Sunday, July 15, 2007

Out of state news: Firefighters battle lightning-caused blazes as another storm looms

BENTON CITY, Washington (AP) -- Firefighters tried to contain about a dozen lightning-caused fires in Washington state on Saturday, hours before another thunderstorm was expected to give them more work.

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A fast-moving wildfire threatens homes in Asotin County, Washington, on Friday night.

Close to 2,700 lightning strikes were reported in Washington and Oregon on Friday and early Saturday, sparking 212 fires, but firefighters quickly contained most of them. Three of the largest remaining fires had burned nearly 43 square miles (69 square kilometers) of grass, sagebrush and farm fields in south-central Washington, and only one had been contained by early Saturday afternoon.

Triple-digit temperatures, low humidity and high winds complicated firefighting efforts, and a fresh round of lightning-packed storms was expected late Saturday.

"We're expecting additional fires coming from the lightning, but they are able to hit the fires pretty hard right now, and they expect to get pretty good containment on 80 percent," said Paul Norman, spokesman for the Northwest Interagency Coordination Center. "Our highest priority is initial attack, just because if you can stop them small, it saves you the effort down the road."

A red-flag warning for high fire danger remained in effect for south-central Washington and the northeast corner of the state, but cooler, more humid weather was expected beginning today.

To the east, three brush fires burning in the Hanford Reach National Monument, near the Hanford nuclear reservation, were 85 percent contained at about 30,000 acres, or 46 square miles (74 square kilometers).

In northern Idaho near Lewiston, a fast-moving wildfire burned about three square miles (five square kilometers), destroyed a home and several other buildings, knocked down power lines and temporarily closed a highway. No injuries were reported.

The blaze, burning mostly on private and Nez Perce Tribe land, reportedly started Friday when a tractor-trailer blew a tire, and flames quickly spread up a hillside, Nez Perce County Fire Chief Ron Hall said. By Saturday, the fire had moved into a more remote area, and evacuation orders had been lifted, said Sandy Holt, assistant fire manager for the tribe.

In eastern Oregon near Burns, a complex of fires started by lightning July 6 was about 36 percent contained but continued to threaten about 140 structures.

The largest fire in Utah history, about 120 miles (193 kilometers) south of Salt Lake City, was 75 percent contained Saturday after burning more than 568 square miles (914 square kilometers). Officials said it could be fully contained by Tuesday.

"We made excellent progress on the line" Saturday, Kathy Jo Pollock, a fire incident command spokeswoman, told The Salt Lake Tribune. "It was a really good day."

In Southern California, firefighters continued the struggle to surround a 26-square-mile (42-square-kilometer) blaze in steep wilderness in Los Padres National Forest. The fire in the interior of Santa Barbara County was 37 percent contained, a figure that had not changed for days.

Crews were trying to prevent flames from jumping a river and possibly threatening the towns of Tepusquet and Figueroa Mountain. High humidity and calm winds had slowed the blaze in recent days, but firefighters expect it to pick up as temperatures rise this weekend, fire information spokesman Tony Guzman said.

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