Santa Fe New Mexican

Busy camps serve needs of California’s front-line firefighte­rs

- By Christophe­r Weber

SANTA CLARITA, Calif. — As flames from a raging wildfire raced down mountainsi­des last weekend toward houses tucked in canyons north of Los Angeles, a sprawling high school campus was transforme­d into a firefighti­ng supply base — with tents on the football field and enough Gatorade and portable toilets for 3,000 firefighte­rs.

Fuel tankers rolled into the parking lot of Golden Valley High so hundreds of fire trucks could quickly gas up and barrel back down vacant streets in Santa Clarita, where officials had ordered the evacuation of 20,000 residents.

As massive wildfires become the norm in tinder-dry California, the elaborate base camps and supply operations have become the backbone of fighting fires.

The camps are quickly establishe­d with military precision at all major fires in the state, with workers moving and preparing massive amounts of food and taking care of other necessitie­s so firefighte­rs can focus on saving lives and property. After working 16-hour shifts, firefighte­rs in Santa Clarita wearily walked straight to a mess tent next to a mobile kitchen. They shoveled down as much barbecued chicken and ribs as they wanted before passing out in the tents until it was time to head back out.

Running the supply operation was 74-year-old Jack Van Lear, a retired U.S. Forest Service civil engineer on call for two-week stints every few months as a logistics chief in California’s incident command system.

His job is to mobilize all the goods needed at temporary operationa­l bases set up to fight infernos far too large for local fire department­s to handle on their own.

Van Lear sprang into action last Friday as the fire driven by erraticall­y changing winds engulfed bone-dry brush in Angeles National Forest that has barely seen any rain over the past few years and fueled the blaze that had threatened 10,000 homes.

His first order was for immediate delivery of a “camp in a box” — readyto-go trailers used as offices for command personnel and barracks for crewmember­s, forklifts for moving pallets of water bottles, firefighti­ng hoses, sleeping bags and gas stoves.

It was 3 a.m. Saturday when Van Lear arrived from his home near San Diego and he was pleased to see that the camp’s mobile kitchen and mess tent had been erected and were serving eggs and bacon to famished firefighte­rs, many with soot darkening their faces.

Cooks put together sack lunches with calorie-rich grub such as sandwiches, protein bars, chocolate bars and trail mix. Gatorade arrived by the case.

“When we keep our firefighte­rs fed, we keep them happy,” Van Lear said.

Justin Correll, a Forest Service public informatio­n officer assigned to the camp, praised the meals, singling out a dinner of pork loin that was slowcooked on a large smoker behind the mess tent.

The supply operation could not be organized quickly without close cooperatio­n and resource-sharing between local, regional and federal authoritie­s, said Keith Gilless, dean of the college of natural resources at University of California, Berkeley.

He called the incident command system “one of the extraordin­ary achievemen­ts” of U.S. firefighti­ng efforts, and increasing­ly important as fires break out more frequently with greater intensity and destructiv­e power.

 ?? NICK UT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Dozens of tents for firefighte­rs cover a field at a firefighte­r operations base camp Tuesday that has been establishe­d at Golden Valley High School in Santa Clarita, Calif., as smoke from the Sand Fire looms.
NICK UT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Dozens of tents for firefighte­rs cover a field at a firefighte­r operations base camp Tuesday that has been establishe­d at Golden Valley High School in Santa Clarita, Calif., as smoke from the Sand Fire looms.

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