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Colorado wildfires: 3 fires near Meeker consume nearly 5,000 acres, destroy 3 buildings

Lauren Penington, The Denver Post on

Published in News & Features

DENVER — A 3,000-acre wildfire burning on Colorado’s Western Slope had destroyed three buildings as of Monday morning, fire officials said.

The lightning-sparked Elk fire started southeast of Meeker in Rio Blanco County just after noon Saturday and grew to roughly 600 acres by Sunday afternoon.

The fire more than quadrupled in size throughout the evening, jumping a county road and consuming 3,000 acres with no containment by Monday morning, according to the Bureau of Land Management in Colorado.

Sheriff’s officials said two houses and one outbuilding were lost in the fire.

Meeker is about 70 miles northwest of Glenwood Springs and 40 miles north of Interstate 70.

The Elk fire also jumped parts of White River, and those areas are firefighters’ top priority, according to the Rio Blanco County Sheriff’s Office.

Evacuation orders remain in effect Monday for both sides of County Road 8 between mile marker 11 and mile marker 16. The road is also closed to the public between mile markers 11 and 18.

Pre-evacuation notices are active for residents along County Road 57, which includes Miller Creek; County Road 22; and County Road 8 from mile marker 8 to mile marker 15, according to the sheriff’s office.

Residents in those areas should be prepared to evacuate “at a moment’s notice,” sheriff’s officials said.

Evacuees should report to the Fairfield Center at 200 Main Street in Meeker, sheriff’s officials said.

The fire is burning on a combination of private, Bureau of Land Management and Colorado Division of Wildland land, according to the sheriff’s office.

Ground crews and aerial teams are both working to fight the fire, though the exact number of people out in the field was not available Monday.

“The fire remained active throughout the night; however, it did not experience any significant growth or make any notable runs,” sheriff’s officials said in a Monday morning update.

But sheriff’s officials said increased fire activity is expected Monday afternoon.

Hot, dry and windy conditions in the afternoon and evening could exacerbate the fire’s growth, according to a red flag warning issued by the National Weather Service.

 

Monday’s warning will be active from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., according to the weather service. Another red flag warning will be active Tuesday from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.

“Any fire that develops will catch and spread quickly,” weather service forecasters stated in the warning.

Another wildfire that sparked Sunday afternoon grew to 1,000 acres overnight with no containment, according to BLM officials.

The Grease fire is burning about 12 miles west of Meeker in the upper end of Rio Blanco County. As of Monday morning, the fire had spread to state-managed and BLM-managed lands, officials said.

A third fire, the 700-acre Lee fire, is burning about 20 miles southwest of Meeker on BLM land with no containment, according to the agency.

The BLM did not note any evacuations associated with the Grease or Lee fires.

Colorado Gov. Jared Polis verbally issued a disaster declaration for the wildfire on Sunday, allowing the state to direct more resources to fighting the Elk fire.

Smoke from multiple wildfires burning Monday in Rio Blanco and Garfield counties caused state health officials to issue a smoke-based air quality advisory.

The advisory will be active from 9 a.m. Monday to at least 9 a.m. Tuesday, according to the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment.

Smoke may cause poor air quality in parts of Rio Blanco, Garfield, Eagle and Routt counties, officials said in the advisory. That includes Meeker, Glenwood Springs, Carbondale, El Jebel, Basalt, Eagle, Vail and Steamboat Springs.

If an area has less than five miles of visibility, the smoke has reached unhealthy levels and people should remain indoors, officials said.

Children, older adults and people with heart disease or respiratory illnesses are all more sensitive to poor air quality, according to the department.

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