Chattanooga Times Free Press

California turns to civilians to fight fires

- BY DON THOMPSON

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Faced with a shrinking pool of inmates to help fight major wildfires, California is increasing­ly turning for new recruits to its state Conservati­on Corps, a program with roots in the Great Depression and a motto that promises “hard work, low pay, miserable conditions … and more!”

Prisoners last year made up about 20 percent of California fire crews on several major blazes, where they used chain saws and hand tools to chew through tinder-dry brush and trees to stop the flames.

But the number of available inmates is declining because counties now oversee most lower-level felons under a law aimed at easing prison overcrowdi­ng. In addition, there are fewer incentives for inmates to risk their lives since a federal court broadened an early release program for firefighte­rs to include other inmates.

The state is about 600 inmates short of the 4,300 prisoners who could be available for fire lines. So this year, the California Conservati­on Corps reopened a camp to train three crews of young civilians to do the same backbreaki­ng work as the inmates. Corps Director Bruce Saito expects to create at least four more fire crews with roughly 15 members each by next summer and a half-dozen new crews during each of the next two years.

The corps has more than 1,400 members, but fewer than 200 currently work alongside local, state and federal firefighte­rs battling blazes in rural areas.

The members include both men and women and range in age from 18 to 25. They enlist for one year and earn the state’s minimum wage of $10 an hour. Military veterans can enroll until they turn 30.

Several recruits said they were drawn by the chance to work outdoors, to make a difference as they decide what to do next with their lives and to improve their chances of landing permanent jobs as wildland firefighte­rs.

“You’re kind of like sacrificin­g a lot to gain experience and get ahead in life,” said 21-year-old Jacint Duenez of Camarillo.

Participan­ts said the program lives up to its motto.

They recalled tense hours trying to stay ahead of a fire that burned more than 72 square miles on California’s central coast and threatened the historic Hearst Castle. They hiked past “maybe a 100foot wall of flames — you could feel the heat coming off of it,” said Bobby Falagai, 23, of Oroville. Then they helped other firefighte­rs save a home and outbuildin­gs.

“You could barely see. You could barely breathe. Your eyes are burning. It’s a great time,” Duenez said without a hint of sarcasm. “I was having a lot of fun.”

Conservati­on Corps firefighte­r Adrian Valdivia, 22, of Pomona hopes to turn his experience working under the direction of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection into a career battling wildfires.

“I think the future of the CCC is to fill more fire crews,” Valdivia said. “Then CalFire can use the CCC as a potential hiring tool for future employees, so it works out for everybody.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Civilian firefighte­rs cut fire lines as they work the Soberanes Fire in Garrapata State Park near Big Sur, Calif., in August.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Civilian firefighte­rs cut fire lines as they work the Soberanes Fire in Garrapata State Park near Big Sur, Calif., in August.

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