San Francisco Chronicle

State hiring firefighte­rs as inmates battle virus

- By Peter Fimrite, