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Firefighters work to contain a fire that jumped a fire line at the north end of a fire burning Saturday, Aug. 5, 2000, near Hamilton, Mont. Choking smoke veiled homes and businesses here Saturday as flames turned forest to ash just a few miles away in one of dozens of blazes that have made Montana a leading hot spot on the West's fire map. Montana's 16 largest fires had burned about 135,000 acres by Saturday, and smaller fires had blackened thousands more. More than 300 homes have been evacuated in southwestern Montana's Bitterroot National Forest, and officials in the Hamilton area warned Saturday that more than 300 additional evacuations could be necessary. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

August 7, 2000 

  

HAMILTON, Montana (AP) - Choking smoke veiled homes and businesses as flames turned forest to ash in one of dozens of blazes scorching the western United States.


President Bill Clinton is expected to tour the area Tuesday and speak with some of the more than 1,500 military troops who have been sent in to help exhausted civilian fire crews, the White House announced Saturday.


"The president wanted to just let the firefighters know how much the country appreciates what they are doing," White House spokesman Joe Lockhart said. Lockhart said Clinton also planned to stop in Idaho, another state hit hard by fires.


Across the West on Saturday, about 70 large fires were burning on more than 747,100 acres (298,840 hectares), according to the National Fire Information Center. The biggest, in Idaho, had charred at least 102,000 acres (40,800 hectares) near the Montana border.


Montana's 16 largest fires had burned about 135,000 acres (54,000 hectares) by Saturday, and smaller fires had blackened thousands more.


"Montana may not have the greatest amount of acreage, but it has more new (fire) starts and more severe weather, lightning going through," said Lynn Pisano-Pedigo, spokeswoman at the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise, Idaho.


"The weather system hasn't changed significantly in the last couple of weeks," she said. "You do have the summer thunderstorms. But unfortunately, there isn't a lot of moisture connected with these. You get a lot of dry lightning."


More than 300 homes have been evacuated in southwestern Montana's Bitterroot Valley, where more than 54,000 acres of the national forest have burned. And officials in the Hamilton area warned Saturday that more than 300 additional evacuations could be necessary. North of Missoula, 20 firefighters were struggling to contain one of the state's smaller fires, a 6,000-acre (2400-hectare) blaze threatening 13 homes on the Flathead reservation.


At an entrance to Hamilton, a sign reads: "Thank you firefighters," enclosed in a heart. Another sign nearby tells people where to find evacuation centers if fire should threaten the town.


A air tanker drops fire retardant on the Pechanga fire that continues to burn out of control near Temecula, Calif., Tuesday, Aug. 1, 2000. More than 5000 acres have been burned as 1,287 firefighters battle the blaze in 100-degree temperatures. (AP Photo/Steven K. Doi)

"I'm basing my concern on the attitudes of people around me," resident Vicki Lawson said Saturday at a coin-operated laundry near her home here. "Obviously, I don't sense much panic."


A health alert was issued for the Hamilton area advising people to stay indoors because of the heavy smoke. In Helena, dense smoke from fires south of the city obscured the Capitol dome.


So far this year, more than 62,000 wildfires, mostly in the West, have burned 3.8 million acres. Assistant Interior Secretary Sylvia Baca has called it the worst fire season in 50 years.


Canadian fire teams are already working in the Northern Rockies alongside hundreds of Army soldiers and Marines sent in to help weary civilian fire crews, and officials expect more Canadians to be battling fires there by Monday.


"Everyone has a high degree of concern about the forest," said Forest Hayes, mayor of Darby, Montana. Solitude and scenery have led people to live in wooded areas away from town, he said, but the trade off is a measure of risk when fire danger rises.


Elsewhere in the West, a blaze 15 miles (24 kilometers) east of Jackson, Wyoming, threatened several homes and cabins, but requests for more firefighters and planes to drop retardant were denied because of demand elsewhere, said Forest Service spokeswoman Mary Tyler. Some 200 people had been evacuated, many for four nights.


Wyoming got some rain from fast-moving thunderstorms Friday afternoon, but "it was not enough rain to really be of any help to the firefighters," Tyler said. "We would need several inches to help us."


Mesa Verde National Park in Colorado was closed again by another rapidly spreading blaze on Friday, just hours after it had reopened after a 10-day, 23,000-acre (9,200-hectare) fire. The latest fire in the nation's largest archaeological preserve had blackened 4,400 acres (1,760 hectares) near some of the park's most popular sites by Saturday and was threatening a research center, headquarters and museum.


In California, a 73,000-acre (29,200-hectare) blaze that has raged near Sequoia National Forest was 80 percent contained Saturday, freeing up firefighters and equipment to be diverted to other locations, said Lee Bentley, a U.S. Forest Service official.


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On the Net:


National Fire Information Center: http://www.nifc.gov


Forest Service links: http://www.fs.fed.us/fire/links2.shtml



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