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Evacuations ordered in New Mexico village due to fast-moving wildfire


Residents in the New Mexico village of Ruidoso were told to immediately flee Monday due to a wildfire that was discovered west of town and has grown to more than 1,300 acres, officials said.

“Immediate mandatory ‘go’ evacuation for the Village of Ruidoso — go now!!” the village government said on its Facebook page in all capital letters shortly before 7 p.m.

The Salt Fork Fire was discovered at around 9 a.m. Monday on the Mescalero Reservation west of the village of more than 7,000, the New Mexico Forestry Division said.

It had grown to 1,385 acres, according to the village’s incident information website, and multiple evacuation orders have been given. By 7:30 p.m. that site said the fire was “an active fire and moving fast.”

No deaths appear to have been reported as of Monday night. The number of structures lost was listed as unknown on government incident websites, but multiple structures were threatened.

“Please do not try to gather belongings or protect your home — GO NOW,” the village warned.

Hot ash from the fire was falling in Alto, a community north of Ruidoso, Ruidoso’s government said. A portion of U.S. Highway 70 near the reservation was closed, it said.

The reservation said on its website that the Mescalero conservation was going door-to-door to tell people in affected areas to leave immediately, and there were fire and vehicle restrictions and closures put in place.

The Mescalero Apache Tribe said it was opening an evacuation center at Inn of the Mountain Gods Convention Center, and said all non-essential tribal employees were being encouraged to volunteer Tuesday. It also offered to house livestock at a rodeo center.

Electricity provider PNM de-energized part of Ruidoso at the request of first responders, the town said.

Ruidoso, Alto and the reservation are in the Sierra Blanca mountain range, around 130 miles southeast of Albuquerque.

The blaze broke out as much of the American Southwest, including parts of New Mexico, were under “red flag” warnings because of the risk of fires due to very dry air and winds.

In Calaveras County, California, east of Stockton, a wildfire that has burned around 1,500 acres also forced emergency evacuations Monday.

Around 5,000 people were without power due to the fire. Aerial video showed planes dumping pink fire retardant ahead of the blaze, and a wall of thick smoke.

The so-called Aero Fire started near Aero Road and Hunt Road in Copperopolis at around 3:20 p.m., according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, known as Cal Fire.

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