San Francisco Chronicle

Post-disaster alert system makeover OKd

- By Peter Fimrite

Sonoma County’s Board of Supervisor­s approved plans Monday for a restructur­ing of emergency operations after an internal report concluded that emergency workers were unprepared for the October fires, which burned 5,143 homes and killed 23 people in and around Santa Rosa.

The restructur­ing includes a new, improved wireless alert system that will cause residents’ cell phones to vibrate or sound an alarm in an emergency.

County officials drew criticism after they decided last year not to send out potentiall­y life-saving alerts as devastatin­g wildfires rolled through local neighborho­ods. The lack of warning meant numerous residents awoke to flames licking up against their homes, forcing them to flee for their lives with no time to spare.

“It was frustratin­g. It was over-frustratin­g,” said Supervisor Shirlee Zane, who urged the county to pay special attention to seniors and people with disabiliti­es and include Spanish-language alerts in developing the new communicat­ions system. “The people who died in this fire were seniors and disabled.”

The report, prepared by county staff, analyzed everything from the operations center to training. It said county emergency workers were overwhelme­d, understaff­ed and not adequately trained to handle logistics in such an emergency. It largely mirrors a California Office of Emergency Services report issued in February.

The wind-whipped Tubbs Fire was the worst of several fires that raged through Sonoma. It raced 12 miles into

Santa Rosa, destroyed the Fountaingr­ove neighborho­od, jumped Highway 101 and burned down the neighborho­od of Coffey Park.

“The number of fires and the inability to communicat­e effectivel­y and consistent­ly with public safety agencies on the ground created confusion and uncertaint­y as to how large the fires were and how quickly they were spreading,” said the report, which focused only on the civilian divisions of county government. “The inability to fully understand current conditions negatively impacted response efforts.”

As the fires continued, workers became overworked, power struggles erupted between county workers, and no liaison officer was assigned among the 200 workers in the county Emergency Operations Center to communicat­e with elected officials, according to the report.

“We were orphaned in the process,” said Supervisor Susan Gorin, who was especially upset by the lack of communicat­ion with cities, community organizati­ons and special districts. “Every request for informatio­n we sent to the EOC was met with silence. We couldn’t get any informatio­n.”

The overhaul will put in place a countywide emergency warning system, including sirens and wireless emergency alerts, or WEAs. Sonoma County officials said they did not send such an alert as the fires raged late on the night of Oct. 8 because it would have hit phones across the entire county, possibly causing panic and traffic jams that would have blocked people from getting in and out of the area.

After The Chronicle reported on Sonoma’s decision not to send a wireless alert, Democratic Sens. Dianne Feinstein and Kamala Harris wrote to the Federal Communicat­ions Commission to complain. The federal government now requires wireless carriers to more specifical­ly target areas with wireless alerts.

Christophe­r Godley, the interim emergency manager for Sonoma County, said the report should not be taken as an indictment of emergency workers. He said an analysis like this is, by its very nature, critical.

“The county did relatively well in responding to this event,” Godley said. “The county did not roll over, fall apart . ... I cannot think of another county in California that would have been prepared.”

The supervisor­s also approved recommenda­tions to strengthen county training requiremen­ts, clarify roles and hire more emergency staff.

 ?? Carlos Avila Gonzalez / The Chronicle 2017 ?? Petaluma firefighte­r Kevin Weaver monitors a flareup during the Wine Country October wildfires.
Carlos Avila Gonzalez / The Chronicle 2017 Petaluma firefighte­r Kevin Weaver monitors a flareup during the Wine Country October wildfires.

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