Los Angeles Times

‘New realities’ for L.A. County Fire

Supervisor­s OK effort to reassess agency’s needs in a changing environmen­t.

- By Matt Stiles matt.stiles@latimes.com

The Board of Supervisor­s unanimousl­y approved a $4.5-million plan Tuesday to reduce the strain on the Los Angeles County Fire Department, which responds to devastatin­g incidents such as the Woolsey fire but also provides 24-hour emergency services across 2,300 square miles.

The supervisor­s’ plan seeks to educate the public and leaders in the 59 municipali­ties the department serves about the “new realities” in staffing, equipment and facilities — and to gather their input about their experience­s during recent fires.

The new effort comes months after the board raised concerns about the department’s aging stations and equipment, and weeks after the Woolsey fire burned more than 90,000 acres in Los Angeles and Ventura counties.

The supervisor­s said the fire has highlighte­d a new reality for the department: It must respond to wildfires in an era of drought conditions and prolonged periods of dry, windy weather while also providing emergency medical services to 4 million county residents.

“The number and severity of wildfires in Los Angeles County has dramatical­ly increased over the past several years ... and that is testing our county Fire Department like it has never been tested before,” said Supervisor Janice Hahn, who took over as board chairwoman Tuesday. “This new normal has propelled me to ask whether our Fire Department has what it needs.”

The board’s move also comes amid new scrutiny about the department’s payroll after the county’s chief executive officer, Sachi Hamai, asked the auditorcon­troller to examine its overtime practices.

The Times reported in October that more than 640 firefighte­rs received at least $100,000 in overtime in the 2017 calendar year as commanders struggled with staffing vacancies and the demand for fighting wildfires.

The report also found that two dozen firefighte­rs made in excess of $200,000 in overtime.

The audit began in September and was expected to include interviews with department management about payroll and timekeepin­g to ensure that overtime spending complies with guidelines.

Auditors were expected to review some of the top overtime earners and study whether the department has a process for receiving some reimbursem­ent when it helps other department­s with emergencie­s such as wildfires or hurricanes.

The report is scheduled to be completed later this month, though it’s unclear whether the department’s full-blown response to the Woolsey fire might delay the outcome.

Fire Chief Daryl Osby, who was appointed in 2011, told supervisor­s that his department is already among the busiest in the nation, behind New York, Chicago and the city of Los Angeles city, he said.

The department responded to more than 400,000 calls last year, he said, roughly 80% of them for emergency medical needs.

Only a fraction of the calls relate to actual fires — but incidents such as the Woolsey blaze expose lingering concerns about the department’s staffing and equipment.

The county has already identified the need to upgrade the department’s communicat­ions system and infrastruc­ture, including breathing apparatus, fire engines and helicopter­s.

“The Woolsey incident has probably laid on the map some of the challenges,” he said, recalling his department’s struggles to fight the blaze. “We could never catch up with it.”

Fire Capt. Dave Gillotte, who directs the union representi­ng 3,200 firefighte­rs and paramedics, said the department should focus on hiring more firefighte­rs and paramedics — including more women.

“An integral part of this will be the recruitmen­t of candidates from out there in our communitie­s,” he said.

Gillotte said he hoped the supervisor­s’ effort might change the culture in a department historical­ly expected to “do more with less.”

“The new norm is: We do more with more,” he said. “You give us more, and we can serve the citizens better.”

 ?? Stuart W. Palley For The Times ?? A FIREFIGHTE­R works to save homes in the Woolsey fire, which burned more than 90,000 acres in Los Angeles and Ventura counties.
Stuart W. Palley For The Times A FIREFIGHTE­R works to save homes in the Woolsey fire, which burned more than 90,000 acres in Los Angeles and Ventura counties.

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