Los Angeles Times

San Diego will expand fire-monitoring network

County plans to place five new mountainto­p cameras, used in fight against the Lilac fire.

- By J. Harry Jones jharry.jones@sduniontri­bune.com Jones writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — Five new high-definition cameras will be placed on mountain peaks and other elevated spots around San Diego County to bolster fire protection, and an existing computer network that links fire stations throughout the region will be upgraded, officials said.

An elaborate computer and camera network that allows firefighti­ng agencies to closely monitor certain areas of the county has been in place for years. But officials want to increase the number of cameras used in the network.

When last month’s 4,100acre Lilac fire erupted, several such cameras were able to capture what was happening and help guide firefighte­rs’ response. The fire destroyed 157 structures and damaged 64 others. Fortysix horses were killed or went missing at the San Luis Rey Downs training facility.

“We were able to look at the smoke column and see the winds, and we knew within just minutes that we were going to have a major incident,” said San Diego County Fire Authority Chief Tony Mecham during a recent county Board of Supervisor­s meeting. “We committed a massive response based on what we were seeing.”

The High Performanc­e Wireless Research and Education Network, known in the industry as HPWREN, connects firefighte­rs from all agencies with real-time fire activity informatio­n. Sixty HPWREN stations use more than 180 cameras to provide high-quality, on-demand time-lapse HD imagery that helps spot fire outbreaks and prevent them from spreading.

During the Lilac fire, while the battle was being waged in Bonsall, dispatcher­s were constantly monitoring the system for other problem areas, Mecham said. Based on that informatio­n, “as we pulled resources from other parts of the county to the Lilac fire, we felt comfortabl­e that we weren’t leaving other communitie­s unprotecte­d,” he said.

Last week, county supervisor­s approved spending $437,174 to add five new cameras to the system and to upgrade the bandwidth of the network.

The new cameras will be placed on Cowles Mountain, Cuyamaca Peak and North Peak in addition to locations in Boulevard and Valley Center.

Every time a 911 call is placed, officials said, the informatio­n is put into the network and every station gets a printout with location and type of call informatio­n. That happened more than 33,000 times last year.

Supervisor Ron Roberts, who has championed the technologi­cal side of firefighti­ng efforts, said the system and other technologi­cal tools provide real-time situationa­l awareness.

“It’s clear that recently our major emergencie­s are coming as wildfires,” he said last week. “They are devastatin­g, they’re unpredicta­ble and very hard to deal with. This effort today represents the latest in a continuing effort to increase fire safety.

“When you’re in a battle, informatio­n and communicat­ions are essential to making good decisions,” Roberts said. “We’ve seen in the past what happens when they don’t have that informatio­n.”

The HPWREN system is the result of a partnershi­p among the county, UC San Diego and the Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy.

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? A FIREFIGHTE­R attacks the Lilac fire tearing through a mobile home park near Fallbrook last month. San Diego County fire officials used a network of mountainto­p cameras to guide their response to the blaze.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times A FIREFIGHTE­R attacks the Lilac fire tearing through a mobile home park near Fallbrook last month. San Diego County fire officials used a network of mountainto­p cameras to guide their response to the blaze.

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