Tonto National Forest replacing miles of fences damaged from Telegraph Fire

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Drone video shows devastation caused by Telegraph Fire

The Telegraph Fire sparked in early June, and it eventually charred over 180,000 acres. Burn scars caused by the fire has also worsened flooding in the area. FOX 10's Danielle Miller reports.

The Tonto National Forest has received funding to pay for replacing dozens of miles of fencing damaged or destroyed in grazing areas by a massive wildfire in east-central Arizona last summer.

Forest officials announced Tuesday that the funding for fencing repairs needed because of the Telegraph Fire near the town of Superior comes from a program that normally focuses on mitigating post-wildfire flooding on federal lands.

According to forest officials, the fencing work will be performed under a pilot program authorizing repairs of minor facilities and infrastructure damaged or destroyed by wildfires.

Range workers identified 66 miles (106 kilometers) of grazing allotment boundary fencing damaged and over 61 miles (98 kilometers) of interior pasture fencing destroyed, forest officials said in a statement.

The Telegraph Fire began on June 4 about 5 miles (8 kilometers) southeast of Superior. It burned more than 281 square miles (728 square kilometers) of land managed by the Forest Service, the federal Bureau of Land Management and the state Land Department.

The fire also destroyed numerous homes and other structures and its cause is still under investigation.

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