Smoke Lifts over Washington fires, but Potential for Fire Growth Remains
The massive cloud of smoke began to lift over Washington wildfires over the weekend, but as air quality improves the fire’s behavior could become more erratic and intense, fire officials said.
“It’s like a flue opening in a fireplace,” said Suzanne Flory, spokeswoman for the U.S. Forest Service and the Rocky Mountain Incident Management Team. “Smoke serves as a cap on the fire.”
The Okanogan Complex of wildfires was measured at 374 square miles as of Sunday.
Once the smoke lifts, humidity drops, heat rises and fires can flare up.
The complex of fires was estimated to be about 10 percent contained as of Sunday morning, fire spokesman Dan Omdal said.
Containment does not mean the fire has stopped burning. It means it has run out of fuel to burn in that area, either because it has hit a man-made fire line, a drop from airplanes of fire retardant, a road or a lake.
Some of the land within the fire lines is still burning, but other sections have burned out.
“We call it a wildfire, but much of the fire has been tamed,” Omdal said. “We are making progress,”
- Jury Awards $68.5M to Family of Worker Who Fell to Death at Philly Construction Site
- US Home Insurance Still Priced Too Low for Climate Risk, Says Swiss Re Chair
- Progressive to Pay $48M to New York Drivers Over Underpaid Total Loss Claims
- Update: Beryl Rakes Mexico’s Yucatan With Hurricane Winds and Heavy Rain