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Texas Wildfires Destroy More Than 1,000 Homes

Texas Wildfires

JIM VERTUNO and MICHAEL GRACZYK   09/ 6/11 09:55 PM ET   AP

BASTROP, Texas — One of the most devastating wildfire outbreaks in Texas history left more than 1,000 homes in ruins Tuesday and stretched the state's firefighting ranks to the limit, confronting Gov. Rick Perry with a major disaster at home just as the GOP presidential contest heats up.

More than 180 fires have erupted in the past week across the rain-starved Lone Star State, and nearly 600 of the homes destroyed since then were lost in one catastrophic blaze in and around Bastrop, near Austin, that raged out of control Tuesday for a third day.

Whipped into an inferno by Tropical Storm Lee's winds over the weekend, the blaze burned more than 45 square miles, forced the evacuation of thousands and killed at least two people, bringing the overall death toll from the outbreak to at least four.

"We lost everything," said Willie Clements, whose two-story colonial home in a housing development near Bastrop was reduced to a heap of metal roofing and ash. A picket fence was melted. Some goats and turkeys survived, but about 20 chickens and ducks were burned to death in a coop that went up in flames.

On Tuesday, Clements and his family took a picture of themselves in front of a windmill adorned with a charred red, white and blue sign that proclaimed, "United We Stand."

"This is the beginning of our new family album," the 51-year-old Clements said.

Perry cut short a presidential campaign trip to South Carolina to deal with the crisis. On Tuesday, he toured a blackened area near Bastrop, about 25 miles from Austin, and later deployed the state's elite search team to the area to look for more possible victims. Texas Task Force 1 is the same outfit sent to New York following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and to New Orleans in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

"Pretty powerful visuals of individuals who lost everything," Perry said after the tour. "The magnitude of these losses are pretty stunning."

The governor would not say whether he would take part in Wednesday evening's Republican presidential debate in California, explaining that he was "substantially more concerned about making sure Texans are being taken care of." But campaign spokesman Mark Miner said in an email later in the day that Perry planned to be there.

Perry, a tea-party favorite who has made a career out of railing against government spending, said he expects federal assistance with the wildfires, and he complained that red tape was keeping bulldozers and other heavy equipment at the Army's Fort Hood, 75 miles from Bastrop, from being putting to use. Fort Hood was battling its own fire, a 3,700-acre blaze.

"It's more difficult than it should be to get those types of assets freed up by the federal government," Perry said. "When you've got people hurting, when you've got lives that are in danger in particular, I really don't care who the asset belongs to. If it's sitting in some yard somewhere and not helping be part of the solution, that's a problem."

White House spokesman Jay Carney said the Obama administration has approved seven federal grants to Texas to help with the latest outbreak, and "we will continue to work closely with the state and local emergency management officials as their efforts to contain these fires."

About 1,200 firefighters battled the blazes, including members of local departments from around the state and crews from such places as Utah, California, Arizona and Oregon, many of them arriving after Texas put out a call for help. More firefighters will join the battle once they have been registered and sent where they are needed.

Five heavy tanker planes, some from the federal government, and three aircraft capable of scooping 1,500 gallons of water at a time from lakes also took part in the fight.

"We're getting incredible support from all over the country, federal and state agencies," said Mark Stanford, operations director for the Texas Forest Service.

The disaster is blamed largely on Texas' yearlong drought, one of the most severe dry spells the state has ever seen.

The fire in Bastrop County is easily the single most devastating wildfire in Texas in more than a decade, eclipsing a blaze that destroyed 168 homes in North Texas in April. Texas Forest Service spokeswoman April Saginor said state wildfire records go back only to the late 1990s.

At least 11 other fires exceeded 1,000 acres Tuesday, including an 8,000-acre blaze in Caldwell County, next to Bastrop County. At least six homes were lost in a fire 40 percent contained. In far Northeast Texas' Cass County, a 7,000-acre fire burned in heavy timberland. And in Grimes County, about 40 miles northwest of Houston, a 3,000-acre fire destroyed nearly two dozen homes and threatened hundreds more.

Many of the buildings destroyed in the Bastrop fire were modest, single-story homes in housing developments. Others were expensive ranch homes, set off by themselves.

