Times-Herald

Miscalcula­tions, errors blamed for massive blaze

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ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M. (AP) — Multiple miscalcula­tions, inaccurate models and a lack of understand­ing of just how dry things are in the Southwest resulted in a planned burn to reduce the threat of wildfire turning into the largest blaze in New Mexico's recorded history, the U.S. Forest Service said Tuesday.

The agency quietly posted an 80-page review that details the planning missteps and the conditions on the ground as crews ignited the prescribed fire in early April. The report states officials who planned the operation underestim­ated the amount of timber and vegetation that was available to fuel the flames, the exceptiona­l dry conditions and the rural villages to water supplies that would be threatened if things went awry.

Within hours of lighting a test fire on that April day, multiple spot fires were reported outside containmen­t lines and there were not enough resources or water to rein them in.

"The devastatin­g impact of this fire to the communitie­s and livelihood­s of those affected in New Mexico demanded this level of review to ensure we understand how this tragic event unfolded," U.S. Forest Chief Randy Moore wrote. "I cannot overstate how heartbreak­ing these impacts are on communitie­s and individual­s."

As of Tuesday, the blaze had charred more than 533 square miles, making it the largest fire to have burned this spring in the U.S. It comes during a particular­ly ferocious season in which fire danger in overgrown forests around the West has reached historic levels due to decades of drought and warmer weather brought on by climate change.

The number of acres burned so far this year is more than two and half times the national average for the past 10 years, according to the National Interagenc­y Fire Center. So far, 31,000 wildfires have burned more than 5,000 square miles in the United States.

Anger and frustratio­n have been simmering among residents and elected officials in northern New Mexico, where several hundred homes have been destroyed and thousands of residents were displaced.

Many mountainsi­des have been reduced to ash and once towering ponderosa pine trees have been turned into charred toothpicks. Spots considered sacred by the ranching and farming families who have called the region home for generation­s have been wiped out.

U.S. Rep. Teresa Leger Fernández called the Forest Service review incredibly disturbing, pointing to the multiple errors in the calculatio­ns that went into planning for the prescribed burn.

"Forest Service failures destroyed many rich and proud New Mexico communitie­s," she said in a statement. "The rains may cause a second flood disaster. As the report notes, the Forest Service put numerous homes, communitie­s, lives, historic sites, and watersheds at risk."

 ?? Brodie Johnson • Times-Herald ?? The St. Francis County Museum’s Summer Enrichment programs this summer are focused on selfsustai­nability as well as a history of Delta culture. In the top photo, David Bernslon, with the Delta Cultural Center in Helena-West Helena, teaches students about blues instrument­s like the Diddlybo. At right, Richard Spilman with the Delta Cultural Center, hands off an African Drum as he teaches about blues beats and early percussion instrument­s.
Brodie Johnson • Times-Herald The St. Francis County Museum’s Summer Enrichment programs this summer are focused on selfsustai­nability as well as a history of Delta culture. In the top photo, David Bernslon, with the Delta Cultural Center in Helena-West Helena, teaches students about blues instrument­s like the Diddlybo. At right, Richard Spilman with the Delta Cultural Center, hands off an African Drum as he teaches about blues beats and early percussion instrument­s.
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