Lodi News-Sentinel

Firefighti­ng planes may never reach California

- By Kate Irby

WASHINGTON — More help is on the way for the increasing­ly devastatin­g California fire season, thanks to Congress.

Only trouble is, that help won’t be there this year, possibly not next year or the year after that. And the last time Congress tried to provide the same resources, after years of work and approving tens of millions of dollars, nothing happened.

The Carr Fire ravaging California has destroyed more than 1,000 homes in and around Redding, north of San Francisco, and killed at least six people. It’s currently the seventh most destructiv­e fire in California’s history. State officials don’t expect the rest of this year’s fire season to ease.

The newly authorized firefighti­ng program mandates that seven C-130 Coast Guard aircraft be converted into air tankers and given to Cal Fire, the primary state firefighti­ng agency.

Cal Fire would then use the aircraft, larger than many in its current fleet of about 60 planes, for carrying larger amounts of flame retardant.

“These C-130s fit the bill we need,” said Scott McLean, Cal Fire spokesman. “They’re not as nimble as some of our other planes, but they fit a need we’ve been asking for for quite a while.”

Cal Fire currently uses planes borrowed from the National Guard for carrying larger amounts of flame retardant, rather than planes of its own.

Besides the change in agency, the newly authorized program is nearly identical to one OK’d by Congress and President Barack Obama in 2013 that planned to transfer seven C-130 aircraft to the U.S. Forest Service.

The Air Force, which handled maintenanc­e and conversion of the planes to air tankers, was authorized to spend up to $130 million on the planes.

The planes never made it to the Forest Service. It took the Air Force two years to award the contract to build and install the retardant delivery systems on the seven planes. Two years after that, in February, the Forest Service under the Trump administra­tion, announced it was seeking terminatio­n of the program, preferring to continue contractin­g air tankers from private companies.

By the time the Forest Service asked to end the program no permanent fire retardant systems were installed in any of the planes, though two have fought fires in California this year.

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