McCaffery Fire east of Redmond Airport held to 458 acres, now 25% contained; evacuation zones drop as heat wave lingers
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(Update: Monday morning update from fire officials)
REDMOND, Ore. (KTVZ) – Firefighters working in record-breaking heat Sunday brought the day-old 458-acre McCaffery Fire near Redmond Airport to 25% containment, which held overnight. Evacuation zones have dropped to Level 2 Be Set, but the BLM imposed an area closure, limiting access routes for returning residents and landowners.
"Firefighters caught a few spot fires outside of containment lines today (Sunday) but held all fires at under an acre, with the support of helicopters cooling hot spots," officials said early Sunday evening on the Central Oregon Fire X/Twitter feed.
That progress came despite Redmond breaking a July 7th temperature record, as it reached 103 degrees, smashing the old record of 100 degrees set in 1968. An excessive heat warning is in place through Wednesday night for much of the region
Here's the Monday morning update from fire officials:
Central Oregon Interagency Dispatch Update – July 8, 2024 | McCaffery Fire
Central Oregon — Firefighters on the McCaffery Fire east of Redmond will spend the day securing containment lines and infrastructure, including the Oregon Army National Guard BIAK Training Center. The McCaffery Fire is now 458 acres and 25% contained.
Hot and dry conditions will continue to challenge firefighters as they work on mopping up the perimeter and increasing containment. Several hot spots outside of the perimeter were identified and contained by crews yesterday and firefighters anticipate that another day of high temperatures will help them identify any spot fires outside of containment lines.
Aviation resources remain available to assist firefighters on the ground in cooling hot spots along with 18 engines, 3 Type 2 initial attack crews, 1 Type 2 crew, 3 water tenders, 2 skidgeons, 1 dozer and overhead resources.
The fire is burning on Prineville District Bureau of Land Management (BLM) lands and on Sunday, July 7, the BLM put a temporary area closure in place for the safety of the public and the firefighters working to contain the McCaffery Fire. To read the closure order in its entirety, visit: Prineville District BLM Temporary Area Closure.
Sunday at 6:00 p.m., Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office lowered the evacuation notice for the areas on Sunny Sage Road off of McCaffery Road to a Level 2 “Be Set.” The Level 2 evacuation notice remains in place for the area of west Powell Butte Estates and the area to the south of Powell Butte Highway in Crook County. Stay up to date on Crook County Emergency Alerts by visiting: alertcrookcounty.org/ To sign-up for Deschutes County Emergency Alerts visit: deschutes.org/911/page/sign-deschutes-alerts.
The cause of the fire is under investigation.
For current wildfire information, the public can visit centraloregonfire.org or follow fire information on X (Twitter) @CentralORFire.
Earlier Sunday, they said the blaze had burned 458 acres and was 10% contained; the acreage held steady through the day.
Tyler Knight, the Central Oregon Fire Management Service's incident commander trainee, talked with us Sunday about the fire's start.
"Once we got on scene, the fire started growing rapidly, had some torching, some spotting, light flashy fuel," he said. "It moved quickly on us."
Forest Service Public Information Officer Kassidy Kern said, "This is not an area that we would see like maybe a normal fire, where we have a solid black. This has been a very spotty burn."
The cause of the fire is under investigation. Kern said, "Unfortunately, though, we know that it is human-caused, because we have not had lightning."
Knight added, "With the hot, dry conditions predicted, we're hoping to just keep the fire in the footprint. We haven't stopped it now, and then crews will continue to work working towards mop up and still containment throughout the day."
The Deschutes County Sheriff's Office updated evacuation levels Sunday evening.
EVACUATION LEVELS UPDATE July 7, 2024 6:00 PM
The Level 3: Go Now evacuation notices for SE McCaffery Rd and SE Sunny Sage Way in Deschutes County will be lowered to Level 2: Be Set effective 6 PM tonight.
Current evacuation notices are:
Level 2: Be Set
West Powell Butte Estates and the area south towards Powell Butte Hwy in Crook County.
The private land off of SE Sunny Sage Way and SE McCaffery Rd in Deschutes County.
