Wildfires burn across Colorado, Utah; force more than 10,000 from homes

Story highlights

11,000 people are evacuated in latest Colorado wildfire

FEMA authorizes federal funds to fight the Waldo Canyon Fire

Six other wildfires are actively burning across the state

Tens of thousands of acres are going up in flames

CNN  — 

Hot, dry and windy conditions – which have fueled rampaging wildfires across Colorado and forced more than 10,000 people from their homes – will continue to plague the region through at least midweek.

Red flag warnings are in effect across portions of 10 states, meaning “a combination of strong winds, low relative humidity and warm temperatures will create explosive fire growth potential.”

The developments are unwelcome news for firefighters who are battling tens of thousands of acres of wildfires in Colorado and neighboring Utah.

The infernos prompted the evacuations of some 11,000 people in and around Colorado Springs on Sunday after the 3,600-acre Waldo Canyon Fire began there a day earlier. The Waldo Canyon Fire was 0% contained late Sunday. More than 13,000 residences are being threatened, although no structures have been lost and no injuries have been reported, authorities said.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) authorized the use of federal funds to help fight the Waldo Canyon Fire after Colorado Springs and surrounding El Paso County declared an emergency, which allows them to receive state and federal aid.

“This is obviously beyond the resources of any one agency,” Colorado Springs Mayor Steve Bach said. “This declaration is the next step needed for an incident of this size.”

More than 70 firefighters were holding the line west of Colorado Springs, said Sunny Smaldino, spokeswoman for the city’s fire department. Forestry officials have 450 personnel committed to the blaze.

Six other wildfires were active in the state, according to the Colorado Division of Emergency Management.

Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper, who traveled to the Waldo Canyon Fire on Sunday, said 70 helicopters and tankers were in the air over Colorado to help crews battle the flames.

“Almost half the airborne fire suppression in the country is in Colorado,” the governor said. “We recognize this is going to take a big push.”

The largest of the fires was the High Park Fire, which began June 9 and has now consumed 83,205 acres, the U.S. Forest Service said. It was 45% contained Sunday.

About 2,000 fire personnel were fighting the wildfire, located in the Arapaho and Roosevelt National Forests, and more were expected later, emergency management spokeswoman Micki Trost said.

She said the High Park Fire has destroyed 191 homes, though officials expect that number to go up once crews are able to go in and assess the damage.

More than $29 million has been spent fighting the blaze, the Forest Service said.

Gene Ellisberg was shooting pictures in the nearby Rocky Mountain National Park when he saw “a giant, enormous smoke cloud” about 30 to 50 miles away, he told CNN.

Ellisberg lives in the flatlands near Denver, but said, “I’m close enough to the fire that when the wind blows, it makes the air quality horrible.”

The other major fire was the 21,616-acre Little Sand Fire, burning on rugged, inaccessible terrain in the San Juan National Forest in southern Colorado. It was 31% contained Sunday.

Though smaller than the other wildfires, the Waldo Canyon Fire was of big concern because of its aggressive behavior, officials said.

“I don’t think there’s been anything more devastating than that fire right there,” El Paso County Sheriff Terry Maketa said, adding the fire has been spreading in two or three different directions.

“This is the greatest natural threat that we’ve seen in this community in the last 30 or 40 years,” Maketa said.

Kimberly Shumard, 47, who lives 20 miles from the fire, said the air can be thick and full of ash. She said she woke up to burned leaves in her yard Sunday and can hear fire-fighting planes and helicopters overhead.

“This is the scariest thing I’ve seen, because it’s so unpredictable,” Shumard told CNN.

She described the smell as “stronger than a campfire.” She said her dog, a Shepherd-Lab mix named Pasha, is keeping a close eye on where she and her husband are at all times and staying close by.

Also Sunday, FEMA authorized federal funds to help fight the Weber Fire in southwest Colorado, which stood at 6,808 acres Sunday and 0% containment.

“Weather conditions are ripe for the fires,” Trost said. Temperatures have been above 100 degrees Fahrenheit in the past two days and humidity has been low, she said.

For firefighters, that means a danger of overheating and a need to keep them hydrated.

The fires are prompting a long list of ever-changing road closures. County and state officials and charities such as the Red Cross and Humane Society are using Twitter and other social media to keep residents updated.

The use of Twitter is beneficial to emergency management officials as well, she said, because it allows residents to share photographs and details of what they’re seeing.

Trost encouraged residents to heed evacuation warnings as soon as they’re issued.

“When you receive that call to evacuate, (make sure) that you are ready to go and that you get out of the area as quickly as possible for your safety and so the fire crews can get into the area,” Trost said.

In neighboring Utah, where the weather was also hot, dry and windy, at least two wildfires were burning Sunday. FEMA is providing funds to help fight the Wood Hollow Fire, which grew to 10,000 acres since starting Saturday afternoon, the Sanpete County Sheriff’s Office said Sunday.

There were evacuation orders in place for parts of the county, about 50 miles south of Salt Lake City. The sheriff’s office could not say how much of the fire was contained.

West of Provo, the Dump Fire had grown to more than 6,000 acres and was 40% contained, officials said.

CNN’s Ed Payne contributed to this report