In at least one neighborhood in Bastrop, flames hop-scotched a street where houses were tucked among oaks, pines and cedar trees. Some homes survived; others were gone.

The Postal Service delivered mail to homes that had burned to the ground; only the mailboxes were left stand.

Residents were surprised by how quickly the blaze engulfed their neighborhoods.

"We were watching TV and my brother-in-law said to come and see this," said Dave Wilhelm, who lives just east of Bastrop. "All I saw was a fireball and some smoke. All of a sudden: Boom! We looked up and left."

Wilhelm returned on Tuesday to find his neighbor's house and three vehicles gone. Some of his children's backyard toys were destroyed, but the Wilhelm house was spared.

"Some stuff is smoldering on the lot behind us," he said. "Inside of the house, we smell like a campfire. We're definitely very lucky."

John Chapman's home on about 20 acres was only singed and had some smoke damage, but the vintage-car collector lost about 175 vehicles he kept in a garage or under pole barns. His losses included about a dozen Corvettes and a Shelby Cobra.

As ashes swirled and tree stumps still spit flames, the 70-year-old Chapman pointed out the melted remains of a 1966 Pontiac GTO, a '57 Chevrolet pickup and a 1947 Studebaker pickup, and said: "You can either laugh or you can cry. You might as well laugh."

"The house is safe, my wife and I are alive and good, and I'm not going to worry about it," he said.

For Perry, the crisis carries both opportunity and risk, said Todd Harris, a Republican consultant who has worked on a number of presidential campaigns.

"It gives Perry an opportunity to demonstrate leadership, to demonstrate decisiveness and at the same time empathy and caring, which are four qualities that most voters look for in a president," Harris said.

But he added: "You can't do anything that looks sounds, or smells even remotely political. If it looks like you are taking advantage of a disaster and trying to use it for political purposes, it will backfire and you'll be worse off than if you hadn't done anything."

About 40 people who fled their homes were staying at a community center in the town of Paige. A volunteer, Debbie Barrington, said some people have been sleeping outside on picnic tables under a pavilion, eating food and using toiletries donated by folks not hurt by the fires.

"The first night, we had a child 17 months old," she said. "We didn't have milk. The next morning, I think we had eight gallons. People heard what we needed and brought it in. The response has been unreal."

___

Also contributing to this story were AP reporters Jamie Stengle, Danny Robbins and Schuyler Dixon in Dallas, Betsy Blaney in Lubbock, Will Weissert in Austin and AP Photographer Eric Gay in Bastrop. Michael Graczyk reported from Houston.

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BASTROP, Texas — One of the most devastating wildfire outbreaks in Texas history left more than 1,000 homes in ruins Tuesday and stretched the state's firefighting ranks to the limit, confrontin...
BASTROP, Texas — One of the most devastating wildfire outbreaks in Texas history left more than 1,000 homes in ruins Tuesday and stretched the state's firefighting ranks to the limit, confrontin...
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08:52 AM on 09/08/2011
To all the armchair metereologists and climatologists who have done their own "research" and decided that the current Texas drought is EXACTLY like the Dust Bowl...

I'd encourage you to stop googling up random facts taken out of context, and instead read a book. Read a whole book. Read a really great book.

It's called "The Worst Hard Time: The Untold Story of Those Who Survived the Great American Dust Bowl," and it's almost certainly available from your public library.

Read that book and you'll realize that NO... the Texas drought has absolutely nothing in common with the Dust Bowl. Sure, absolutely, it's Texas's worst drought in history. It's still absolutely nothing compared to the Dust Bowl.

