Santa Cruz Sentinel

State to add 1,400 firefighte­rs amid weather

- By Adam Beam

Gov. Gavin Newsom on Tuesday said the state will hire nearly 1,400 additional firefighte­rs as an unusually dry winter stokes fears of another devastatin­g wildfire season.

California depends on snowfall in the mountains for much of its water. But the latest snow survey recorded a statewide “snow water equivalent” of just 15 inches, or about 54% of average for April 1, when the state’s snowpack is the deepest.

The state had a similarly dry winter last year. What followed was a record-setting wildfire season where more than 4% of the state’s land burned, destroying nearly 10,500 buildings and killing 33 people.

Tuesday, Newsom said he was using his emergency authority to spend $80.74 million to hire 1,399 additional firefighte­rs at the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, better known as Cal Fire. More than 19,000 firefighte­rs battled blazes in California last year.

“We aren’t just waiting for the next crisis to hit — this funding will support our heroic firefighte­rs to save lives as they work to prevent and tackle destructiv­e wildfires,” Newsom said in a news release.

Most of the new firefighte­rs will be seasonal through June 30. Newsom said Cal Fire will assign 1,256 firefighte­rs to eight understaff­ed fire crews.

Another 24 firefighte­rs will join the California National Guard hand crews who work to get rid of dead trees and other brush that fuel fires. Newsom said 119 firefighte­rs will join crews trained to drop in wildfire zones via helicopter.

While Newsom’s moves will bolster the state’s seasonal firefighti­ng crews, the state’s two U.S. senators and nearly two dozen of its Congressio­nal representa­tives asked the Biden administra­tion on Monday to establish a year-round wildland firefighti­ng force.

California’s peak wildfire season typically runs from the summer through late fall. But wildfires can happen anytime, especially in dry weather conditions. A fire in Siskiyou County near the Oregon border that started on Saturday burned 1.3 square miles before it was contained, according to Cal Fire.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R CHUNG — THE PRESS DEMOCRAT ?? Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks at a press conference while touring areas damaged by the Glass Fire at Foothills Elementary School near St. Helena.
CHRISTOPHE­R CHUNG — THE PRESS DEMOCRAT Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks at a press conference while touring areas damaged by the Glass Fire at Foothills Elementary School near St. Helena.

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