Fire risks from global warming spread to wet US Northwest

In this photo taken Friday, Aug. 2, 2019, Jason Ritchie holds his phone with a photo he took of a wildfire behind his home four years earlier, in Sammamish, Wash. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

In this photo taken July 24, 2019, a block of houses are carved into a forest along the Middle Fork Snoqualmie River in the Cascade foothills of North Bend, Wash. Experts say global warming is changing the region’s seasons, bringing higher temperatures, lower humidity and longer stretches of drought. And that means wildfire risks in coming years will extend into areas that haven’t experienced major burns in residents’ lifetimes. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

In this photo taken July 24, 2019, a development of houses stand next to a forest and in view of Mt. Si in the Cascade foothills of North Bend, Wash. The region, famous for its rainfall, has long escaped major burns even as global warming has driven an increase in both the size and number of wildfires elsewhere in the American West. But according to experts, previously too-wet-to-burn parts of the Pacific Northwest now face an increasing risk of significant wildfires because of climate change. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

ISSAQUAH, Wash. — Nestled in the foothills of Washington’s Cascade Mountains, the bustling Seattle suburb of Issaquah seems an unlikely candidate for anxiety over wildfires.

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