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Arizona wildfire displaces up to 3,500 people

by Reuters
Wednesday, 8 June 2011 03:33 GMT

(Updates evacuations, adds details)

By David Schwartz

PHOENIX, June 7 (Reuters) - A stubborn wildfire in eastern Arizona that has forced the evacuation of as many as 3,500 people flared out of control for a 10th day on Tuesday and advanced on two more mountain towns near New Mexico.

Fire officials said more than 2,100 firefighters faced another tough day of fierce winds that threatened to blow the massive blaze northward and closer to the communities of Eager and Springerville, with an estimated 7,500 residents combined.

Fire officials have put both towns in Arizona's White Mountains region on alert for possible evacuation on Monday. The small town of Luna, New Mexico, also falls under the pre-evacuation alert.

The popular mountain retreat of Greer, home to roughly 200 permanent residents, was ordered evacuated on Monday as flames crept to within 5 miles (8 km) of town. But the community appeared on Tuesday to be out of immediate danger as the leading edge of the fire pushed north.

Some 500 residents in Eager were evacuated on Tuesday afternoon, said Sergeant Richard Guinn, a spokesman for the Apache County Sheriff's Office.

"At this point, we need people to get out so we're sure everyone will be safe," he told Reuters. "Now we've reached that trigger point."

Weather forecasts call for sustained winds of up to 18 miles per hour (29 km per hour), with gusts even higher in the region, about 250 miles (400 km) northeast of Phoenix and stretching to near the Arizona-New Mexico border.

At midday Tuesday, fire officials said the so-called Wallow Fire had charred more than 311,000 acres (126,000 hectares) of tinder-dry ponderosa pine forests since it erupted on May 29, and now ranks as the second-largest wildfire in Arizona's history.

No one has been hurt, and reported property losses have been limited to 10 buildings. But Governor Jan Brewer said that as many as 3,000 people have been forced from their homes. On Monday she declared a state of emergency for two counties.

The state's largest wild lands blaze on record, the Rodeo-Chediski fire in eastern Arizona, blackened almost 469,000 acres (190,000 hectares) in 2002.

As of Tuesday, containment of the Wallow Fire remained at zero. Brewer said fire officials were hoping to gain some control over the blaze by Thursday or Friday, though her spokesman, Matt Benson, said firefighting progress hinged on weather conditions.

Nearly 900 firefighters continued to work on Tuesday to gain greater control over a separate large wildfire burning in the southeastern part of the state.

Officials said the Horseshoe 2 Fire had consumed more than 104,000 acres (42,000 hectares) and prompted the evacuation of two small communities there. That fire was listed as 55 percent contained.

(Editing by Steve Gorman and Greg McCune)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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