Porterville Recorder

Firefighte­r's death caused by retardant

- By DON THOMPSON

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — A firefighte­r battling the largest wildfire in California history was killed last month when thousands of gallons of flame-suppressin­g liquid were dropped from an aircraft flying barely above the treetops because spotters mistakenly sent it on a route too close to the ground, according to state investigat­ion findings released Friday

The pilot and a supervisor flying ahead in a small guide plane led the giant modified Boeing 747 nearly into the trees on Aug. 13 because the pilots failed to recognize that there was a hill in the flight path, according to the Green Sheet report by the state's firefighti­ng agency.

Because of the near ground-level release, the retardant struck with such force it uprooted an 87-foot (27-meter) tree that fell on Matthew Burchett, a 42-year-old battalion chief from Utah helping with the Mendocino Complex Fire north of San Francisco.

Another large tree was snapped by the force of nearly 20,000 gallons (75,700 liters) of liquid and three firefighte­rs were injured, one seriously.

Global Supertanke­r Services LLC, which operated the 747, said in a statement that it thought the area was clear of firefighte­rs and "acted within procedural and operationa­l parameters."

Two supervisor­s — one in the air and one on the ground — potentiall­y face discipline or loss of their current positions because of multiple compoundin­g mistakes, said Cliff Allen, president of the union representi­ng California's wildland firefighte­rs.

California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection spokesman Scott Mclean said there are ongoing internal investigat­ions into what went wrong.

"We definitely don't want this to ever happen again," Mclean said.

The 747 was flying only 100 feet (30 meters) above the treetops, at least 100 feet too low, officials said. The goal is to fly high enough for the retardant to disperse and fall like rain, but at such a low level they said the slurry would have hit the trees at nearly the same speed as the aircraft — more than 160 mph (260 kph).

The guide pilot "made a 'show me' run" for the 747 pilot over the intended path for the retardant drop, and marked the path for the jet with a smoke trail, according to the report.

"Obscured by heavy vegetation and unknown to the (747) pilot, a rise in elevation occurred along the flight path." The ground sloped up about 170 feet (50 meters) in the middle of what otherwise was a flat area, according to the report.

The guide planes have two people aboard, a pilot and an "air tactical supervisor," a specially trained firefighte­r who directs the pilots of both the guide plane and the airtanker trailing behind.

"He laid down the line and he was directing the tanker and the tanker was following direction," said Allen, the union president.

Mclean said spotters have a difficult job because "the ground is very deceptive and very hard to read."

The retardant drops were intended to help secure a firebreak cut through the trees by a bulldozer to stop advancing flames. Burchett and the other three firefighte­rs were working on the hill next to the firebreak when the drop was announced over a radio and firefighte­rs were told to "Clear the area out."

The four did not respond to the warning, though the report says that "when personnel are working under a tree canopy, supervisor­s must ensure the drop path is cleared."

Allen said the supervisor could face discipline for not getting an acknowledg­ement that the firefighte­rs were evacuating.

It is not uncommon to have firefighte­rs under retardant drops, Mclean said, though he could not say if the four firefighte­rs knew they were in the flight path or why they didn't acknowledg­e or act on the radioed warning.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO BY RICK EGAN ?? In this Aug. 20, photo, the casket with fallen Utah firefighte­r Matthew Burchett is loaded into a fire engine after the funeral at the Maverik Center in West Valley City, Utah.
AP FILE PHOTO BY RICK EGAN In this Aug. 20, photo, the casket with fallen Utah firefighte­r Matthew Burchett is loaded into a fire engine after the funeral at the Maverik Center in West Valley City, Utah.

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