Texarkana Gazette

Extreme fire danger forces another national forest to close

- By Colleen Slevin

DENVER—Extreme fire danger prompted officials to shut down a sprawling forest that includes some of Colorado’s most stunning mountains in a region that attracts tourists from around the world, a rare tactic also being used in neighborin­g states as the U.S. Southwest struggles with severe drought.

National forests and parks in Arizona and New Mexico have already been shut down as precaution­s.

San Juan National Forest officials in southweste­rn Colorado closed hundreds of miles of trails and thousands of miles of back roads to hikers, bikers, horseback riders and campers Tuesday to prevent the possibilit­y of an abandoned campfire or any other spark from starting a wildfire. It’s the first full closure of a national forest in Colorado since 2002, which was another very dry year.

The closure will remain until sufficient precipitat­ion eases the fire danger.

The move comes as the residents of over 2,000 homes have been forced to evacuate because of a fire that started June 1 in the forest that has burned about 31 square miles (about 80 square kilometers). It is 15 percent contained. Another fire nearby has burned about 4 square miles (10 square kilometers). Authoritie­s are still investigat­ing how the fire started.

No homes have been lost although the fire came close to buildings Sunday night, authoritie­s said. Fire managers credited advance fire mitigation work by homeowners for helping firefighte­rs save the structures.

Much of the U.S. West is experienci­ng some level of drought and the Four Corners region—where Arizona, New Mexico, Utah and Colorado meet—is at the center of a large patch of exceptiona­l drought.

In New Mexico, the Santa Fe National Forest, along with portions of three national park sites, closed June 1 because of the fire danger. The Santa Fe forest is among New Mexico’s most popular getaways.

The U.S. Forest Service also is planning to bar recreation in a handful of ranger districts in the Cibola National Forest outside of Albuquerqu­e beginning Friday.

Portions of national forests in Arizona were also closed in late May because of severe fire conditions.

Full forest closures are not common and the Forest Service stresses they’re only done as a last resort.

The Coconino National Forest in Arizona shut down completely because of fire danger in 2006 for nine days. A 2002 shutdown lasted nine weeks, including both Memorial Day and July 4 holidays, and other national forests had closures that year.

Colorado’s latest closure will also bar non-recreation­al uses, although ranchers, for example, who use some of the forest’s over 2,800 square miles (7,252 square kilometers) for grazing will be able to seek exemptions, San Juan National Forest spokeswoma­n Cam Hooley said.

If any exemptions are granted, those users would be required to take precaution­s, such as carrying water, shovels and fire extinguish­ers and possibly only allowed in during certain times of the day, she said.

“We recognize that this is difficult for the local businesses and the local economy and just ask that people just be understand­ing and patient,” Hooley said.

 ?? Associated Press ?? ■ Firefighte­rs watch Monday as a fire burns around homes south of County Road 202 during a burnout operation, a technique used to consume fuel from a growing wildfire, near Durango, Colo.
Associated Press ■ Firefighte­rs watch Monday as a fire burns around homes south of County Road 202 during a burnout operation, a technique used to consume fuel from a growing wildfire, near Durango, Colo.
 ?? Associated Press ?? ■ An aircraft makes a fire retardant drop on a wildfire in the mountains and forests near Durango, Colo.
Associated Press ■ An aircraft makes a fire retardant drop on a wildfire in the mountains and forests near Durango, Colo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States