logo
‘We have a lot to be thankful for': Ruidoso rebuilds after fire and flood devastation

‘We have a lot to be thankful for': Ruidoso rebuilds after fire and flood devastation

Yahoo5 hours ago

Life is beginning to return to the scorched hills, dotted with charred tree trunks, in the charming mountain village of Ruidoso.
Colorful butterflies lilt among snapdragons, heavy machinery clears the foundations of torched homes and carves out larger banks along Rio Ruidoso, and a hum of energy resonates from the community's main drag.
A year after twin fires and repeated floods ravaged the historic village, Ruidoso has made significant strides toward rebuilding what was lost and repairing what survived. It's a journey that will continue for some time to come.
"Even though to the locals here it seems like it's been very slow, a lot of progress maybe hasn't been made in their area … when you look back at the total body of work, it's been remarkable," Ruidoso Mayor Lynn Crawford said. "A year later, we've made a lot of progress, but still have a long way to go."
That community spirit was on display as locals gathered at Wingfield Park to recognize first responders and celebrate their community's resilience on Tuesday, June 17.
Crawford recalled the day flames began stretching into Ruidoso: it was a Monday, June 17, and it started like any other day. The South Fork and Salt fires, which began on the nearby Mescalero Apache reservation, torched roughly 25,000 acres and destroyed around 1,300 structures, leaving behind a bald landscape that made the water from the torrential downpours that followed rush into the city without impediment.
The blazes also caused two deaths — 60-year-old Patrick Pearson was found dead near the Swiss Chalet Hotel and a second unidentified victim was found in a burned car on Ranier Road.
And though the fires were eventually extinguished, the land they ravaged only sets the stage for more flooding as the Southwest prepares for monsoon season, another issue Crawford and village leaders must contend with, along with rebuilding their town.
But none of that appears to overwhelm Crawford or, by all accounts, the roughly 7,600 people he represents.
"A lot of it is rebuilding and maintaining," he said. "That's one thing about Ruidoso … we're very optimistic people. We always have a good plan, and they say that plan works until you get hit, but we got knocked down and through the subsequent nine floods, we got up every time."
"When we have so much support from the surrounding communities, the people that support our (tourism) industry, it really helps us get out of bed in the morning and make sure we're ready to go to work for the people that come to see us."
Ruidoso Fire Chief Cade Hall was just a firefighter when the blazes broke out around Ruidoso last year.
The Ruidoso Fire Department includes about 27 firefighters, with only seven or eight on duty each day. On June 16, 2024, Hall was off when he got a call from the Smokey Bear Hot Shot crew saying, "We lost it."
Hall did not even know there was a fire in the area, but he immediately looked outside and could see the dark plume of smoke rising over the horizon. The whole fire department was then called into action.
"I hit all-call and brought in every firefighter in Ruidoso to try to help mitigate the problem," he recalled. "We were fighting fire, fighting fire — there was 100-foot, 150-foot flame lengths, we had a house torch here and then you turn around and it's wrapping around you — and the next thing you know, the rain came and we went from fighting fire to having people floating down the creeks, houses and all that stuff."
Ruidoso's firefighters immediately pivoted to rescue efforts as state and federal agencies continued fighting the fires, getting swift water crews into action.
Ruidoso native Leland DeFord was there when the fires and flooding began, opting not to evacuate from his home. A former El Paso firefighter and forensic photographer, DeFord began documenting the destruction but changed course after only a few days.
"It just got so depressing, the damage," he remembered, "so then I started photographing the relief effort."
Immediately after the fire and flooding ended much of the work for Hall and the rest of the village has been on make sure the kind of devastation seen last year is never seen again.
Flood mitigation efforts such as expanding culverts, installing barriers around riverbanks and thinning areas to create defensible space around homes and other structures continue to be a large part of the recovery effort.
Despite mudslides still being a concern for Hall, he applauded the resilience of the people in Ruidoso, who, he said, were anxious to reclaim their hometown.
"This place is second to none," he said. "They came back with a vengeance. They wanted their place to be back."
"Minus some trees, and some houses in areas that we can't build back due to flooding, it's just resiliency," Hall added. "These guys are resilient."
For Heather Kinney, who is opening her shop, Feather and Stone Emporium, on Sudderth Drive in Ruidoso next year, evidence of the village's slow but steady recovery is everywhere — from the constant hum of traffic to, most notably, the local farmers' market.
"We had more people attend the farmer's market, as vendors and patrons, than we ever did before," she said as she moved along the stones and jewelry at her shop. "So, people are ready to get back to normal for sure."
While a new normal might be in the offing for the people of Ruidoso, as Crawford noted, the expansive rebuild in the village leaves room for a new vision to take root. Something he's calling "Ruidoso 2.0."
"We have plans and we're working with access to the community to let them know that they can have their input," Crawford said. "But the village, we're a bunch of planners here, so we have a very robust comprehensive plan, a master plan, strategic plans and then, indeed, tactical plans for every aspect of the community, so we have buy-in from all parts of the community."
The first step to reimagining Ruidoso is housing. Crawford said "well over" 100 families are still not in their permanent homes, taking up residence in nearby towns like Capitan or Tularosa, and many will never be able to return or rebuild as their former properties are now in extended flood zones.
"We need to continue to invest in affordable and, primarily, workforce housing," Crawford said. "People that are working, they need nice, safe, secure homes that are hardened, and by that I mean that we make sure the lots are thinned, that maybe the roofs are made out of metal or some other material that has a lot of fire resistance, making sure that we have different aspects that have been pointed out during our thinning process by the local forestry (department)."
By the end of the month, the village will finish construction on a housing development that will include 10 modular homes and village leaders recently broke ground on a 72-unit apartment complex. Additionally, Crawford said he is working with federal agencies on a buy-back program for residents who cannot rebuild as a way to avoid piling financial devastation on top of already-traumatized residents.
The site of the iconic Swiss Chalet Motel, which was destroyed, may also be a future site for new housing in the village, Crawford said.
While housing remains at the top of the community's list, Crawford also has an eye toward securing the village's economic future by protecting water resources and bringing businesses back to town.
The fires caused half a billion dollars in damage.
"Our water resources and assets are in full tact, we check those constantly, but it's rebuilding our economy, it's doing the rebuilding of homes, structures in the community where most the people who work in our shops live, that the majority of the homes that we lost," he said.
The people of Ruidoso appear committed to bringing their village back to its former glory.
"A year later," Crawford mused, "we have a lot to be thankful for."
Adam Powell covers government and politics for the El Paso Times and can be reached via email at apowell@elpasotimes.com.
"
This article originally appeared on El Paso Times: Ruidoso rebuilds homes, hopes after year of disaster and disruption

