Los Angeles Times

O.C. gets grant for fire-spotting plane

Supervisor­s accept $4.5 million from state to fund pilot program for monitoring blazes.

- BY DANIEL LANGHORNE Langhorne writes for Times Community News.

The Orange County Board of Supervisor­s accepted a $4.5-million state grant Tuesday that will fund a 150-day trial program for a fixed-wing aircraft that will monitor area wildfires, providing incident commanders with real-time informatio­n on fire conditions.

The Orange County Fire Authority will oversee operation of the dual-prop plane, which will be flown by a contractor, Courtney Aviation.

Firefighte­rs will have access to video and images shot by the aircraft’s infrared cameras within five minutes of its arrival over a site.

“This new tool will immediatel­y tell us the direction of the fire, so we can safely and rapidly evacuate residents, as well as position fire crews in precise locations to better protect life, property and infrastruc­ture during a wildfire,” Orange County Fire Chief Brian Fennessy said in a written statement.

Images obtained by the aircraft will inform the databased computer models developed by the WIFIRE Lab at UC San Diego.

California firefighte­rs have benefited from the socalled Firemap’s real-time projection­s of wildfire behavior based on past and current weather conditions, weather forecasts, satellite detection and informatio­n about vegetation and landscapes.

Assemblywo­man Cottie Petrie-Norris (D-Laguna Beach) requested the $4.5million grant for the program as part of the 2019-20 state budget signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom.

“These state funds will help to protect our communitie­s from fire devastatio­n,” Petrie-Norris said in a prepared statement. “I’m excited that our hard work to secure these funds has been successful at this critical time. If a wildfire breaks out, this pilot program will potentiall­y save lives and infrastruc­ture.”

Chairwoman Lisa Bartlett of the Orange County Board of Supervisor­s thanked Petrie-Norris for her work to secure funding for the aircraft, which will also provide mutual aid to Los Angeles, Riverside, Ventura and San Diego counties.

“This is going to have a huge impact for our county of Orange,” Bartlett said. “The first-responder intelligen­ce pilot program is going to bring state-of-the-art, military-style technology and intelligen­ce to Orange County so we can advance our response and deployment efficiency.”

Supervisor Don Wagner, who represents several foothill communitie­s that face a heightened threat from wildfires, said the county often lacks funding to pay for equipment, helicopter­s and overtime pay for firefighte­rs.

“Fighting fires can be very expensive,” Wagner said. “All of those things end up being costly, and, to the extent we can, we try to get more through the grant process.”

California Democrats and Republican­s have displayed bipartisan support for providing firefighte­rs with the equipment they need to protect the public.

“Fire doesn’t know any political lines, it doesn’t know any geographic lines, and it doesn’t know racial or ethnic lines,” Wagner said. “It’s a problem that’s common to all of us and it’s one that has no partisan edge to it.”

The Orange County Fire Authority board is scheduled to take action on the contract with Courtney Aviation on Thursday.

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? A FIREFIGHTI­NG helicopter flies above an Anaheim fire in 2017. A fixed-wing aircraft trial program will give firefighte­rs access to real-time data on wildfires.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times A FIREFIGHTI­NG helicopter flies above an Anaheim fire in 2017. A fixed-wing aircraft trial program will give firefighte­rs access to real-time data on wildfires.

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