Fires in Washington State

Scores more firefighters raced Tuesday to the Okanogan Complex of fires, the biggest wildfire in the history of Washington state and the nation’s No. 1 summer wildfire priority. But it still might not be enough.

The complex of five fires near the north-central town of Omak grew by almost 14,000 more acres by Tuesday afternoon, to 258,339 acres, or more than 403 square miles. If it were a city, it would be the 10th-largest in the continental U.S. by area.

“This fire remains the No. 1 priority fire in the United States,” said Todd Pechota, chief incident commander for Okanogan Complex.

Nearly 100 new firefighters arrived at the fire, which has been only 15 percent contained since it started Aug. 15, the joint local-state-federal incident command team said Tuesday. In just 10 days, it has already cost nearly $10 million to battle, commanders said.

Related: Okanogan Complex: Washington Wildfire Is Now Largest in State History

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But the fire’s northeastward is continuing unabated because, the incident team reported bluntly, of a “lack of resources to implement suppression actions.”

Crews were even being diverted from California, even though they’re needed there for numerous fires burning hundreds of thousands of acres.

The Okanogan Complex merged last week with the Twisp River fire.