Level 2: Means “BE SET” to evacuate. You must prepare to leave at a moment’s notice. This level indicates there is significant danger to your area, and residents should either voluntary relocate to a shelter or with family and friends outside of the affected area, or if choosing to remain, to be ready to evacuate at a moment’s notice. Residents MAY have time to gather necessary items, but doing so is at their own risk. This may be the only notice you receive. Emergency services cannot guarantee that they will be able to notify you if conditions rapidly deteriorate. Area media services will be asked to broadcast periodic updates.
Road Closures:
Calvary Way between Hwy 126 and McCafferty Rd in Crook County.
Sherman Rd and SE McCaffery Rd in Deschutes County.
Access for returning residents:
Residents and landowners on Sunny Sage Way and SE McCaffery Rd in Deschutes County will only be able to access their property via Sherman Road from Hwy 126 (just past the Redmond Airport). Security will be on site to ensure only residents and landowners will be allowed into the area as surrounding lands managed by the Prineville District of the Bureau of Land Management are closed. Residents and landowners please only travel on Sherman Road to McCaffery to Sunny Sage Way.
For information on evacuation maps and road closures, go to www.deschutes.org/emergency.
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Meanwhile, the Prineville District Bureau of Land Management said Sunday it has implemented a temporary area closure of the BLM-managed lands around the McCaffery Fire area.
"This closure is in place for the safety of the public and to ensure that fire suppression activities to happen unimpeded," the agency said. "The order will be in place until rescinded."
Click on the link below to read the full closure in its entirety: https://www.blm.gov/sites/default/files/docs/2024-07/Prineville%20District%20Closure%20McCaffrey%20Fire%207.7.24_ASR_508_1_0.pdf
![](https://ktvz.b-cdn.net/2024/07/McCaffery-Fire-map-458-acres-7-7.jpg)
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Earlier information:
Incident 353, named the McCaffery Fire for McCaffery Road in the area the fire began, was reported shortly after 2 p.m. on Prineville BLM-managed land near the Deschutes/Crook county line, east of Redmond and west of Powell Butte.
Several Forest Service and BLM crews quickly responded to assist Redmond firefighters during the afternoon, along with two single-engine air tankers (SEAT planes) to drop retardant, joined structural-protection task forces.
Three Large Air Tankers (LATs) helped firefighters on the ground, which also included private crews and a bulldozer, officials said early Saturday evening. They added that the fire at last report was still three miles from any structures.
Around 7:25 p.m., officials said in an update that "retardant drops have slowed the spread of the fire. Dozers and engine crews are working on flanking the fire at this time."
Redmond Airport's airfield closed for several hours on Saturday "due to adjacent wildfire fighting efforts" but reopened Saturday night.
They said the airfield had been closed "to dedicate air space to aerial firefighting efforts just east of the airfield." However, they said the terminal remained open and urged travelers to check with your air carrier directly for flight status updates and any cancellations.
Meanwhile, west of Bend, firefighters Saturday night stopped another new fire, Incident 356, off Forest Road 4615, two miles south of Skyliners Sno-Park. It was contained at a quarter-acre.
The Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office issued an initial Level 3 GO NOW evacuation notice shortly before 3 p.m. for SE Sunny Sage Way off McCaffery Road. Soon, an area of Crook County faced the same evacuations, but their Level 3 was reduced to Level 2 by 10 p.m.
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Level 3: means “GO” evacuate now. Leave immediately! Danger to your area is current or imminent, and you should evacuate immediately. If you choose to ignore this advisement, you must understand that emergency services may not be available to assist you further. DO NOT delay leaving to gather any belongings or make efforts to protect your home. This will be the last notice you receive.
A Temporary Evacuation Point was established at the Powell Butte Church.
Large animals can be sheltered at the Crook County Fairgrounds.
Current maps including evacuation areas can be found at: https://deschutes.org/emergency
For fire information, you can visit the Central Oregon Fire information site at: www.centraloregonfire.org
Make sure you are registered for Deschutes Alerts to receive evacuation and emergency alert and warnings in your area by going to: www.deschutesalerts.org.
Crook County Sheriff John Gautney said Redmond Airport was giving priority traffic to fire aircraft. He said the fire was under the command of BLM, with a joint command with Prineville and Redmond Fire, the Oregon State Fire Marshal's Office and the Crook and Deschutes County sheriff's offices.
Pacific Power's outage map showed two "emergency de-energizations" in the area of the fire, affecting 176 customers. Crews were investigating a larger outage affecting 1,733 customers on Bend's south end.