Email: 2024.durkee@firenet.gov Phone: 541-208-4371
(7 a.m. to 7 p.m. PDT) InciWeb: https://inciweb.wildfire.gov/incident-information/orvad-durkee-fire Facebook: www.facebook.com/DurkeeFire
DURKEE FIRE
Size: 294,265 acres Containment: 90% Location: 1 mile west of Durkee,
OR
Start Date: July 17, 2024 Personnel: 362 Cause: Lightning
Current Situation
Today’s weather conditions are ideal for new fire starts; please remain vigilant
in respecting closures and fire restrictions to help prevent human-caused wildfires. Fire danger is rising daily.
There was a new start south of the Pleasant
Valley area and west of Alder Creek Road yesterday. Durkee Fire
resources worked with local responders to quickly suppress
the 10-acre wildfire.
Yesterday, firefighters increased containment to 90% using infrared data and an unmanned
aircraft system (UAS or
drone) to identify and extinguish hotspots. Total
reported fire acreage decreased slightly
due to improved mapping data.
Fire crews continued to patrol and secure fire lines, with an emphasis on
the north and northwestern portions of the fire. Where possible, crews worked in coordination with resource
advisors to repair areas disturbed
by wildfire suppression operations. Crews continued to remove surplus
equipment for transport to a federal incident support
cache for maintenance and repair. Supplies
and equipment are sent
out multiple times each year
decreasing the need to make new purchases.
Today, crews will continue
patrolling for any residual heat, supporting suppression repair, and mapping dozer and handlines for future repair.
Firefighters and aircraft
are available for initial attack
if needed.
Tomorrow, the Durkee Fire will be transitioned back to the local units at 8 p.m. PDT.
Weather and Fire Behavior
Today, there is an
increase in the threat of fire
weather conditions and fire danger due to today’s very hot and
dry weather. This prolonged period of
above average temperatures and dry conditions is expected to continue as well
as the increase in fire danger. Relative humidity will be in the teens and
possibly single digits today. Tomorrow relative humidity will be even lower,
expected around eight to nine percent. The fire potential
outside the fire
footprint is higher than the potential inside the footprint.
Evacuations
The Malheur County Sheriff’s
Office (https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100069245917855
) and the Baker
County Sheriff’s Office (https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100064434892363
) have issued evacuation orders for multiple
areas during the Durkee Fire. Please continue to be vigilant and stay tuned to their Facebook pages for the latest information as weather patterns
and fire activity
may change evacuation levels.
Residents in Level 3 Evacuations “GO NOW” should leave immediately and not return to their property until
evacuation levels are lowered.
Carry enough supplies to support
you and your family for
multiple days. A real- time map of fire evacuations is available on the State of Oregon Fire Dashboard (https://www.arcgis.com/apps/instant/portfolio/index.html?appid=22d04c007866419c91ccf00d097526c8 ).
Closures:
·
The Baker County
Sheriff's Office has closed Burnt River Canyon Road to non-local, non-emergency traffic.
·
I-84 and
other highways: Please go to tripcheck.com for current road closures
as the situation is subject to change.
·
A burn ban is currently in effect
for all of Malheur County (https://www.malheurco.org/category/public- notices), and all Bureau
of Land Management lands in
Malheur and Baker counties.
The Wallowa-Whitman National Forest remains in public use restrictions and
IFPL4.
·
The temporary flight restriction has
been reduced over the Durkee Fire. More information is available at https://tfr.faa.gov/save_pages/detail_4_2285.html. Remember, if you fly we can’t! If a drone or other aircraft enters the air space, all firefighting aircraft will be grounded.
Additional Resources:
·
For current air quality information, visit fire.airnow.gov.
·
Weather and fire behavior could impact transportation, power transmission, cell service and other utilities.
Monitor IdahoPower.com for information.
·
Post-fire resources for eastern Oregon
livestock and agricultural producers are available. For
immediate assistance associated with livestock, forage,
and crop losses
contact your county’s
USDA Farm Service
Agency (FSA) office. Learn more
about these and other disaster relief programs
at www.farmers.gov/protection-recovery/wildfire and contact your FSA Service
Center.
·
For technical expertise regarding livestock,
post-fire rehabilitation and land management,
call Eastern Oregon Agricultural Research Center at (541) 573 -8900.
·
Questions related to agriculture and natural
resources, family and community health,
and more may be
directed to the OSU Extension Service office in your county (https://extension.oregonstate.edu/find-us).
·
If you don’t have access to a computer and/or
internet connection, Extension offices
house Ag Disaster Relief Resource
Computers, which are available to producers to access federal/state relief programs.
·
Oregon Wildfire Response & Recovery website (wildfire.oregon.gov/recovery) provides guidance on topics including wildfire insurance,
filing a homeowners claim after the fire, returning to a home that survived a fire, replacing lost or missing
documents and next steps for people whose homes or businesses burned.
·
For longer term
management needs, contact the USDA Natural Resource Conservation
Service (NRCS) field office in your county to explore
current funding/technical support
available and inform future program offerings in your county. Go
to www.nrcs.usda.gov/conservation-basics/conservation-by-state/oregon/whats- available-in-my-county.
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