Albuquerque Journal

Biden declares emergency as blaze continues to threaten resort areas

Break in heavy winds, but dry conditions exist

- BY HAYLEY SMITH, ANITA CHABRIA, RUBEN VIVES AND ALEX WIGGLESWOR­TH

SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Calif. — President Joe Biden declared an emergency in California that will allow federal assistance for the Caldor Fire, which has burned hundreds of structures and continues moving toward Nevada.

The fire barreled toward Lake Tahoe for several days amid heavy winds. But that threat became one of many as the fire moved in other directions, including north toward Wrights Lake and Desolation Wilderness and south toward Kirkwood. Officials say it remains highly dangerous, and thousands of weary firefighte­rs are battling it on several fronts.

Crews may have gotten a break Thursday as red flag conditions were expected to abate, according to meteorolog­ist Jim Dudley. However, dry conditions and low humidity will remain persistent problems.

The fire roared to more than 200,000 acres Thursday but stayed mostly clear of the resort town as crews scrambled to keep it east of Pioneer Trail.

Firefighte­rs also managed to protect many of the homes in Christmas Valley and Meyers, both within the Tahoe Basin.

By Thursday morning, it had reached 210,259 acres and was 25% contained.

Officials confirmed some damage on the outskirts of the Sierraat-Tahoe ski resort late Wednesday, according to Assistant Chief Jamie Moore, a Los Angeles firefighte­r working as part of the state’s interagenc­y effort on the Caldor fire.

“They did lose some outbuildin­gs, but the main lodge was not damaged,” Moore said. Active structure defense is ongoing in Twin Bridges and Strawberry.

As of Thursday morning, 622 homes and 12 commercial properties had been destroyed by the fire, officials said. More than 32,000 structures remained threatened. Tens of thousands of people have been forced from their homes.

Among the evacuees at the Reno-Sparks Convention Center on Thursday was Paul Brooks, 64, of Roseville.

Brooks said he left his home near Sacramento due to wildfire smoke and rented a hotel room in South Lake Tahoe, where he figured the air was cleaner. Four days later, he was forced to evacuate.

Inside the convention center, he said he’s seen people break down. Some get frustrated because they want to return home.

“But they can’t because of the situation,” he said. “People are becoming stir crazy, so I try to keep a positive attitude.”

Brooks considers himself an environmen­talist and said he believes that disasters such as damaging fires and floods will persist if people don’t start taking better care of their surroundin­gs.

“On the East Coast, it will be ‘row, row your boat’ and on the West, ‘the roof, the roof is on fire,’” he said.

The fire’s eastern flank remains a top concern, even with a reduction in wind conditions, according to officials.

“This is where we have a lot of focus,” said Beale Monday, a spokesman with the California Department of Forestry and Fore Protection, or Cal Fire. “All of our resource focus on this side is all broken up into structure protection, and trying to skirt that fire away from the valuables at risk and the communitie­s down here.”

Monday said crews were laying bulldozer lines on the east side of Pioneer Trail and on the west side of Truckee Drive in an effort to keep flames away from South Lake Tahoe. Crews were also removing brush and debris from the side of the highways in the event that they have to ignite a backfire, he said.

Officials were considerin­g opportunit­ies to build a “catcher’s mitt” beyond the immediate fire lines and into Nevada to stop the fire’s march east, he said.

As of Wednesday night, the fire was about five miles from the state line, Moore said.

“I’d be surprised if it doesn’t make it to Nevada in the next day or so,” said Craig Clements, a professor of meteorolog­y and director of the Wildfire Interdisci­plinary Research Center at San Jose State University.

Clements’ team used dynamic computer modeling to forecast the fire’s likely behavior.

The model initially showed the fire reaching Nevada late Wednesday night or early Thursday, he said, but was later amended to reflect slowing spread.

“This is a difficult fire to forecast,” Clements said, noting that it is burning in complex terrain with very dry vegetation.

“But our model shows it’s going to keep going east,” he said.

 ?? NOAH BERGER/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Caldor Fire crested the Sierra Nevada, forcing the unpreceden­ted evacuation this week of all 22,000 residents of South Lake Tahoe. Firefighte­rs, above, discuss strategy Thursday as the blaze consumes forest.
NOAH BERGER/ASSOCIATED PRESS The Caldor Fire crested the Sierra Nevada, forcing the unpreceden­ted evacuation this week of all 22,000 residents of South Lake Tahoe. Firefighte­rs, above, discuss strategy Thursday as the blaze consumes forest.

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