September 10, 2011 8:08 AM
Texas wildfires evacuees anxious to return home
Gayla Holley of Moms Against Hunger prays with Lynn Landis, a Magnolia fire evacuee, at a drive-through supplies station on Friday, Sept. 9, 2011 at the Magnolia Apostolic Tabernacle in Magnolia, Texas. Landis, who came to the church with her son and four dogs to collect food and other essentials, was concerned because she did not have renter's insurance. (AP Photo/The Courier, Karl Anderson)
(CBS/AP)
(CBS/AP)
Updated 4:26 PM ET
BASTROP, Texas - Fire crews made progress Saturday fighting a massive Central Texas wildfire but concerns over still smoldering hotspots kept thousands of residents from returning home.
Tensions flared during a news conference Saturday as some residents shouted questions at county officials, demanding to know when they could return to their homes in the Bastrop area, located about 30 miles east of Austin.
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2011/09/10/national/main20104267.shtml
SAN ANTONIO (Reuters) - More than a thousand firefighters, aided by lighter winds, on Saturday began to beat back raging wildfires that have scorched Texas for the past six days torching 1,600 homes and killing four people.
"We've had quite a bit of success today," Bill Paxton of the Texas Forest Service said of the battle to contain six dozen major blazes that have torched 154,000 acres across Texas since Sunday.
The largest of them, the Bastrop Complex fire, which has burned 1,376 homes and killed two people, was 40 percent contained on Saturday, Paxton said, as 64 aircraft and nearly 1,100 firefighters began to beat back the flames.http://www.mcall.com/news/local/sns-rt-us-wildfires-texas-disastertre7891kl-20110910,0,1103644.story
BASTROP, Texas - Authorities say they expect the number of homes destroyed by a massive Texas wildfire to increase from the nearly 1,400 they've already tallied.
Bastrop County Judge Ronnie McDonald said Saturday that crews haven't had an opportunity to go in and count homes in some areas because of smoldering hot spots.
Authorities have said that nearly 1,400 homes have been destroyed by the wildfire that has been raging for a week in and around Bastrop, a city near Austin.
A spokesman for the team of federal, state and local agencies responding to the fire also said the number was expected to rise.
Spokesman Bruce Prud'homme also says the wildfire is now 50 percent contained, up from the 40 percent figure announced earlier Saturday.
http://www.startribune.com/nation/129583298.html
BASTROP, Texas - Fire crews made progress Saturday fighting a massive Central Texas wildfire but concerns over still smoldering hotspots kept thousands of residents from returning home.
Tensions flared during a news conference Saturday as some residents shouted questions at county officials, demanding to know when they could return to their homes in the Bastrop area, located about 30 miles east of Austin.
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2011/09/10/national/main20104267.shtml
Fresh crews, light winds help fight Texas wildfires
SAN ANTONIO (Reuters) - More than a thousand firefighters, aided by lighter winds, on Saturday began to beat back raging wildfires that have scorched Texas for the past six days torching 1,600 homes and killing four people.
"We've had quite a bit of success today," Bill Paxton of the Texas Forest Service said of the battle to contain six dozen major blazes that have torched 154,000 acres across Texas since Sunday.
The largest of them, the Bastrop Complex fire, which has burned 1,376 homes and killed two people, was 40 percent contained on Saturday, Paxton said, as 64 aircraft and nearly 1,100 firefighters began to beat back the flames.http://www.mcall.com/news/local/sns-rt-us-wildfires-texas-disastertre7891kl-20110910,0,1103644.story
Officials expect total number of homes destroyed by Texas wildfire to rise from current 1,400
Article by: ANDREW DeMILLO , Associated Press
Updated: September 10, 2011 - 6:55 PM
Bastrop County Judge Ronnie McDonald said Saturday that crews haven't had an opportunity to go in and count homes in some areas because of smoldering hot spots.
Authorities have said that nearly 1,400 homes have been destroyed by the wildfire that has been raging for a week in and around Bastrop, a city near Austin.
A spokesman for the team of federal, state and local agencies responding to the fire also said the number was expected to rise.
Spokesman Bruce Prud'homme also says the wildfire is now 50 percent contained, up from the 40 percent figure announced earlier Saturday.
http://www.startribune.com/nation/129583298.html
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