COLORADO WILDFIRES: More Than 900 Homes Evacuated Near Denver

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DAN ELLIOTT | 01/ 8/09 06:53 PM | AP

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High winds cause a flare up on a ranch in rural Boulder County, Colo. on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2009. Three wind-driven wildfires swept across Boulder County grasslands Wednesday, prompting authorities to call for evacuations of threatened residential areas. (AP Photo/Peter M. Fredin)

BOULDER, Colo. — Thousands of evacuated residents, including former FEMA chief Michael D. Brown, were allowed to return to their homes Thursday after firefighters partially contained a wildfire near Denver that destroyed two houses and several outbuildings.

Brown told The Associated Press that his house was spared, but he watched firefighters battle the blaze about a half-mile from his home.

Crews expected to fully contain the 3,700-acre fire zone about 25 miles northwest of Denver by Thursday night. The fire blackened mostly grassland north and west of the city of Boulder, an area of scattered subdivisions, farms and ranches along the foothills of the Rocky Mountains.

"I'm shaking and I'm so grateful we have our homes and our pets," said Darlene Steiner, as she inspected her home north of Boulder following an overnight evacuation that affected an estimated 3,000 people. Steiner walked arm-in-arm with a friend, checking on neighbors and gazing at the burned landscape.

At least 1,300 homes were evacuated and two were destroyed, county Sheriff's Cmdr. Phil West said. The evacuation order was lifted Thursday evening.

West estimated that within the 3,700-acre fire zone, about 1,400 acres had actually burned.

Two firefighters and a police officer sustained minor injuries.

"The fact that no one was killed or seriously injured and the fact that we lost two homes in a wind-driven event like this is miraculous," Sheriff Joe Pelle said. "The effort to suppress this wildfire once the winds died down last night was exhausting and downright heroic."

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Garry Briese, the Denver-based regional director for FEMA, also credited years of work to protect neighborhoods by outlawing wood shingles and encouraging homeowners to keep flammable landscaping away from their homes.

"It was an overnight miracle that was 15 years in the making," said Briese, a former president of the International Association of Fire Chiefs.

Some 200 firefighters spent the night lighting backfires to starve the blaze. They saved several homes from destruction, Pelle said.

The cause of the fire, which started Wednesday, was under investigation, though officials believed wind gusts reaching 80 mph likely downed power lines.

A broad swath of the foothills was charred Thursday, and some wind gusts kicked up as the sun rose.

Brown said he was prepared with a "go kit" stuffed with medication and cash that was left over from his FEMA tenure when he was called out on disasters. He was director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency from 2003 until he resigned amid criticism after Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

"We never think of the fact that something like this can happen," Brown said. "One minute I'm sitting in my office and the next there is a deputy in my driveway telling me I have to leave."

Christy Cramer, a horse trainer, spent six hours Wednesday evacuating 42 horses from the Joder Ranch.

"I called all of my friends with big horse trailers," Cramer said. "The flames were right next to my truck. It was very, very, very scary."

Seven horses were found safe at the ranch Thursday, including one standing in a burned pen, Cramer said.

Neighbors helped Bobra Goldsmith, 78, round up more than 160 llamas and alpacas on her Rocky Mountain Llamas ranch. The retired University of Colorado professor lost her house in the fire.

"My mother was an artist," Goldsmith told the Daily Camera newspaper. "The house was filled with her work. I can't tell you what I've lost."

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Associated Press writer P. Solomon Banda contributed to this report.

BOULDER, Colo. — Thousands of evacuated residents, including former FEMA chief Michael D. Brown, were allowed to return to their homes Thursday after firefighters partially contained a wildfire ...
BOULDER, Colo. — Thousands of evacuated residents, including former FEMA chief Michael D. Brown, were allowed to return to their homes Thursday after firefighters partially contained a wildfire ...
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- Nishnabe I'm a Fan of Nishnabe 31 fans permalink
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Anyone notice the awkward sentence that indicates former FEMA director keeps a "go kit stuffed with cash from his FEMA days?" Editor, oh editor, what does that really mean? And why does he need cash when he had a govt credit card and surrounded by gofers and functionaries? Was the bag stuffed with tax dollars or what? Inquiring minds want to know.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:47 PM on 01/08/2009
- Cuyahoga I'm a Fan of Cuyahoga 10 fans permalink

I lived in Boulder 1974-79; my then husband was a geography/geology grad student @ CU. He did a study of the topography of the region and talked with developers about the insanity of building in the foothills of and just west of Boulder, about the fire risk, AND the mud slides that could happen with high rains. As naive Ohioans - we were stunned that the developers' responses were "The money will be in my pocket and I'll be long gone by time that ever happens."

