San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

CALIF. SCRAMBLES FOR MORE FIREFIGHTE­RS

With inmate crews depleted, state to add profession­als

- BY DON THOMPSON & DAISY NGUYEN Thompson and Nguyen write for The Associated Press.

As California enters wildfire season, the state is scrambling to find sufficient firefighte­rs amid the coronaviru­s outbreak that has depleted the ranks of inmates who usually handle some of the toughest duties and caused a budget deficit that derailed plans to hire 600 new state firefighte­rs and support personnel.

Gov. Gavin Newsom on Thursday said the state would instead add 172 profession­al firefighte­rs and he’ll use his emergency authority to beef up seasonal crews as the state enters another hot, dry summer when fires often rage out of control.

The threat from coronaviru­s already sidelined some of the firefighti­ng hand crews that do what Newsom called “the really hard grunt work.” They typically include 15-17 inmates or civilian California Conservati­on Corps members who use hand tools and chainsaws to cut and scrape road-like clearings through trees and brush to stem the spread of wildfires.

Just 94 of the state’s 192 authorized inmate crews are available, “substantia­lly down from where we’ve been in the past,” Newsom said, after the state was forced to temporaril­y quarantine 12 inmate firefighte­r camps last month. The state has also released thousands of inmates to create space during the pandemic and before that, as part of a plan to reduce incarcerat­ion for lower-level offenses.

In response, Newsom announced Thursday he will use $72.4 million to hire 858 additional seasonal firefighte­rs and field six more California Conservati­on Corps crews through October. That’s sharply down from his pre-pandemic plan to spend $200 million to hire about 500 profession­al firefighte­rs and 100 support staff. The budget he signed includes funding for the 172 permanent positions.

Tim Edwards, president of the union representi­ng state firefighte­rs, said even the 600 positions would merely have restored the state’s profession­al ranks to normal, but called the new hires “a very good start.”

As of Saturday, the California Department of Public Health reported 6,945 deaths, with hospital admissions climbing 44 percent over the last two weeks, forcing state-ordered shutdowns of many businesses such as bars and indoor restaurant­s that had just reopened.

The Red Cross also put out a call Thursday for more fire season volunteers, saying the pandemic will make it hard to deploy trained disaster volunteers from other parts of the country if a major wildfire breaks out.

Red Cross and state officials say they hope to put evacuees in hotels when possible, but when shelters are needed they will add medical workers to conduct health screenings, sanitize shared living quarters and help with food distributi­on.

Officials are also taking steps to prevent the virus from spreading among firefighte­rs, in part by keeping crew members together but physically separated from other teams.

“They will be considered a family unit” as they eat, sleep, travel and fight fires together, Cal Fire Chief Thom Porter said.

He said he doesn’t expect to field the full number of inmate crews anytime this year. But he hopes that by the height of the fall wildfire season the state can have about 155 crews operating, about the same as last year.

California is compensati­ng in part by finding more bulldozers and boosting its air power with things such as three modern Black Hawk firefighti­ng helicopter­s, one of which served as a backdrop for Newsom’s news conference.

Those aircraft can quickly dump water and retardant on and around small fires to help keep them from growing out of control, Porter said.

“We will make it happen,“Porter said. “We have the air fleet to do so.”

 ?? BEN MARGOT AP FILE ?? California is finding it difficult to hire sufficient wildland firefighte­rs amid the coronaviru­s outbreak.
BEN MARGOT AP FILE California is finding it difficult to hire sufficient wildland firefighte­rs amid the coronaviru­s outbreak.

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