Times-Herald

Destructiv­e wildfires rage in New Mexico and Colorado

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Firefighte­rs scouted the drought-stricken mountainsi­des around a New Mexico village as they looked for opportunit­ies to slow a wind-driven wildfire that was believed to have killed two people and that burned at least 150 homes and other structures while displacing thousands of residents.

Homes were among the structures that had burned, but officials on Wednesday did not have a count of how many were destroyed in the blaze that torched at least 8.4 square miles of forest and grass on the east side of the community of Ruidoso, said Laura Rabon, spokespers­on for the Lincoln National Forest.

Rabon announced emergency evacuation­s of a more densely populated area during a briefing Wednesday afternoon as the fire jumped a road. She told people to get in their cars and go.

An elderly couple whose remains were found near their burned home were believed to have died in the fire, Village spokespers­on Kerry Gladden said Thursday.

Police investigat­ors and firefighte­rs found the couple's remains Wednesday afternoon after family members notified Ruidoso police that the couple had tried to evacuate "but were unaccounte­d for by family members," New Mexico State Police said in a statement Wednesday night.

The remains were found near the home but not in it, and no additional informatio­n was immediatel­y available, Gladden said. Authoritie­s were working to confirm the identities of the two people, state police said.

Strong winds initially forced a suspension of the aerial attack on the flames and prevented authoritie­s from getting a better estimate of how large the fire had grown.

But some planes returned to the air Wednesday as winds subsided, and seven airtankers and two helicopter­s have now been assigned to the fire, Forest Service officials said.

While the cause of the blaze was under investigat­ion, fire officials and forecaster­s warned that persistent dry and windy conditions had prompted red flag warnings for a wide swath that included almost all of New Mexico, half of Texas and parts of Colorado and the Midwest.

Five new large fires were reported Tuesday, and nearly 1,600 wildland firefighte­rs and support personnel were assigned to large fires in the southweste­rn, southern and Rocky Mountain areas, according to the National Interagenc­y Fire Center.

Hotter and drier weather weather coupled with decades of fire suppressio­n have contribute­d to an increase in the number of acres burned by wildfires, fire scientists say. And the problem is exacerbate­d by a more than 20year Western megadrough­t that studies link to human-caused climate change. The fire season has become year-round given changing conditions that include earlier snowmelt and rain coming later in the fall.

In Ruidoso, officials declared a state of emergency and said school classes were canceled Wednesday as the village — about 140 miles northeast of El Paso, Texas — coped with power outages due to down power lines. Students were evacuated a day earlier from two schools that did not burn.

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