And that to even suggest otherwise simply proves one has no freakin' clue what the Dust Bowl was, what caused it, or what happened to people during it.
10:38 PM on 09/07/2011
Not the longest drought in state history. Perhaps the most severe by rainfall standards, but not the longest... Get y
06:11 PM on 09/07/2011
Please visit http://txfiremap.com/ and help out! You can view wildfires, update information, add evacuation shelters, and donate to the Red Cross of Central Texas.
02:08 PM on 09/07/2011
GOVERNOR PERRY:
GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE........... ANY QUESTIONS?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
garymc8
We got OBL- not gop
01:08 PM on 09/07/2011
Good thing housing land and labor are Dirt Cheap
12:56 PM on 09/07/2011
There's no aid money left to help Texas or the East Coast. It's all been sent to countries who hate us.
12:25 PM on 09/07/2011
Perry is a typical politician. Talks out of both sides of his mouth! That's really typical of the repubs in their state denial. On on side he doesn't want government help for victims of disasters, on the other hand he wants it to relieve the agony of frustration of people who've lost everything. Hypocriscy is alive an well in the t-party repub-radicals that real Americans can see through all the rhetoric! He'd do well staying in Texas and continue pander to the flocks!!
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mzkitti
6/3/1927
12:15 PM on 09/07/2011
Firefighte­rs come from all across the country to help distinguis­h these fires as they have repeatedly done in california­. The unpopular cuts that Texas had to make were necessary to balance their budget which they have done effectivel­y without the stimulus money. Not only do they have one of the lowest unemployme­nt rates in the country, they also have created more jobs than any other state. Texas is fiscally better off and didn't have to spend taxpayers money to do it. Its really sad how liberals take a natural disaster and turn into an opportunit­y to spew their hatred for republican­s, they have been doing it for so long now its part of the democratic platform.


********** balance the State budget WITHOUT ANY STIMULUS MONEY? YOUR FACTS ARE CERTAINLY SCREWED UP!
11:22 AM on 09/07/2011
First off Thank You to everyone for thoughts and prayers. Now for the rest of you, yes Perry has cut budgets but that hasn't stopped the countless numbers of firefighters from working their butts off trying to put out our numerous fires. These men and women (many of them on their own time and dime) are working hard to save people who they might not even know. Another thing for those who say we "deserve" this NO ONE EVER DESERVES SOMETHING LIKE THIS TO HAPPEN. One thing I can definately say is that people here step up to help others in need. We are currently in the worst drought in over 60 yrs many areas look like Fall season because the trees are wilted and brown. Yes "government" help would be nice since we are part of the US
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tj101
Hata ukinichukia la kweli nitakwambia
07:25 PM on 09/07/2011
Oh, please!

My Oregonian friends are risking THEIR lives becuase YOUR gov cut the funding to firefighters by 75%, From 30 million to 7 million.

What did Perry expect would happen?

I empathize with the citizens, but Perry needs to be held accountable for his choices.
08:22 PM on 09/07/2011
Perry didn't start the fires and they really have nothing to do with politics just people losing everything they own. I am soo tired of hearing how disasters worldwide are political issues.
10:17 AM on 09/07/2011
My heart goes out to all these people who have lost their homes in the fires. I can't even imagine how painful and devastating it must be to lose everything you own. Photo albums, precious heirlooms, memories, etc. It is probably difficult to have a positive attitude after going through something so traumatic, but I'm glad most people made it through unharmed. You can buy new things and create new memories, but loved ones cannot be brought back. Sorry to those who were not as lucky and lost friends or family.
10:05 AM on 09/07/2011
Good job Perry! Let's cut the fire budget from 30 million to 7 million then cry to Obama you need federal money!!!
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MANOFCOMMONSENSE
Bush Mission Accomplished? I Screwed up our Countr
09:57 AM on 09/07/2011
No wonder Rick Perry wants to move to Washington?? His State has been burning since December?? If he gets elected it will be just in time!! He has my vote!!
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09:54 AM on 09/07/2011
Maybe I just missed it. Were there a lot of politicians and phony religious leaders saying this is god's wrath and a message for the people who live there?
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MANOFCOMMONSENSE
Bush Mission Accomplished? I Screwed up our Countr
09:54 AM on 09/07/2011
A dumb Republican had to write this article??...........................................................................................................................................Now, Perry — whose job includes coordinating his state's wildfire response — has the chance to try to boost his image and set himself apart from his GOP presidential rivals by showing off his leadership and management skills as Republicans nationwide weigh whether he has what it takes to be president. Not one of his opponents is a sitting governor..................................................................................................................................OK and now this??...................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Fires have blackened 3.5 million acres, an area roughly the size of Connecticut, across the state since December.
09:51 AM on 09/07/2011
Welcome to the liberal bull$hit post
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tj101
Hata ukinichukia la kweli nitakwambia
07:27 PM on 09/07/2011
LOL....if there are any falsehoods, you are free to point them out, zippy.