Forest Service hampered by lack of senior staff
Video: Life |
Santa surprises family with soldier's return Dec. 23: Santa surprises a young girl by bringing her father home from Iraq for Christmas. WCMH's Marcus Thorpe reports. |
Takes longer to control blazes?
The hardest-hit areas include the Angeles and San Bernardino National Forests, where only 60 to 70 percent of engines are being regularly staffed because there are too few qualified supervisors to go around, said Mike Dietrich, acting deputy director of fire and aviation for the Forest Service’s Region 5, which encompasses all of California.
Those forests border on heavily populated urban areas, potentially raising the risk to people living nearby.
“It’s going to take them longer to get to these fires,” said Doug Campbell, a retired Forest Service fire planner who now trains various agencies on fire behavior.
None of the big fires so far this season have gotten out of hand because of short staffing, and officials said they are confident California has enough resources available to get through the next six months.
With 1,600 seasonal hires, the Forest Service is fielding 5,200 firefighters this year. Chiefs on California’s 18 national forests, which cover about 20 percent of the state, can call on their counterparts in other federal firefighting units or the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, which has 8,400 people available this summer, said Ken McLean, deputy state director of fire protection.
California’s robust mutual aid system also activates thousands of engines working for myriad municipal and county departments in large fires.
Covering gaps
Despite the shortages of engine crews, the Forest Service’s teams of smokejumpers and hotshots are filled.
Engine crews are being moved around the state as weather-related fire risk levels change, Hollenshead said. The region has also won an extra complement of 15 federal helicopters to beef up capacity for the first crucial hours of a blaze.
The agency has won approval to begin a massive hiring push starting next week to fill the roughly 470 captain, engineer, dispatcher and other specialist vacancies before the fall, Dietrich said. Those critical staff members manage individual engines and direct the army of entry-level and seasonal “water-squirters” in fire prevention tasks once big fires hit.
Firefighting crews and equipment from other parts of the country are also being moved into California and the rest of the West, said Tom Harbour, national director of fire and aviation for the Forest Service.
“We move those assets around to cover gaps in specific area, and the focus for us now is the West,” he said.
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
-
Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM LIFE |
| Add Life headlines to your news reader: |
Boost your career with an online Degree. Pick from Leading Colleges!
www.EarnMyDegree.com
Sponsored links
Resource guide


