400 more homes evacuated by growing fire near Utah ski town


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SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — A wildfire near a southern Utah ski town that has forced hundreds of people to evacuate has doubled in size in high winds and drove out residents of 400 additional homes, authorities said Thursday.

The blaze is one of several burning in the U.S. West as extreme heat makes it difficult for firefighters to tamp down the flames.

In Utah, new evacuations were ordered east of the fire's epicenter in the tiny mountain town of Brian Head, with residents nearby and people visiting a popular fishing area also asked to leave to avoid danger, said Denise Dastrup of the Garfield County Sheriff's Office.

More than 700 other people have been out of their homes since Saturday. Someone using a torch to burn weeds ignited the fire near the alpine community that is home to the Brian Head Resort and close to several national monuments and parks in Utah's red rock country.

The mountain bike and hiking trails, zip line and water tubing hill that lure summer visitors were closed while firefighters try to contain the blaze.

The resort, which is a ski area in the winter, says on its website that it still plans to carry out summer activities that include music concerts and Fourth of July events but that it doesn't know when it will reopen.

One home has been destroyed and another damaged. It also caused minor damage at a Boy Scout camp.

The unidentified person accused of starting the fire could face charges. Firefighting costs could rise to more than $1 million, said Jason Curry of the Utah Division of Forestry, Fire and State Lands.

Anita DeLelles, a cabin owner in Brian Head, said she's saddened, frustrated and angry that the action of one "careless person" is causing so much damage. She wasn't there when the fire started, but people renting her cabin had to be evacuated.

She said she's losing income from having to cancel reservations during busy summer months. But that's secondary to her concern for what the town will look like when the fire is finally out.

"I'm saddened by the devastation of the beauty of the place," said DeLelles, who lives about 85 miles south. "It's almost surreal just thinking about how fast it's grown."

The fire has spread to 17 square miles (44 square kilometers) and is heading toward a lake used by recreationists and where some homes stand, said Erin Darboven of the Bureau of Land Management.

A stretch of closed highway has been extended to nearly 48 miles (77 kilometers).

Garity Hathaway was at the top of a mountain hiking trail Saturday with her husband and their two children when they saw the flames. They ran down a ski slope to get their things from their hotel and leave town, cutting their weekend getaway short by a day.

"We were scared. We couldn't tell how far away it was," said Hathaway of Orem, Utah. "It was too close for comfort."

Elsewhere, New Mexico authorities lifted the evacuation of more than 150 homes in the mountains east of Albuquerque as firefighters got a handle on fire that started Wednesday. It took crews a few hours to slow the flames, and families were allowed to return home by nightfall.

Another fire, sparked by lightning nearly three weeks ago, has charred more than 11 square miles (28 square kilometers), and crews have started rehabilitation work.

With the hot, dry conditions persisting, forest officials imposed fire restrictions in hopes of limiting human-caused fires.

In California, crews working in rugged terrain during punishing heat were struggling to contain a wildfire that's burned nearly 2.5 square miles (6.5 square kilometers) in the San Bernardino Mountains east of Los Angeles.

More than 1,200 firefighters got help Thursday from a fleet of water- and fire retardant-dropping aircraft. No buildings were threatened.

Firefighters in the San Francisco Bay Area brought a grass fire near a highway in Vallejo under control after it damaged several properties and led to major traffic backups.

Copyright © The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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