The Columbus Dispatch

Fire escapes called ‘miraculous’

Evacuation in Colorado likely saved many lives

- Thomas Peipert and Matthew Brown ASSOCIATED PRESS DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/AP

DENVER – A late-season wildfire pushed by hurricane-force winds tore through two densely populated Denver suburbs and seemed destined to leave a trail of deaths. Yet, as of Wednesday, only two people were unaccounte­d for out of some 35,000 forced from their homes.

It’s a remarkably low number of possible casualties, according to disaster experts and authoritie­s, all the more so because a public alert system did not reach everyone and the winter blaze caught many people off-guard.

Several factors broke in favor of the evacuees: The blaze came during daylight and over the holidays when many were at home in mostly affluent neighborho­ods where most residents have easy access to vehicles and could flee because the region has an extensive road network.

It also might have helped that the area has seasoned emergency management personnel who have worked other recent wildfires, major floods in 2013 and a supermarke­t mass shooting in March.

“In terms of the big picture it’s a really miraculous evacuation,“said Thomas Cova, a University of Utah professor who researches emergency management and wildfire evacuation­s. “So close to a populated area … spot fires everywhere and 100 mph winds – I think it’s incredible that’s there’s only two people missing.”

The Boulder County Sheriff’s Office said Wednesday that investigat­ors looking for one of the two found partial human remains in an area near the suspected origin of the blaze. The adult’s remains were found in the Marshall area south of Boulder, the office said.

Sheriff Joe Pelle previously said officials were looking for a man in the area. Sheriff’s and coroner’s officials continued to work the scene.

Authoritie­s are conducting a separate search for a woman reported missing in the hard-hit community of Superior.

Colorado Gov. Jared Polis said the fire that destroyed almost 1,000 homes and damaged hundreds more stands as a warning: “When you get a pre-evac or evacuation notice, hop to it.”

Officials have not said how many people were contacted through the emergency system, which sends a recorded alert or text to phones. The alert undoubtedl­y saved lives, but some residents affected by the fire said they never received it.

Neil Noble, who fled his Louisville home last Thursday, said the first he heard of the fire was from a Fedex delivery driver who knocked on his door to drop off a package. After setting out for an errand and seeing gridlocked traffic as the smoke plume grew, Noble decided to leave with his three teenage children.

“I’ve talked to dozens of people, even those whose houses burned down, and nobody seems to have received any kind of notificati­on,” he said.

Alerts went out to people with landlines because their numbers are automatica­lly enrolled in the system and those with cellphones and VOIP phones who enrolled online, Pelle said. He also noted that people with landlines might not have received the evacuation order because those very lines had been burned by the fire.

According to Everbridge, the company that created the notificati­on system, more than half of households in the country rely on cellphones and don’t have landlines.

Noble, who does not have a landline and didn’t know he had to sign up for the alerts on his cellphone, said it would be an uphill battle to get tens of thousands of people to manually sign up for the service, causing unnecessar­y risk.

“We were fortunate enough it happened in the daytime, you know. You could see the plume getting worse and worse,” he said. “At night this would have been deadly with this lack of communicat­ion.”

Past fires have shown that wildfire alert system subscripti­on rates can be as low as 30% to 40%, Cova said. But not every household needs to receive an emergency alert for it to be effective, since people will quickly share the news with their neighbors and friends, he said.

The Boulder County fire ignited shortly after 11 a.m. on Dec. 30, when schools were closed and many people were either home from work or working from home due to the pandemic.

That avoided a scenario in which anxious parents scrambled to find their children rather than flee immediatel­y, said Lori Peek, director of the Natural Hazards Center at the University of Colorado Boulder.

Most people in the suburban neighborho­ods that burned likely had access to vehicles, a contrast with other disasters such as Hurricane Katrina, where a quarter of New Orleans’ population had no personal transporta­tion, Peek said.

While the emergency notificati­on system didn’t reach everyone, Boulderare­a residents have seen enough fires along the Front Range communitie­s at the foot of the Rocky Mountains to react quickly when smoke appears on the horizon, Peek said.

Sharpening that awareness of danger is a growing understand­ing that climate change is making wildfires worse even as subdivisio­ns creep deeper into fireprone areas.

“I think one of the shifts that is going to follow this fire is that people are going to start thinking, ‘Am I at risk? I thought I was safe, living in a suburban area,’ ” Peek said. “I don’t think it’s a bad thing to question that. Anything that can help people to get more prepared for the hazards we face is a good thing.”

Cova credited local officials for not hesitating to order evacuation­s once the fire began to spread.

“If we had evacuation speed records, this would be up there in the top 10,” he said. “I don’t think anybody dropped the ball.”

He contrasted the Colorado response with California’s 2018 Camp Fire that killed 85 people and destroyed the town of Paradise. The evacuation order for Paradise came after the fire already was in town and there was only one remaining route out of the community.

Boulder County Commission­er Matt Jones, who was forced from his Louisville home, credited all of the law enforcemen­t agencies and fire department­s that converged on the area from across the state to help with the evacuation.

“It was phenomenal. It saved homes. I have no doubt about it,” he said.

 ?? ?? The hulk of a charred convertibl­e sits Tuesday amid the rubble of a home destroyed by wildfires in Louisville, Colo.
The hulk of a charred convertibl­e sits Tuesday amid the rubble of a home destroyed by wildfires in Louisville, Colo.

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