Lodi News-Sentinel

Firefighte­r killed in Calaveras state park preparing a prescribed burn

- Hyeyoon Alyssa Choi

A 26-year-old firefighte­r was killed when a dead tree struck and killed him while he was preparing a patch of land for a prescribed burn in Calaveras Big Trees State Park, east of Sacramento, California, officials said.

Darin Banks of Red Bluff was assigned to a hand crew preparing for the prescribed burn in the park's South Grove, where there are hundreds of ancient sequoias, when he was killed on May 6, according to Jess Wills, president of Firestorm Wildland Fire Suppressio­n Inc.

Banks was clearing dead trees when the top of a tree broke off and fell, striking him in the head, back and legs, said a spokespers­on for California's Division of

Occupation­al Safety and Health. Banks could not be resuscitat­ed and was pronounced dead at the scene.

"Our heart goes out to his family and friends," said Douglas Johnson, a spokesman for California State Parks.

Cal/OSHA and the Tuolumne County Coroner were at the state park this week to investigat­e the incident, Johnson said.

The investigat­ion is ongoing, according to a Cal/OSHA spokespers­on.

Banks had a 4-year-old son, Wills said in a statement Saturday. Bank's body was being transporte­d in a convoy to his home in Red Bluff on Thursday, KCRC7 reported.

California State Parks Fire Management, working with Cal Fire, was preparing prescribed burns in the South Grove and North Grove area of the park at the time of the incident.

The accident came amid a push by the Calaveras Big Trees Associatio­n, a nonprofit dedicated to preserving the park's two groves of sequoias, to immediatel­y mobilize forest crews to try to prevent destructiv­e wildfires.

"As a result of decades of fire suppressio­n followed by limited periodic controlled burning, there has been an excessive, unnatural accumulati­on of fuel over the years," Vida Kenk, president of the CBTA, said earlier this year.

Approximat­ely 19% of all giant sequoias, exclusive to California and some more than 2,000 years old, have been destroyed by wildfires in less than two years, Kenk said.

Catastroph­ic wildfires could be prevented by strategica­lly implementi­ng measures like controlled burning, which reduces flammable fuels in the forest that can turn a fire into a conflagrat­ion, according to U.S. Department of Agricultur­e Forest Service.

Fuel treatments make wildfires less likely and easier for firefighte­rs to manage if one occurs, according to the U.S. Department of the Interior Office of Wildland Fire.

The next prescribed burn will be conducted this Sunday in the North Grove weather permitting, Johnson said.

Prescribed burning in the South Grove has been postponed to the fall, and crews will continue to prepare the area into the summer, he said.

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