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The Country's Largest Wildfire Is Burning In Washington State

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Burnout operations near Powerline Road on the Range 12 Fire near the Tri-Cities, Washington.
Alissa Cordner

Tri-Cities area residents woke up to a blood-red sunrise. The Range 12 Fire in southeast Washington has burned 175,000 acres and is 10 percent contained.

From the Benton City command post for the Range 12, smoke and charred hills surround most of town. About 250 homes are in jeopardy in the current fire footprint. About 400 firefighters, three helicopters and 34 engines are fighting it.

Some firefighters and land managers say they’re on edge because of predicted gusty winds and a red flag warning. The breeze is already kicking up, and firefighters worry that burned areas could pop up and jump the established fire lines.

Crews set a backfire Sunday night on Rattlesnake Mountain to keep the Range 12 fire from burning contaminated areas of the Hanford Nuclear Reservation, where plutonium was manufactured for World War II. The Range 12 is the largest wildfire on a list of fires managed by government agencies.

Copyright 2016 Northwest News Network

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Anna King loves unearthing great stories about people in the Northwest. She reports for the Northwest News Network, a journalism collaboration of public radio stations in Washington and Oregon that includes JPR.