Law enforcement officials, in conjunction with the New Mexico National Guard, began allowing displaced citizens back into zones that had been under mandatory evacuation since the start of the Dog Head Fire. Not all areas of the evacuation zones were completely opened up the morning of June 21, 2016, but many of the citizens who had been away from their homes for up to four days slowly began returning. Airmen with the 150th Special Operations Wing, and Soldiers with the 919th and 126th Military Police Companies and the 226th Military Police Battalion checked resident’s identification cards to e
Law enforcement officials, in conjunction with the New Mexico National Guard, began allowing displaced citizens back into zones that had been under mandatory evacuation since the start of the Dog Head Fire. Not all areas of the evacuation zones were completely opened up the morning of June 21, 2016, but many of the citizens who had been away from their homes for up to four days slowly began returning. Airmen with the 150th Special Operations Wing, and Soldiers with the 919th and 126th Military Police Companies and the 226th Military Police Battalion checked resident’s identification cards to ensure they lived in the areas. (Photo by 2LT Anna Doo, New Mexico National Guard Public Affairs Office)
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