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News / Nation & World

Torch blamed for wildfire in Utah

Governor says it was used to kill weeds in dry conditions

By BRADY McCOMBS and ALINA HARTOUNIAN, Associated Press
Published: June 20, 2017, 5:53pm
2 Photos
From left, Twin Falls, Idaho, firefighters Tenli Bright and Kori Neiwirth get ready to roll out for the day on the fire line, Parawan, Utah, Monday, June 19, 2017. Utah firefighters were battling a wildfire Monday that shut down a highway and forced hundreds of people to flee a ski town as crews in New Mexico mop up another blaze amid scorching heat in the Southwest U.S.
From left, Twin Falls, Idaho, firefighters Tenli Bright and Kori Neiwirth get ready to roll out for the day on the fire line, Parawan, Utah, Monday, June 19, 2017. Utah firefighters were battling a wildfire Monday that shut down a highway and forced hundreds of people to flee a ski town as crews in New Mexico mop up another blaze amid scorching heat in the Southwest U.S. (Leah Hogsten/The Salt Lake Tribune via AP) Photo Gallery

SALT LAKE CITY — A wildfire that destroyed one home and damaged another while forcing hundreds of people to evacuate a Utah ski town was started by somebody using a torch to kill weeds, Gov. Gary Herbert said Tuesday.

Herbert, who toured the fire-damaged area around Brian Head, tweeted that experts told him the weed torch was used in dry conditions. He urged people to be extra careful during hot, dry days.

The person who was doing the burning on private land has been identified by investigators but has not yet been charged, which is why officials aren’t releasing the name, said Jason Curry of the Utah Division of Forestry, Fire and State Lands.

Even if the person had a permit to be burning, he or she would be responsible for the cost of the wildfire that is expected be more than $1 million, Curry said.

The evacuations of more than 700 people and the closure of part of a state highway were still in place as of Tuesday afternoon, Forest Service spokeswoman Cigi Burton said. There’s no timeline to lift the measures.

Wildfires have also hit California, where a blaze in the San Bernardino Mountains east of Los Angeles is 10 percent contained, and northern Nevada, where firefighters are battling a trio of wildland blazes.

In California, the nearly 1,000-acre fire prompted mandatory evacuations of several blocks near Baldwin Lake. The blaze, which began Monday, burned through brush and timber in the midst of a heat wave. About 500 firefighters aided by aircraft battled the flames.

In Utah, Kristi Phillips and her husband were in the middle of installing appliances in their newly purchased condominium on Saturday when the delivery driver mentioned black smoke off in the distance.

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Within 45 minutes, the flames were close enough to see and a voice over a megaphone was telling them to evacuate immediately.

“Everyone in the building was scrambling to get out,” she said.

They were able to stay with friends and return to their main home in Las Vegas. She doesn’t expect to be able to check on the condo until the weekend.

“We were in the middle of putting the dishwasher in. It’s half-sitting in, half-sitting out,” she said.

Burton said the fire was growing slowly and crews were lighting backfires to help consume fuels in the path of the flames that have blackened roughly 1.5 square miles (2 square kilometers).

One firefighter suffered a concussion and another a puncture wound in the fire that started Saturday, she said. Both are recovering.

The fire is keeping visitors away from the mountain town full of businesses that rely on summer tourism.

Carol Reid and her husband decided to do a scenic drive Saturday around Brian Head when she saw a whiff of smoke that she thought might be a campfire.

As they turned around a curve into town, “flames exploded up the hill and within seconds the fire spread all the way up to the top of the mountain,” she said in an email.

She and her husband left town.

Rolane Grinnell, owner of Brian Head Outdoor Adventure company, said his business is losing thousands of dollars.

“We’re having to turn our guests away,” Grinnell said.

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