The Denver Post

President Biden declares disaster in New Mexico

- By Cedar Attanasio and Susan Montoya Bryan

LAS VEGAS, N. M. » Firefighte­rs slowed the advance of the largest wildfire in the U.S. as heavy winds relented Wednesday, while President Joe Biden approved a disaster declaratio­n that brings new financial resources to remote stretches of northern New Mexico devastated by the blaze.

U.S. Rep. Teresa Leger Fernandez announced the presidenti­al disaster declaratio­n during an evening briefing by the U.S. Forest Service about efforts to contain the fire, which has fanned out across 250 square miles of high alpine forest and grasslands at the southern tip of the Rocky Mountains.

“It will help us do that rebuilding and it will help us with the expenses and the hardship that people are facing right now,” the congresswo­man said. “We’re glad it happened this quickly.”

Fire bosses said they are seizing upon an interlude of relatively calm and cool weather to keep the fire from pushing any closer to the small New Mexico city of Las Vegas and other villages scattered along the fire’s shifting fronts. Airplanes and helicopter­s strategica­lly dropped slurries of red fire retardant from the sky, as ground crews cleared timber and brush to starve the fire along crucial fronts.

Bulldozers for days have been scraping fire lines on the outskirts of Las Vegas, population about 13,000, while crews have been conducting burns to clear vegetation along the dozer lines. Aircraft dropped more fire retardant as a second line of defense along a ridge just west of town in preparatio­n for intense winds expected during the weekend.

Local law enforcemen­t officials urged residents to be careful not to spread misinforma­tion. Las Vegas Police Chief Antonio Salazar said his officers would provide “burglary patrols” of evacuated areas and help maintain order at a local Walmart as people line up to purchase supplies.

Meanwhile, numerous fire engines and crews remained stationed Wednesday on the western edge of town.

Getting the right resources into the right areas when they can do the most good is the goal, fire officials said.

“And the chess board keeps getting bigger. That makes it even more complicate­d,” fire informatio­n officer Andy Lyon said Wednesday, referencin­g a peak and ridge on the northern end of the fire that weren’t factors just days ago. “So now that topography is part of our equation, part of the chess board.”

The fire grew to 250 square miles, with containmen­t stuck at 20% of its perimeter. In one area, the fire was about a mile away from Las Vegas on Wednesday, but the real concern were the gusts of 60 mph or more that were expected to sweep over the area during the weekend.

Officials at Los Alamos National Laboratory were warily tracking another wildfire that crept Wednesday within about 5 miles of facilities in Los Alamos.

“Currently, we feel confident that our mitigation measures will protect Laboratory property,” said Rich Nieto, the laboratory’s wildland fire manager, in a statement.

 ?? Thomas Peipert, The Associated Press ?? A firefighti­ng plane flies over a plume of smoke near Las Vegas, N.M., on Wednesday.
Thomas Peipert, The Associated Press A firefighti­ng plane flies over a plume of smoke near Las Vegas, N.M., on Wednesday.

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