Lorne Brunson stands Sunday on a hill overlooking the remains of his homestead

Lorne Brunson stands Sunday on a hill overlooking the remains of his homestead

Calmer weather helps crews fighting wildfires spread across the West

  • The Associated Press
  • Tuesday, August 18, 2015 12:01am
  • News

The Associated Press

Fire crews stepped up their attack Monday against wildfires that have destroyed dozens of homes and forced hundreds to flee in Western states.

Calmer weather Sunday helped firefighters tighten their grip on the blazes, but dry, hot weather is expected in the days ahead.

With most available firefighters, aircraft and engines already working on the wildfires, the National Interagency Fire Center announced Monday that it was calling on the military for help.

Two hundred active-duty troops will spend most of this week training, NIFC fire managers said, and will be deployed to a fire this Sunday.

It’s the first time the agency has mobilized the military since 2006.

A look at conditions:

Washington

More crews, including some from the Washington National Guard, were being mobilized as several large fires threatened homes in the Chelan area in central Washington.

The blazes have destroyed more than 50 structures, forced about 1,500 residents to flee and scorched more than 155 square miles. Scores of homes remain threatened.

Fire incident spokesman Wayne Patterson said air tankers established lines to keep the flames from reaching downtown Chelan, a popular resort town.

Helicopters have been dipping into Lake Chelan to pull up water to battle blazes north of the lake.

“There were literally people on the beaches near that lake, in their swim wear out on the lake right near it,” Patterson told The Associated Press.

Improved weather helped firefighters Sunday, but hot temperatures and low humidity are expected this week.

Oregon

Higher humidity and lighter winds allowed crews to slow the spread of wildfires burning up eastern Oregon.

A lightning-sparked fire near John Day has grown to nearly 60 square miles and has destroyed at least 26 homes.

Roughly 300 firefighters were assigned to the blaze over the weekend, and more are expected.

South of Baker City, the improved weather helped firefighters make progress on the state’s largest wildfire.

The blaze has charred almost 140 square miles and destroyed six homes.

Meanwhile, hundreds of evacuated residents on the Warm Springs tribal reservation were allowed to return home Sunday as danger eased from the County Line 2 Fire.

Containment of the 85-square-mile blaze increased to 25 percent.

Idaho

Wildfires have destroyed 42 homes and at least 79 outbuildings in northern Idaho near the town of Kamiah.

More than 700 firefighters along with 40 fire engines and four helicopters were trying to protect homes Monday, but residents along an 11-mile section of U.S. Highway 12 were told to be ready to flee.

The group of lightning-caused fires has scorched about 70 square miles of mainly forest lands and was 15 percent contained.

A 70-year-old woman was killed when she fell while preparing to flee from the wildfire, the Idaho County Sheriff’s Department said Saturday.

Cheryl Lee Wissler of Adams Grade died Friday from a head injury she suffered when she fell, authorities said.

On the Idaho-Oregon border, some 800 firefighters had a giant 443-square-mile wildfire 70 percent contained.

The week-old fire has scorched grassland that is needed for cattle and is primary habitat for sage grouse, a bird under consideration for federal protections.

California

A fire that has been burning for more than a week about 100 miles north of San Francisco has destroyed nine homes and charred more than 39 square miles.

But firefighters are gaining ground against the wildfire with 85 percent containment reported Monday.

Fire officials said that over the weekend, smoke from the fire drifted into the San Francisco Bay Area and especially east of the city, where it was trapped in valleys for several days, causing hazy skies and breathing difficulties for some.

The fire is the second of two blazes that have charred land near dry Lower Lake.

The first one, which was contained Friday after more than two weeks, destroyed 43 homes.

In Southern California, crews working through the night stopped the spread of two Los Angeles County fires that burned several structures, charred hundreds of acres of dry brush and led to the arson arrest of one person.

A brush fire sparked near a riverbed in Montebello, a suburb east of Los Angeles, halted operations at an oil field and prompted evacuation of a park.

The fire, which grew to about 200 acres, was 20 percent contained Monday.

Montebello authorities said a 45-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of arson.

To the north, a wildfire that burned buildings at an abandoned rehabilitation center in rural Castaic has charred about 300 acres in Angeles National Forest. It was 10 percent contained.

Meanwhile, a 2½-square-mile fire in the forest above the suburbs of Glendora and Azusa was 60 percent contained.

Colorado

Lightning across northwestern Colorado is suspected of sparking about 30 fires over the weekend, keeping firefighters running from one blaze to another.

The largest of the wildfires was burning on more than 1,000 acres 20 miles north of Craig. It was 80 percent contained Monday.

Many smaller fires were contained.

More than 4,000 lightning strikes hit northwestern Colorado on Saturday and Sunday.

Montana

So many wildfires have ignited across the Northern Rockies this month that fire officials are allowing some that might have been snuffed out under normal circumstances to burn.

There were 86 active fires burning across Montana and Idaho as of Monday, and seven in Montana were listed as unstaffed due to a lack of resources, according to the Northern Rockies Coordination Center. All seven are small fires burning in remote areas in northwestern Montana.

More than 100 aircraft, 75 crews and 229 fire engines were being used to fight fires in Montana and Idaho, according to the center.

Additional crews and equipment were being used for fires outside the Northern Rockies.

Montana Department of Natural Resources Administrator Bob Harrington said only skeleton crews remained to respond to any new fires, while state officials were relying on local fire departments to respond if there were outbreaks in relatively quiet eastern Montana.

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