Wednesday, August 19, 2015

FALLEN HEROES: 3 firefighters killed, 4 injured in fighting Washington state wildfire










"It is really bad out there. The fires have just exploded."  "We're just directing everybody to head south."

 
By GENE JOHNSON and NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS  .

SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) — 


Three firefighters were killed and three to four others were injured Wednesday as raging wildfires advanced on towns in north-central Washington, authorities said.


Okanogan County Sheriff Frank Rogers said the deaths, in a wildfire near Twisp, had been confirmed, but he said he was not immediately releasing further details about the circumstances.

"My heart breaks over the loss of life," Gov. Jay Inslee said in a written statement. "I know all Washington joins me and Trudi in sending our prayers to the families of these brave firefighters. They gave their lives to protect others. It was their calling, but the loss for their families is immense."

The news came after officials urged people in the popular outdoor-recreation centers of Twisp and Wintrop, in the scenic Okanogan River valley about 115 miles northeast of Seattle, to evacuate as a complex of fires in the area covered about 50 square miles. The Okanogan County Emergency Management department issued the order for the towns, which combined have a population of about 1,300.

The town of Conconully, home to about 200 people 20 miles northwest of Omak, had also been evacuated.

Angela Seydel, a spokeswoman for the agency, said Wednesday evening that 4,000 homes in the region had been evacuated.


 


Three Washington National Guard soldiers stand in a clearing on a hillside as they fight the First Creek Fire, Tuesday, Aug. 18, 2015, near Chelan, Wash. The troops in Washington state were part of a massive response to blazes burning throughout the West. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren) 


"It is really bad out there. The fires have just exploded," she said. "We're just directing everybody to head south."

The National Weather Service issued a red flag warning for the eastern portion of the state from 11 a.m. Wednesday to 5 p.m. Friday. Officials said temperatures will climb above 90 degrees and relative humidity will drop as low as 14 percent.

Drought and heat have combined to make this fire season of the most active in the United States in recent years. Nearly 29,000 firefighters are battling some 100 large blazes across the West, including in Idaho, Oregon, Montana, Washington and California.