Wildfire News
West Texas residents evacuated as wildfires spread PDF Print E-mail

TUSCOLA, Texas — Residents near a small West Texas town were evacuated Thursday and some highways were closed as a 300-acre wildfire destroyed three structures and threatened 70 more, fueled by high winds and parched grass.

Helicopters and planes doused houses and other buildings in Taylor County south of Abilene, saving them from the flames as 15 fire departments worked to contain the blaze later in the evening, according to the Texas Forest Service. Parts of State Highways 83 and 84 were closed.

Earlene Hutto and her husband were watching the fire near their home that afternoon when a sheriff's deputy knocked on their door and asked them to evacuate. The couple packed up important papers and photos and then, with their son, drove away in the family's three cars, the Abilene Reporter-News reported in Thursday online editions.

In Central Texas, firefighters on Thursday were putting out a few remaining hot spots of a 1,500-acre blaze in Bastrop County that started Saturday by a fallen power line and destroyed 28 homes and a dozen businesses.

In Brewster County, firefighters had contained about half of an 800-acre fire Thursday night.

In Ector County, firefighters had contained about three-fourths of a 640-acre fire that was narrow and about 8 miles long that started by an oil field heater-treater, according to the Texas Forest Service. Also Thursday, firefighters were battling a 15-acre blaze just west of that fire in Pecos County.

 
Australians brace for worsening wildfire weather PDF Print E-mail

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Emergency officials warned residents in southern Australia that high temperatures, strong winds and lightning forecast for Friday could spark dangerous new flare-ups in the region's still-burning wildfires.

Victoria state Emergency Services Commissioner Bruce Esplin said residents of southern Victoria — where wildfires this month killed more than 200 — need to decide quickly whether to defend their homes from the flames or flee.

Exhausted firefighters on Thursday were still working to contain four major blazes in Victoria.

Officials were increasingly worried that Friday's predicted temperature of 100 degrees Fahrenheit (38 Celsius) combined with strong, erratic winds and lightning could send the flames out of control.

Schools and child care centers across the state will be closed Friday in anticipation of the extreme conditions, officials said. Parks Victoria told visitors to avoid camping in the region's national parks on Friday, with some parks closed completely.

The official death toll from the Feb. 7 blazes remains at 210, though officials expect it to climb higher as more remains are identified from the rubble. On Wednesday, police said it could take another two weeks to conclude the search for dozens still missing. The fires also destroyed 2,029 houses, leaving 7,500 homeless.

Meanwhile, Victoria police on Thursday arrested two 18-year-old men accused of stealing items from a fire-damaged home — the first arrests associated with suspected looting from the Feb. 7 blazes.

 
Australia wildfires kill at least 49 PDF Print E-mail
By Jennifer Bennett
February 8, 2009
Reporting from Sydney, Australia -- Wildfires roared through southeastern Australia on Saturday, killing at least 49 people and destroying homes, farmland and forests, officials said. The army was called in to help firefighters and volunteers battle the blazes.

Officials said the death toll could rise as fires continued burning out of control early today in the southern state of Victoria, in the country's worst wildfire disaster in years. At least 640 houses have been destroyed, officials said.

Police said most of the deaths occurred around the towns of Kinglake and Wandong, northeast of Melbourne, the state capital, and that crews are dealing with 60 fires in the state, Bloomberg News reported.

The biggest fire razed Kinglake, about 60 miles north of Melbourne. Damage also was very heavy in the town of Marysville; aerial video showed rubble where homes once stood.

Officials said that in one town people died as fires swept through their homes, and a family of six is believed to have died in their car.

Officials were still trying to reach many small towns, and there was concern that others may have perished.

More than 3,000 firefighters were working against the blazes, which had spread across the state. Some fires were close to Melbourne's northeastern suburbs, and the main power station for the city of 4 million was threatened.

One fire official said some 460 square miles had been burned by early today and estimated that hundreds of homes had been lost.

"Hell in all its fury has visited the good people of Victoria in the last 24 hours," Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said.

The premier of Victoria, John Brumby, called the disaster a "deeply sad and shocking tragedy -- an incredible and terrible loss."

Temperatures Saturday reached as high as 117 degrees after a weeklong heat wave.

Brumby said army troops would be deployed to help the thousands of exhausted firefighters and volunteers.

Police suspected that some of the fires had been deliberately set and said it would take days to get all of them under control.

In the state of New South Wales, 59 wildfires were raging, and officials told residents to prepare for the worst.

Police officers are beginning to move into burned-out areas. Officials are concerned that there may be more bodies in the remains of homes and cars.

In 1983, Australia's deadliest fires on record killed 75 people and destroyed more than 3,000 homes in Victoria and South Australia.

Bennett is a special correspondent.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.
 
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