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Weatherford student takes top honor with website in National History Day competition
Weatherford student takes top honor with website in National History Day competition

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Weatherford student takes top honor with website in National History Day competition

A Weatherford student earned first place earlier this month in a National History Day competition held at the University of Maryland. Cassidy McCarthy, daughter of Amber Hutchison of Weatherford, was one of some 3,000 students from across the country to attend the competition June 5-9. McCarthy, 12, took the top spot for Junior Division Website with her exhaustive online history of the struggle of coal miners in the early 20th century West Virginia Mine Wars. Her entry, 'The West Virginia Mine Wars: Justice in the Coal Field,' is reached at: The entry was tailored to the theme of the event, 'Rights and Responsibilities in History.' McCarthy reached the national competition from among more than a half million middle school and high school students vying in local, regional and state brackets. 'The theme of rights and responsibilities has never been more relevant, and these students tackled it with passion and depth,' National History Day Executive Director Cathy Gorn said in a news release. 'Their work continues to inspire all of us who believe in the power of historical thinking.' McCarthy, who will enter eighth grade at the virtual iUniversity Prep through Grapevine-Colleyville ISD, is set to study college freshman math and science in the fall. She aspires to a career in medicine. 'She wants to be a dermatologist,' Hutchison said. McCarthy also plays club volleyball for Peak.

