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Wildfire closes popular Glacier Park roadway

Fires also burning in central Montana

MATT VOLZ

Associated Press

HELENA - Wildfires in Montana have forced the closure of Glacier National Park's most popular roadway and prompted the evacuation of homes in the central part of the state.

Drought conditions mixed with lightning passing through the area Tuesday have increased the fire threat in western Montana.

National Park Service officials closed the entire eastern side of the scenic Going-to-the-Sun Road because of a wildfire near Grizzly Point about 6 miles east of Logan Pass.

The fire forced park officials to evacuate the Rising Sun Motor Inn and a nearby campground. Park rangers were searching for backcountry hikers in the area.

Officials say they do not yet have new estimates on how many acres have burned in the fire that started Tuesday. The fire had burned between 800 and 1,000 acres as of Tuesday night, forcing park officials to evacuate the Rising Sun Motor Inn and a nearby campground. A second campground was being evacuated this morning.

National Park Service officials said this morning that the entire eastern side of Going-to-the-Sun Road remains closed from the St. Mary's park entrance to 3 miles west of Logan Pass at the Big Bend pullout.

The Going-to-the-Sun Road was closed from Logan Pass to the park's St. Mary entrance. People who had driven or hiked into the area were being shuttled out, Glacier spokeswoman Denise Germann said.

It was not immediately clear how many people were there, and Germann said she could not provide any additional details.

This is peak visitor season in the park, and about 95 percent of tourists travel at least some length of the Going-to-the-Sun-Road, according to National Park Service statistics. The 50-mile, two-lane road is the only one that bisects the park, hugging precipitous cliffs as it crosses the Continental Divide at Logan Pass, with an elevation of 6,647 feet.

In the central area, another blaze was threatening homes about 15 miles east of Townsend near the Deep Creek Canyon as it quickly spread from 50 to 1,000 acres, Helena National Forest spokeswoman Kathy Bushnell said.

She said that crews were taking advantage of cooler weather overnight to get the upper hand on the fire.

Wind, small trees and brush were pushing the fire, which was 15 percent contained Tuesday night, into more heavily timbered areas, Bushnell said. It is not clear how many homes are in the rural area, but a dispatcher at the Broadwater County Sheriff's Office said evacuation alerts were sent to 45 telephone numbers.

A portion of U.S. Highway 12 was closed to traffic because of the fire, which was burning just north of the roadway, Bushnell said. Two campgrounds and a day-use area near Deep Creek also have been closed.

Fire officials don't know what caused the fire, she said. No injuries have been reported.

Authorities also briefly evacuated eight to 10 residents because of a wildfire that started Tuesday afternoon less than 10 miles west of Helena, Lewis and Clark County Sheriff Dave Rau said.

Officials had the fire under control after a little more than an hour and allowed the residents back in. The fire was caused by lightning and was very close to another one that broke out Monday, Rau said.

"There is only one way in and out," Rau said of Colorado Gulch Road. "So we wanted to act fast."

No injuries were reported, but one garage was damaged, he said.

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Associated Press writers Alison Noon and Thomas Peipert contributed to this report.

 

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