Hawaii County firefighters worked Monday night to stop the spread of a brush fire that consumed one house in Naalehu and forced families to evacuate their homes.
"There’s still a lot of unburned fuel," assistant fire chief Gantry Andrade said at 8 p.m. Monday. "The fire is not under control, and there are continuous flare-ups."
The home destroyed by fire was one of 11 evacuated Monday morning.
As of 8 p.m. the fire had not spread beyond 15 acres of dry brush, but wind continued to blow.
Highways and major roadways remained open; however, some roads within the subdivisions had been closed, and motorists were advised to avoid the area.
Kaalualu Waiohinu Road, the main thoroughfare through the Green Sands Subdivision, was reopened at 8 p.m.
Windy conditions, rough terrain and a thick overgrowth of christmasberry trees and guinea and fountain grasses have made it difficult to control the blaze.
Andrade said the Hawaii Fire Department got a call Monday morning from someone who said he "had started a controlled burn, but the fire got away from them."
Late Monday afternoon the Fire Department called it a "runaway brush fire" that was continuing to burn out of control.
Andrade, who was not at the scene, counted 70 to 80 rooftops from an online map in the small subdivision but did not know whether they were houses or garages.
The wind was clocked at 23 to 28 mph during the day, Andrade said.
He said fire suppression efforts would likely continue through the night.
Firefighters were expected to wait until the wind dies down, typically in the evening, to bring fire lines into the area.
The fire, which started at 10:36 a.m., was in the areas of Pele and Mark Twain roads.
Two bulldozers, one county and one private, were cutting firebreaks, Andrade said.
County officials said residents had been advised to evacuate the subdivision due to high wind and heavy smoke conditions. The American Red Cross said Monday it had opened a shelter at Na‘alehu Community Center.