New Mexico
Cooler New Mexico weather aids big wildfire fight — for now
MORA, N.M. (AP) — Practically 3,000 firefighters in New Mexico saved the nation’s largest lively wildfire from rising on Monday as they took benefit of cooler climate earlier than the return of extra harmful circumstances later within the week.
“General, day,” fireplace operations chief Alex McBath mentioned Monday night time. “Every thing stayed inside the fireplace strains.”
Firefighters additionally expanded contingency firebreaks northeast of Santa Fe as forecasters warned that hotter, windier climate will return by Friday.
“Simply because we’ve had just a few good days of climate … it doesn’t imply we’re out of the woods but,” San Miguel County Sheriff Chris Lopez mentioned Monday night time.
The blaze that began almost seven weeks in the past within the Rocky Mountains foothills southeast of Santa Fe remained simply 40% contained Monday. It began as two fires and burned into one massive conflagration now bigger than the town of Los Angeles.
Flames have consumed greater than 484 sq. miles (1,253 sq. kilometers) of timber, grassland and brush and evacuations have been in place for weeks.
Nevertheless, evacuation orders have been relaxed in lots of areas and stretches of freeway reopened south of Taos.
Together with cooler temperatures, fireplace crews have been helped over the weekend by water-dropping helicopters and plane. Rising humidity was anticipated to assist add moisture to the bone-dry fuels on forest flooring for just a few extra days, forecasters mentioned.
Nevertheless, “by Friday we’re again to the identical outdated important fireplace climate that we now have been experiencing for a lot of, many days,” mentioned Stewart Turner, a fireplace habits analyst for the U.S. Forest Service.
Additionally on Monday, the U.S. Forest Service launched a survey of vegetation and soil harm throughout 118 sq. miles ( 465 sq. kilometer) of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains that burned in current weeks, together with private and non-private land.
About one-fifth of the realm skilled high-severity burning that may result in heavy and even harmful erosion. Bushes in these areas will take a few years to recuperate with out planting.
The fireplace is amongst 5 lively massive fires within the state and amongst 14 nationally, in keeping with the Nationwide Interagency Hearth Heart.
The New Mexico fireplace accounts for almost 60% of the 536 sq. miles (1,388 sq. kilometers) consumed by wildfires within the U.S. thus far this 12 months.
Wildfires have damaged out this spring in a number of states within the western U.S., the place local weather change and an everlasting drought are fanning the frequency and depth of forest and grassland fires. The variety of sq. miles burned thus far this 12 months is much above the 10-year nationwide common.
Hearth crews continued to make progress towards cordoning off a wildfire on the outskirts of a U.S. nationwide safety analysis station at Los Alamos, New Mexico.
That fireside within the wooded Jemez Mountains was 85% encircled by clearings and limitations that may cease a wildfire from spreading additional, U.S. authorities mentioned.
Bandelier Nationwide Monument introduced plans to partially reopen its reserve for ancestral Native American settlements and tradition to the general public Friday after a weekslong closure. Campgrounds, backcountry areas and a few trails will stay off-limits.
In southwestern New Mexico, a fireplace that’s burning by way of parts of the Gila Nationwide Forest triggered new evacuations on Sunday in rural areas, as emergency crews labored to guard houses and outbuildings from advancing flames. That fireside has burned throughout 230 sq. miles (595 sq. kilometers) of forest and scrubland and continues to develop.
New Mexico
Lawsuit filed over paid time off for New Mexico judicial employees
NEW MEXICO (KRQE) – The New Mexico court system is suing the state over what it claims is interference with how it pays its own employees. The Administrative Office of the Courts said the state is illegally meddling in the way judicial employees are paid for time off, enforcing restrictions on when workers can use leave, and not allowing it to roll over year after year.
New Mexico Game and Fish Department offering free beginner fishing class
They said the courts should be able to make those decisions. “We think we tried hard to talk this through with DFA and work through our concerns and their’s. But unfortunately, that didn’t work and it didn’t leave us other options,” said Director Karl Reifsteck, Adminsitrative Office of the Courts.
The Department of Finance and Administration said AOC’s policy is illegal and that it is the state’s job to oversee that spending.
