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Fairbanks neighborhood gets evacuation order, others standby

Thunderstorms Thursday night hit the ridge above Gilmore Trail neighborhoods, triggering a wildfire evacuation order.
Thunderstorms Thursday night hit the ridge above Gilmore Trail neighborhoods, triggering a wildfire evacuation order.

The first evacuation orders and standy alerts in the "Ready, Set, Go" system were issued to woodsy neighborhoods northeast and west of Fairbanks.

Thunderstorms Thursday afternoon started a dozen new fires in the Interior, including a wildfire in the Gilmore Trail neighborhood northeast of Fairbanks that triggered an evacuation. The Fairbanks North Star Borough Notification system issued other evacuation preparation warnings during the night.

Some fires, like the Lake George Fire east of Delta Junction, were small -- less than an acre, and smoldered and crept through spruce and hardwoods, and far from structures. Others were larger like The Twelvemile Lake Fire, also east of Delta, which got to 100 acres last (Thursday) night -- burning in black spruce and brush.

But it is the biggest ones that are pulling on the resources of the federal Alaska Fire Service and the state Alaska Division of Forestry. Sam Harrell, Information Officer for Forestry, says now the equipment and people are being prioritized to protect life and property among the emerging incidents.

“Every fire wants every resource you have, but we only have so many airplanes, so many firefighters, and so much ground to move everything around.”

For example, the Gilmore Creek Trail on the northeast side of Fairbanks received a lot of resources.

“The Gilmore Trail was a very important fire, um, because of the, because of the proximity to all the folks that live, um, on that hillside up there and the potential for fire to move quickly in that area.”

Harrell said that’s why evacuation orders are carefully calculated, and people in harm’s way are given as much warning as possible, in case firefighting equipment can’t get there fast enough.

“Everybody needs and wants to be protected, but it's a scale in numbers and it's, it's very challenging.”

Still burning today are the Bear Creek Fire near Healy, which started near the Parks Highway at mile 262. Dog teams, multiple cabins and structures were within 3 miles of the fire last night, so water scoopers and air tankers were ordered, and a fire crew from Anderson went to the scene.

Farther up the Parks is a larger fire on the hillside near the Bonanza Creek area at MilePost 332. Last night it was 350 acres and burning in continuous black spruce and hardwoods. The nearby Skinny Dicks Lodge is being used for equipment staging. That could mean travelers coming to Fairbanks for solstice weekend should watch for emergency vehicles, fire crews and heavy equipment in the area.

Robyne began her career in public media news at KUAC, coiling cables in the TV studio and loading reel-to-reel tape machines for the radio station.