The Ukiah Daily Journal

California’s final frontier faces firefighte­r shortage

- By Elizabeth Castillo Calmatters

Nestled in California’s northeast corner, Modoc County calls itself the “last best place.” Home to the sprawling Modoc National Forest and graced with lava flows, cinder cones, juniper flats and pine forests, the county is one of California’s most sparsely populated places.

It’s also one of California’s most vulnerable places to the lightning- sparked wildfires that tear through wilderness.

Now this remote region is poised to become even more vulnerable as the Newsom administra­tion realigns the state’s inmate camps that fight wildfires.

The Devil’s Garden Conservati­on Camp, located in Modoc County, is one of eight fire camps across California that will lose its inmate crews by the end of this year.

Stacey Hafen, executive director of the Modoc Fire Safe Council, a fire prevention nonprofit formed by locals, called the news devastatin­g.

“Devil’s Garden Conservati­on Camp is such a resource for Modoc County,” Hafen said. “We are so far northeast, there aren’t a lot of firefighti­ng resources. Having those crews readily available if some sort of wildfire starts, it is so helpful.”

Without the inmates, local officials say fires will burn longer as the area waits for resources to arrive from more than 100 miles away. Worrisome questions remain about who will create fire breaks and clear fuels

alifornia faces financial woes stemming from the coronaviru­s pandemic so Gov. Gavin Newsom’s budget required the Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion and Cal Fire to consolidat­e the fire camps that have crews below capacity and to prioritize the closure of camps with other fire resources nearby.

When California implemente­d reforms that landed fewer people in prison, fewer inmates were eligible for the fire camps. The eight camps selected to lose their inmates are half full at most.

Statewide, nearly 350 inmates will most likely be moved to the other 35 camps that will remain open.

The camp in Modoc County once housed around 130 inmates, but the num

bers have steadily declined. It now houses 45. By the end of next month, that drops to zero.

Inmate fire crews are first responders, alongside Cal Fire firefighte­rs. Each year, the camp contribute­d thousands of hours to create fuel breaks, worked with local districts to reduce fire risk and completed community projects. This year, the camp spent 173 days on fire assignment­s.

Several camps that will lose their inmate crews are near other fire camps, and other rural areas, like Redding in Shasta County, have nearby options for reinforcem­ents.

But Modoc County, home to fewer than 9,000 people, has nothing nearby, said Steve Walker, a Cal Fire division chief with the Lassen-modoc unit.

Modoc appears to be the only region in California that the fire camp decision leaves with no nearby resources to help fight fires. Without Devil’s Garden, its nearest fire camps are 107 and 180 miles away. And those routes are rural, windy roads that aren’t quick to traverse.

“Not having them up here in the local area will definitely impact” response times to fires, Walker said.

Modoc County Supervi

sor Ned Coe said the depopulati­on does not bode well for the region.

“Response times to fires are going to be greatly extended, which is not conducive to getting ahead on fires while they’re still small,” he said. “Additional­ly, the fire crews in the off season provide a huge service in the form of conservati­on work that they do in the community.”

California’s Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion declined to be in

terviewed about how they chose the camps that will lose the inmates and the impacts on Modoc County.

“The locations selected will take into considerat­ion proximity to other fire camps in an effort to minimize impacts to communitie­s that rely on the services provided by inmate fire crews,” according to Newsom’s budget.

When fires start in the Modoc area, they’re typically caused by lightning. This summer, the Caldwell fire, which was part of the July Complex, burned nearly 81,000 acres near the Lava Beds National Monument. In 2018, the Stone Fire burned nearly 40,000 acres in the Modoc National Forest.

Because power lines have been a major cause of fires throughout California, the local electrical co- op, Surprise Valley Electric, has used the camp to clear vegetation around their lines.

General Manager Bradley Kresge said the utility will probably have to hire tree trimmers to do the work that the fire crews have done during the last four years.

Still, he said it’s a big loss to the community.

“It’s amazing what they do and how they help this little community. We’re a very rural, isolated part of California and it’s not a booming economy up here and they just provide so much service,” he said. “They’re really a blessing to our community and we’d really hate to see them go. You’ll definitely see the lack of their presence.”

When the Devil’s Garden crews aren’t being dispatched to fight fires, they spend thousands of hours working on local conservati­on projects. This year, they’ve spent nearly 24,000 hours working on regional projects, including work with the Modoc Fire Safe Council.

Modoc is so remote that it made headlines earlier this year because it was the last California county to stave off the coronaviru­s pandemic. Modoc’s only incorporat­ed city and county seat, Alturas, has one fulltime fire marshall. Besides the fire camp, which is located in the city, Alturas relies on volunteer firefighte­rs

lturas Mayor Mark Steffek called the inmate fire camp “a wonderful asset.” Beyond fire protection, he said the camp adds to the local economy.

“The camp purchases equipment, supplies, and food items from local businesses,” Steffek wrote in a letter to state officials saying the camp is vital to the region. “The unique. location of Modoc County in the very remote and isolated area of northeast California requires that we have a state presence in the form of the Devil’s Garden Conservati­on Camp to assist our local community.”

Modoc County is largely federal land, mostly within Modoc National Forest. The U.S. Forest Service relies on the camp, too.

A spokespers­on for the Modoc National Forest declined to be interviewe­d but wrote in a statement that “the Devil’s Garden crew is an integral contributo­r to fuels-reduction and suppressio­n efforts on all lands in the area, including the Modoc National Forest.”

As the fire camp empties out in the coming weeks, the local Cal Fire chief is left with unanswered questions.

 ?? PHOTO COURTESY OF CAL FIRE/ DEVIL’S GARDEN CONSERVATI­ON CAMP ?? Devil’s Garden Conservati­on Camp will close by the end of this year, leaving Modoc County with few resources for fighting wildfires. The camp’s inmates are dispatched locally and throughout California to build fire breaks and complete other projects.
PHOTO COURTESY OF CAL FIRE/ DEVIL’S GARDEN CONSERVATI­ON CAMP Devil’s Garden Conservati­on Camp will close by the end of this year, leaving Modoc County with few resources for fighting wildfires. The camp’s inmates are dispatched locally and throughout California to build fire breaks and complete other projects.
 ?? KARL MONDON — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? Cattle graze in Modoc County south of Alturas.
KARL MONDON — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP Cattle graze in Modoc County south of Alturas.

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