USA TODAY US Edition

Wildfires still spread poor air

Improving weather may help Bootleg Fire crews

- Doyle Rice

A large wildfire in Northern California spread into Nevada late Wednesday, leading to new evacuation­s, while crews battling the nation’s largest fire in Oregon were aided by better weather.

Smoke from wildfires in the West continued to spread Thursday, bringing hazy skies and poor air quality to many locations.

More than 1,200 firefighte­rs battled the Tamarack Fire near Lake Tahoe in California and Nevada on Thursday. The fire has burned more than 68 square miles of national forest.

A request for evacuation­s was issued for portions of Douglas County, Nevada, as the fire spread across the state line.

An evacuation center was set up at a community center in Gardnervil­le, Nevada.

To the northwest, the Dixie Fire spread up the west flank of the Sierra Nevada, expanding to more than 162 square miles.

The west shore of a resort lake and many other small communitie­s were under evacuation orders.

In Oregon, the nation’s largest wildfire, the Bootleg Fire, grew to 624 square miles Thursday – more than half the size of Rhode Island.

Authoritie­s said lower winds and temperatur­es allowed crews to improve fire lines in that blaze. The fire approached an area burned by a previous fire on its active southeaste­rn flank, raising hopes that lack of fuel could reduce its spread.

More than 2,200 people are fighting the fire, which is about one-third contained.

Almost 80 large wildfires are burning across the USA, including 19 in Montana.

More than 200 fires are burning in Manitoba and Ontario, according to Canadian officials.

More than 21,700 wildland firefighte­rs and support personnel are assigned to wildfires, the National Interagenc­y Fire Center said.

The forecast was not as hopeful in other parts of the country.

The National Weather Service said Thursday that “elevated to critical fire weather extends from the northern Sierra Nevada to northwest Montana, where wildfires are expected to be most likely to spread uncontroll­ably.”

Smoke and other particulat­e matter from fires in the western USA and Canada traveled downwind, producing hazy skies and reducing air quality – in some cases thousands of miles from the points of origin, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor.

After a cold front swept the skies clean in the Northeast overnight, smoke was forecast to be thickest across the Carolinas, the Ohio and Tennessee Valleys, the Great Lakes and the Upper Midwest, the weather service said.

Air quality alerts were issued from Minnesota to North Carolina.

In North Carolina, the weather service warned “air quality is expected to reach code orange, which is unhealthy for sensitive groups and means individual­s with respirator­y and/or heart ailments, older adults, and children should reduce prolonged or heavy outdoor exertion.”

Research points to potential longterm health damage from breathing in microscopi­c particles of smoke, meaning millions of people could be at risk far from where huge fires burn.

Almost 80 large wildfires are burning across the USA, including 19 in Montana. More than 200 fires are burning in Manitoba and Ontario, according to Canadian officials. Meanwhile, more than 21,700 wildland firefighte­rs and support personnel are assigned to wildfires,

 ?? NATHAN HOWARD/AP ?? Spot fires smolder near trees damaged by the Bootleg Fire on July 21 in Bly, Ore.
NATHAN HOWARD/AP Spot fires smolder near trees damaged by the Bootleg Fire on July 21 in Bly, Ore.

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