Minnesota's connection to the "fathers of Juneteenth"
Minnesota's connection to the "fathers of Juneteenth"

CBS News

timean hour ago

  • CBS News

Minnesota's connection to the "fathers of Juneteenth"

Long celebrated by African Americans, Juneteenth became a federal holiday in 2021, and a Minnesota state holiday two years later. Parades, concerts, informal and formal gatherings are just some of the ways families and communities honor what's also called Freedom Day. But it's much more than just a party, says Lee Henry Jordan, National Juneteenth's Midwest and state director. "You need to know the history of what you're commemorating and celebrating," Jordan said. "The 13th Amendment, the Emancipation Proclamation and General Order No. 3, we call those some of the 'Freedom Documents.'" Jordan believes all who take part in celebrations should know that in 1863, the Emancipation Proclamation freed enslaved people in states that tried to secede from the United States. Two years later, in June 1865, about 2,000 Colored troops marched into Galveston Bay in Texas to enforce General Order No. 3, which formally freed about 250,000 enslaved people who were being held illegally. Jordan calls members of four regiments — the 20th, 28th, 29th and 31st United States Colored Troops — the "fathers of Juneteenth." "The history of the United States Colored Troops, that should be a part of the celebration," Jordan said. Members of the United States Colored Troops. He hopes people look to uncover the freedom story of their own family, diving deep into history. "There were people that didn't get press but still did the work, and those people are in your family," he said. Jordan truly believes someone in his family wore the Union uniform and was in Galveston Bay in 1865. Through his research, he found at least one Minnesotan there. "William Crosley, and the fact that he's buried in Rochester, Minnesota," he said. "He was at Galveston, Texas, when the United States Colored Troops were there. So if he was there, who else was there?" He believes following a trail of history can unlock your family's freedom story. "There is a continuing story, energy, power, whatever you want to call it, that's connected to freedom," he said. "Find whatever that is for you, bring that to a Juneteenth celebration, and trust me, you will find a kindred spirit." Kindred spirits with shared history — American history — that should be celebrated by all. "If you don't leave there with a little bit more knowledge of who you are and where you come from and what can be done, then, now I think you're missing a little something," he said. Click here for a list of Juneteenth events this weekend in the Twin Cities, including the Great Minnesota Cookout on the lawn of the Minnesota State Capitol.

Pilot killed in Beverly plane crash identified by his family as Geoffrey Andrews
Pilot killed in Beverly plane crash identified by his family as Geoffrey Andrews

CBS News

timean hour ago

  • CBS News

Pilot killed in Beverly plane crash identified by his family as Geoffrey Andrews

The pilot killed in a small plane crash in Beverly, Massachusetts on Thursday has been identified by his family. Geoffrey Andrews was piloting the plane when it crashed shortly after takeoff Thursday on Sam Fonzo Drive in an industrial park near Beverly Regional Airport. A second man in the plane was injured. He has not been identified. Police said it appears Andrews was attempting to take off when the plane crashed. The FAA said the plane had just left Beverly and was heading to Ticonderoga Municipal Airport, which is about 100 miles north of Albany, New York. "We thank the investigators who we trust will conduct a thorough investigation into what caused this catastrophic loss of life. We also pray for his passenger in the plane and are sending his loved ones strength through this difficult time," said Andrews' family in a statement. His family said Andrews was a staff scientist at MIT Lincoln Laboratory and graduated from Lehigh University and got his doctorate from Purdue University. They said he loved to fly and was working to become a certified flight instructor. Andrews is survived by his wife, Gentry, who is expecting their first child in October. "Beyond his love for flight, Geoffrey was a charismatic, beautiful soul who cared deeply for his family and friends and always had a kind word for others. He was so excited about the upcoming birth of their baby," said his family in a statement.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store