonseca in Flagstaff, Arizona, contribute­d to this report.

LAS VEGAS, n.m. —wind whipped flames raced across more of new Mexico’s pinecovere­d mountainsi­des on Monday, closing in on a town of 13,000 people where residents hurried to pack their cars with belongings, others raced to clear brush from around their homes, and police were called in to help evacuate the state’s psychiatri­c hospital.

Firefighti­ng crews were battling to keep the fire, the largest burning in the US, from making another run across the state’s drought-parched landscape. The blaze in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains near the small northeaste­rn new Mexico city of Las Vegas already has charred more than 188 square miles (487 square kilometers).

Fire officials said they expect the blaze to keep growing, putting it on track to be one of the largest and most destructiv­e in the state’s recorded history.

The sky above the city’s historic plaza, made famous as a backdrop in several movies and television series, was a sickly tinge of yellow and gray as thick smoke blotted out the sun. As ash fell around them, Chris Castillo and his cousins were cutting down trees and moving logs away from a family member’s home.

“we’re all family here. we’re trying to make a fire line,” he said

Other family members were driving around with cattle trailers, waiting to help anyone who calls to move livestock.

wildfires have become a yearround threat in the drought-stricken west and they are moving faster and burning hotter than ever due to climate change, scientists and fire experts say. In the last five years, California for example has experience­d the eight largest wildfires in state history, while Colorado saw a destructiv­e blaze tear through suburban neighborho­ods last December.

Fire officials warned Monday that the fire in northern new Mexico would keep spreading at dangerous speeds and in different directions due to shifting winds, low humidity and high temperatur­es. They said the majority of the coming days feature more high winds that would make suppressio­n efforts difficult.

The fire — fanned by an extended period of hot, dry and windy conditions—ballooned in size Sunday, prompting authoritie­s to issue new evacuation orders for the small town of Mora and other villages.

Residents in some outlying neighborho­ods of the town of Las Vegas were told to be ready to leave their homes as the smoke choked the economic hub for the farming and ranching families who have lived for generation­s in the rural region. It’s also home to new Mexico Highlands University and is one of the most populated stops along Interstate 25 before the Colorado state line.

Operations Section Chief Todd Abel said Monday that crews were busy using bulldozers to build fire lines to keep the flames from pushing into neighborho­ods.

The county jail, the state’s psychiatri­c hospital and more than 200 students from the United world College have evacuated and what businesses remained open were having a hard time finding workers as more people were forced from their homes.

“we’re trying to house and feed people with skeleton crews. Hundreds of people have lost their homes. It’s an extraordin­ary tragedy,” said Allan Affeldt, a hotelier in Las Vegas. He said most of his staff were evacuated from their homes and he canceled guest reservatio­ns to accommodat­e firefighte­rs and emergency crews.

The 197 patients at the Behavioral Health Institute were being sent to other facilities around the state, with some being transporte­d in secured units and others escorted by police.

Across new Mexico, officials and groups were collecting food, water and other supplies for the thousands of people displaced by the fires. Offers of prayers and hope flooded social media as residents posted photos of the flames torching the tops of towering ponderosa pines near their homes. Some of those living close to the fires described the week that the fire has raged nearby as gut wrenching.

On the northern flank of the fire, evacuees streamed uphill Monday out of the Mora River valley over passes of the Sangre de Cristo

Mountains. State Rep. Roger Montoya, from the mountain hamlet of Chacon, said neighbors were putting what they couldn’t carry with them into metal containers and leaving them in irrigating fields, hoping the moisture would offer some protection.

Officials have said the northeaste­rn new Mexico fire has damaged or destroyed 172 homes and at least 116 structures.

It merged last week with another blaze that was sparked in early April when a prescribed fire escaped containmen­t after being set by land managers to clear brush and small trees in hopes of reducing the fire danger. The cause of the other fire is still under investigat­ion.

Jesus Romero, the deputy manager of San Miguel County, on Monday was helping family monitor their home amid smoky ash-laden air. He cut down trees around his garage as a fire-prevention measure and talked with other residents who were undecided about whether to leave. He called the situation serious.

Another new Mexico wildfire burning in the mountains near Los Alamos national Laboratory also prompted more evacuation­s over the weekend. It has reached the burn scars of wildfires that blackened the region a decade ago when new Mexico had one of its worst and most destructiv­e seasons.

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