Thousands refuse to evacuate largest U.S. wildfire in New Mexico
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[May 06, 2022] By
Andrew Hay
TAOS, N.M. (Reuters) - Thousands of people
told to flee the largest wildfire burning in the United States have
chosen to stay and defend generational homes in the mountains of
northern New Mexico, even as some run out of food and water, officials
said.
In Mora County, population 4,500, around 60% of residents in evacuation
areas have remained in centuries-old farming and ranching communities
where electric power has been lost, said Undersheriff Americk Padilla.
"This is their livelihood, this is all they know, so these elderly
people, and a lot of the people, our constituents are not leaving,"
Padilla said.
The forested mountains around 40 miles northeast of Santa Fe are known
for tough, self-sufficient residents, many of whom can trace lineage to
18th century Spanish settlers and Native American tribes.
Local doctor Matthew Probst said residents had high “social
vulnerability,” families possibly owning a $15,000 mobile home outright
but having no home owner's insurance and few financial resources.
Keeping these "norteños" or northerners in their homes was a strong
sense of "querencia," or belonging to the land, he said.
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A firefighter works to combat the Hermits Peak and Calf Canyon
wildfire, near Las Vegas, New Mexico, U.S. May 4, 2022. Picture
taken May 4, 2022. REUTERS/Kevin Mohatt
"It's more than just your place or your personal
belongings and your material things. This is your land, your soul
connected to it generationally," said Probst, who has evacuated his
family and livestock from the village of Ojitos Frios.
New Mexico Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham said
worried relatives were asking her to get family members out.
“I have no doubt that we have people without power who are on
oxygen. I have no doubt we have individuals who are running out of
food and water,” Lujan Grisham told a news briefing.
Padilla feared violent winds forecast for the weekend could push the
fire into villages and even neighboring Taos County after it
destroyed at least 166 homes, burning 165,276 acres (67,000
hectares) in Mora and San Miguel counties. He was distributing food
and power generators to homes.
"I cannot neglect the people that decided to stay," he said.
(Reporting by Andrew Hay in Taos, New Mexico; Editing by Leslie
Adler)
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