Officials cancel plan for Coloradans to return home as wildfire keeps burning near Boulder

By P. Solomon Banda, AP
Thursday, September 9, 2010

High winds mean Colo. fire evacuees can’t return

BOULDER, Colo. — Winds expected to reach 60 mph Thursday are forcing authorities to call off plans for residents to return to their homes after they fled a wildfire that has destroyed at least 169 houses near Boulder.

The winds were expected to pick up earlier than originally thought, leading authorities to close roads that had temporarily been opened to residents at 10 a.m. Residents who were set to be allowed in at 2 p.m. won’t be able to get in at all.

Containment lines have been built around 30 percent of the 10-square-mile fire, but firefighters warned that progress could be undone if sparks jump the lines.

Wind gusts could blow away the little moisture the area has seen and spread the fire beyond the 20-mile-long perimeter.

“The wind event tonight, we could be off to the races,” said Rob Bozeman, field observer with the Boulder Mountain Fire Protection District.

Nine people had been reported missing in the fire zone, but Cmdr. Rick Brough said they all have been accounted for.

About 3,500 people have been out of their homes for four days, and some residents have been frustrated with a lack of information about what was happening behind fire lines or because they couldn’t do more to help. Some have gotten around roadblocks by hiking and biking in to check on their homes.

Brough said one person caught sneaking in was led away in handcuffs. He acknowledged authorities didn’t have enough resources to force everyone to leave again if they refused to do so.

The fire has burned 6,365 acres, or about 10 square miles, and damage in about 20 percent of that area still has not been assessed.

Already though, the reported loss of homes surpasses that of the 2002 Hayman fire in southern Colorado that was the most destructive in the state’s history. That fire destroyed 133 homes and 466 outbuildings on 138,000 acres of more sparsely populated area that includes national forest land.

Firefighters took advantage of cooler weather and light rain to attack the wildfire Wednesday, and air tankers dumped fire retardant on the flames. About 100,000 gallons of retardant has been used and firefighting costs have reached $2.1 million so far.

The cause of the fire was under investigation.

Fire managers said as many as 500 firefighters and support personnel are at the fire and more were on the way. Laura McConnell, spokeswoman for the management team, said crews are dealing with downed power lines, debris, poison ivy and rattlesnakes. They also have to watch for propane tanks in the area.

YOUR VIEW POINT
NAME : (REQUIRED)
MAIL : (REQUIRED)
will not be displayed
WEBSITE : (OPTIONAL)
YOUR
COMMENT :