Chattanooga Times Free Press

Wildfire near Tucson, Arizona, threatens hundreds of homes

- BY MATT YORK

TUCSON, Ariz. — Hundreds of foothills homes on the outskirts of Tucson remained under an evacuation notice Friday as firefighte­rs supported by helicopter­s worked to keep a wildfire from moving downhill from canyons and ridges in mountains in a national forest.

Most of the western United States is experienci­ng extreme dryness or drought, creating challengin­g conditions for wildfire season, Bryan Henry, meteorolog­ist with the National Interagenc­y Fire Center, said in a recent fire season outlook.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency granted Arizona’s request for money to help fight the fire, officials said Thursday.

Fire officials said the fire’s growth slowed overnight but that it remained a threat. Flames have been visible from Tucson at night, and smoke from the fire plumed over a suburb Friday morning.

Pima County officials on Thursday issued an evacuation notice for approximat­ely 300 homes in a area south of the Coronado National Forest, and numerous other residents were told to prepare to evacuate.

Over 400 firefighte­rs battled the week-old lightning-sparked fire that as of Friday had burned 11 square miles of mostly brush and tall grass.

Fire officials said specialize­d crews were assessing potential threats to homes and other structures to identify access routes and develop contingenc­y plans in the event of the fire spreading into neighborho­ods.

In the neighborho­ods closest to the fire, sheriff’s deputies checked IDs to confirm that people trying to enter were residents, as helicopter­s dropped water on hot spots.

Sheriff’s officials went door to door in neighborho­ods on Thursday to notify residences of the evacuation notice, which a sheriff’s spokesman said Friday wasn’t mandatory.

“People are not required to leave, however we are telling people we may not be able to come back and assist if things start to burn,” said Deputy James Allerton.

No injuries or structural damage was reported, Allerton said.

Travis Mayberry, an operations section chief for the fire management team, said Friday much of the fire was burning in terrain too rugged for grounds crews to work safely, particular­ly if they needed to escape quickly.

“Ït’s not a great place for us to put people in to safely work,” he said. “It’s just too steep.”“

Mayberry said crews continued to clear lines to keep the fire away from homes south of the forest and might set additional fires to burn vegetation to slow the wildfire by depriving it of potential fuel.

The fire, sparked June 5 by lightning, was only 10% contained as of Friday morning, and Mayberry said increasing the containmen­t figure would be a slow process.

 ?? KELLY PRESNELL/ARIZONA DAILY STAR VIA AP ?? The Bighorn Fire breaks onto the southern slopes of the Santa Catalina Mountains on Wednesday and burns over a pair of homes in the foothills just east of the Finger Rock Trailhead in Tucson, Ariz.
KELLY PRESNELL/ARIZONA DAILY STAR VIA AP The Bighorn Fire breaks onto the southern slopes of the Santa Catalina Mountains on Wednesday and burns over a pair of homes in the foothills just east of the Finger Rock Trailhead in Tucson, Ariz.
 ?? JOSH GALEMORE/ARIZONA DAILY STAR VIA AP ?? Crew members with the Smokey Bear Hotshots from Ruidoso, N.M., cut line near the mouth of Finger Rock Canyon near Tucson as a precaution against the growing Bighorn Fire being fought in the Santa Catalina Mountain Range.
JOSH GALEMORE/ARIZONA DAILY STAR VIA AP Crew members with the Smokey Bear Hotshots from Ruidoso, N.M., cut line near the mouth of Finger Rock Canyon near Tucson as a precaution against the growing Bighorn Fire being fought in the Santa Catalina Mountain Range.

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