Building in areas where fire risk is exceptionally high due to the elevation, dryness, and the highly flammable pines and other brushes is as foolish as building on the edge of the gulf coast.

Besides - it would be far more beautiful without all the building. For those of you who live there now and say Boulder is great - you should have known it 30 years ago.

Juliann

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:10 PM on 01/08/2009
- springsm I'm a Fan of springsm 54 fans permalink

Well Julie ann everywhere you see this greed and the stupidity of building in non supportable areas. Being from Ohio however, does not give you any more credence than the next place, maybe even less, in some eyes. I am really sorry that this area is burning...­when I was in Boulder the town was just that...a smaller college town. And a neat place to live. Like all good things, they catch on and grow. Developers are the first to encroach and betray.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:47 PM on 01/08/2009
- Cuyahoga I'm a Fan of Cuyahoga 10 fans permalink

I apologize for not being clear. Being from Ohio had NOTHING to do with having credence. I was trying to communicate that we were naive - very young and naive - and didn't realize how people were take advantage of others so easily. Boulder was a great place to live. I miss it tremendously.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:36 PM on 01/08/2009
- Durango I'm a Fan of Durango 144 fans permalink

Ed Quillen of the Denver post calls them Stupid Zones. Along with building on beaches and floodplains.

His solution is to allow them to build but not to sell them insurance. They can have their trophy homes (or as they are now known, Starter Castles) but if the burn or get flooded the owners are 100% responsible. No insurance or government bailouts.

That should take care of the problem.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:41 PM on 01/08/2009
- ArchAngel I'm a Fan of ArchAngel 11 fans permalink

I'm right up against the mountains and watched this too close for comfort from my home last night.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:44 PM on 01/08/2009
- brutus948 I'm a Fan of brutus948 5 fans permalink

yea I had to evacuate also. it was sooo close. The winds were crazy

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:53 PM on 01/08/2009
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Yeah, but, who is gonna coach the Broncos?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:26 PM on 01/08/2009
- KarelS I'm a Fan of KarelS 11 fans permalink

Shanahan is coming back as Vince Lombardi. It'll also take a little plastic surgery, but he's been faking it so long as a football coach this operation should be a cinch.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:43 PM on 01/08/2009
- josholland I'm a Fan of josholland 10 fans permalink
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Yeah, AND the cover keeps blowing off my grill. Damn you global warming!

Thanks so much firefighters. I don't have renter's insurance sooo...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:06 AM on 01/08/2009
- Durango I'm a Fan of Durango 144 fans permalink

I would guess that they don't have 2 feet of snow on the ground like we do in the SW end of the state.

Fires in January. How weird.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:04 AM on 01/08/2009
- shockmagog I'm a Fan of shockmagog 139 fans permalink
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I was going to ask...I've never heard of anything like this happening in Colorado in January.

Just in the past few years we've been getting fires all year around in Southern California.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:10 PM on 01/08/2009
- Durango I'm a Fan of Durango 144 fans permalink

I think what is going on is that they are getting Chinook Winds. Winds that warm as the come down in elevation from the Continental Divide.

And that along with dry conditions have resulted in the fires. I would guess that given enough wind anything could burn.

But it is hard to believe that is happening while we have that much snow on the ground and nightime temperatures near zero.

But i guess that is why I live in the mountains and not on the Plains.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:36 PM on 01/08/2009
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i thought they had record snow? boulder is a great town!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:54 AM on 01/08/2009
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Record snow in the mountains, yeah. The winds are are warm, Chinook, snow eater winds. great for startins and spreading fires this time of year. Boulder is the windiest town you can imagine. They test wind turbines there.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:03 PM on 01/08/2009
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It has burned right to the northern edge of Boulder and threatened many mountain homes and many more east on the plains. The firefighters have done a spectacular job of preventing loss of personal property. Some of the videos that have been shown on local news show how close many came to losing their homes. Thank you, firefighters, for your selfless dedication and for doing a great job on this fire!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:54 AM on 01/08/2009
- SworldPeas I'm a Fan of SworldPeas 5 fans permalink

It's got GLOBAL WARMING written all over it!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:42 AM on 01/08/2009
- imok I'm a Fan of imok permalink

in the meantime, copies of inconvenient truth are now being burned for warmth in most of the northern hemisphere.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:55 PM on 01/08/2009
- shockmagog I'm a Fan of shockmagog 139 fans permalink
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Extreme manifestations of local weather seem to be one of the things marking this phase of Global Warming.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:13 PM on 01/08/2009
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