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New Mexico
Governor Lujan Grisham travels to Mexico City – Office of the Governor – Michelle Lujan Grisham
SANTA FE – Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham is traveling to Mexico City, Mexico, to participate in a Clean Energy and Energy Security Collaboration Roundtable and a reception with U.S. Ambassador to Mexico, Ken Salazar, on September 30.
The governor will also attend the inauguration of Her Excellency Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo on October 1 in Mexico City.
She will be accompanied by Chief of Staff Daniel Schlegel, Deputy Chief of Operations Caroline Buerkle, Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department Secretary Designate Melanie Kenderdine, and Economic Development Department Secretary Designate Rob Black.
The state is covering the cost for the delegation’s travel.
Gov. Lujan Grisham will return to New Mexico on October 2. In her absence, Lt. Gov. Howie Morales will serve as acting governor.
New Mexico
Ruidoso fire and flooding victims frustrated with FEMA
It’s been over three months since the South Fork and Salt Fires devastated Ruidoso and the surrounding areas, causing more than $29 million in damage, and victims are frustrated with the federal government’s response.
RUIDOSO, N.M. – It’s been over three months since the South Fork and Salt Fires devastated Ruidoso area, causing more than $29 million in damage.
Since then, the community has also faced flood after flood. Luckily, they’ve gotten a break from Mother Nature, but they’re still picking up the pieces.
KOB 4 spoke to FEMA officials about how they’ve helped some fire and flooding victims. But there are residents who say they’ve been having trouble getting that help.
“It has been a nightmare. I’m telling you because I’ve gone over there like 21 times, and they haven’t responded,” said Priscilla Aguilar, a wildfire evacuee.
Aguilar and Abel Montelongo are trying to get their money back. They had to leave Ruidoso Downs because of the South Fork and Salt Fires.
According to Montelongo, FEMA was supposed to help with those costs. However, after trying to track them down several times, he never got his money back. He did get $291 in food stamps/EBT money.
But it was flooding, not the fires, that impacted Aguilar and Montelongo’s home.
“Since the rain and the water is coming into the yard and getting under the house, it’s going to ruin all the piping,” Aguilar said.
Aguilar says they didn’t get the sandbags that officials promised them. At this point, they just want answers.
“At least they should have sent us a letter saying, ‘We’re not going to help you.’ Because that’s a promise that they made, not just to us, but to the whole community,” Aguilar said.
They applied for flooding insurance after FEMA mentioned an exception with the National Flooding Insurance Program might expedite the process.
“Normally, when you buy a brand-new flood insurance policy, there is a 30-day waiting period,” said Roberto Ramirez, a director of FEMA’s hazard mitigation branch. “If you are in a post-wildfire situation, like we are in Ruidoso, those 30 days can change to one day.”
There are different qualifications. For example:
- If the fire happened on federal land
- If you bought a flooding insurance policy within 60 days of the fire being fully contained
- If the flooding results from, or was made worse by, a wildfire
“We’re still within at least those 60 days from fire containment,” Ramirez said.
According to ArcGIS data, both fires were 100% contained Aug. 26. That means you have until Oct. 25 to apply.
“In Lincoln County, there’s only 252 policies. That’s the entire county. There’s a lot of people that don’t have flood insurance. Right now, we only had 73 claims since the disaster was declared,” Ramirez said.
We reached out to FEMA on behalf of Aguilar and Montelongo. However, FEMA told us that they can’t discuss individual cases due to privacy.
KOB 4 was told that once someone receives a letter of denial, they can appeal it. Denials can also happen for a number of reasons.
FEMA sent KOB 4 the following statement:
“They have 60 days from the date that appears in the Determination Letter. That letter is not the last word.
When someone applies with FEMA, we send an Inspector to verify losses and damages, ownership of property or rental contract and identity of the person. If the applicant don’t keep the appointment the system generates a Letter.
Many times survivors don’t present sufficient evidence and FEMA ask for more documentation such as hotel receipts with letterhead, and the dates have to match with the evacuation dates, food receipts, contractors estimates are verified. Every case is unique.”
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