(UTV | MEXICO) – The New Mexico wildfires that started more than a month ago are being stoked by the high winds and drought and continue burning.
The fire is threatening more communities in the Rocky Mountain foothills while forcing some local schools to go virtual.
More than 318 square miles (824 square km) of ponderosa forests across the state have been burnt down and about 300 structures have been destroyed.
Officials at the Los Alamos National Laboratory in northern New Mexico and residents in the nearby town are prepared to evacuate if a wildfire burning there moves closer, said the reports.
The cost of fighting the blaze and another smaller fire burning near the Los Alamos National Laboratory has topped $65 million so far.
Nearly 1,800 firefighters and support personnel have been assigned to fight the blaze, said the report. The state’s governor, Michelle Lujan Grisham, said at a briefing on Tuesday that she had not received any reports in recent days of widespread damage to homes but believed the risk of more destruction is high.
The US National Weather Service has issued red-flag warnings for extreme fire danger in much of New Mexico and parts of Nevada, Arizona, Colorado, and Texas this week.