IE 11 Not Supported

For optimal browsing, we recommend Chrome, Firefox or Safari browsers.

Evacuations Canceled for Slowing Anchorage Wildfire

The 25-acre fire was 30% contained as of 10 p.m. Tuesday. The cause of the fire was unknown, and the fire department was unable to confirm whether anyone had been living in the woods where it started.

Smoke rises from a wildfire in east Anchorage, Alaska
In this photo taken Tuesday, July 2, 2019, and provided by the Alaska Division of Forestry, smoke rises from a wildfire in east Anchorage, Alaska. A fast-moving brush fire caused the temporary evacuations of a trailer home park and a science center in east Anchorage on Tuesday afternoon. Smoke from the fire raised a plume over Alaska's largest city that could be seen for miles.
Jason Jordet/Alaska Division of Forestry via AP
(TNS) — A wildfire spread quickly Tuesday afternoon in East Anchorage, prompting evacuations from nearby homes and workplaces and firefighting responses from multiple agencies.

No one was injured and no structures had been damaged as of 10 p.m. Tuesday, according to Anchorage Fire Chief Jodie Hettrick, and evacuation orders were canceled within an hour.

Police said the fire — which started in the Campbell Park area near Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue and Elmore Road around 4:30 p.m. — spread rapidly west, toward East 46th Avenue and Piper Street.

The 25-acre fire was 30% contained as of 10 p.m. Tuesday, according to Stephanie Bishop with the Alaska Division of Forestry. The fire was incorrectly reported earlier to be 80% contained; rather, crews “were able to get retardant around 80% of the fire."

“It will take us a while to mop up,” said Hettrick, who expected to have crews in the area for at least another two days.

Hettrick said the cause of the fire was unknown, and the fire department was unable to confirm whether anyone had been living in the woods where it started.

Officials, however, remained positive about overnight firefighting efforts. “We are very optimistic that we can keep this in containment this evening,” Bishop said, thanks to contributions from emergency responders from Alaska and beyond.

Eastbound traffic was snarled Tuesday evening in several of the city’s main arterial roads in Midtown Anchorage, but all roads had reopened by 9 p.m. Tuesday. Police said Campbell Creek trailheads at Folker Street, Grumman Street, MLK and Lake Otis Parkway were closed, and urged trail users to avoid Campbell Creek Trail east of Lake Otis Parkway and Far North Bicentennial Park.

Hettrick warned of extreme fire danger, saying the fire department had responded to three fires at different locations Tuesday afternoon. Under a citywide burn ban put in place last week, the only outdoor fires allowed in the municipality are barbecue grills and pellet grills.

The fire, which was burning in black spruce, was down to about 3 acres of active fire, Hettrick said around 8 p.m. Firefighters reported 60-foot flames, Beth Ipsen with the Alaska Fire Service said.

The closest the fire got to homes was a half-mile, Hettrick said. Police urged residents not to enter the fire zone because it was not safe.

Hettrick said the fire was first reported by an Anchorage Police Department officer, and the officer’s early reporting “gave us the opportunity to get here quickly and extinguish this fire.”

Evacuations had been in place for Manoog’s Isle mobile home park, Campbell Creek Science Center and surrounding areas, and the area around East 50th Avenue and Folker Street. Those who evacuated and went to Wendler Middle School have returned home, municipal manager Bill Falsey said. The school is no longer being used as an evacuation center, but people were urged to call 907-343-4701 if they were unable to get home, Falsey said.

Earlier in the evening at Manoog’s Isle mobile home court, when evacuations were still underway, some people were packing while others were standing by their cars, watching as planes dropped fire retardant and a huge plume of smoke rose nearby.

Pao Thao, 26, was evacuating Manoog’s Isle with his wife and three children. He said he first took a nap after work, not worried about the fire, and then his family woke him up, screaming, “We have to go!”

Seanna Jensen, 29, has lived in Manoog’s Isle for the last decade. “It was so terrifying at first,” she said. “All of our main stuff was packed.”

But Jensen didn’t leave.

“I’m not going to leave my home until it reaches the trailer court line,” she said.

Michael Malone, 59, has lived in Manoog Trailer Park for a couple years and has been in Alaska his whole life.

He said he’d evacuate, but he doesn’t see a threat. “Got a lot of swamp before it gets to us."

“It’s Anchorage," Malone said while watching a helicopter deliver buckets of water to the fire. "They’re going to throw everything they got at it.”

———

©2019 the Alaska Dispatch News (Anchorage, Alaska)

Visit the Alaska Dispatch News (Anchorage, Alaska) at www.adn.com

Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Sign up for GovTech Today

Delivered daily to your inbox to stay on top of the latest state & local government technology trends.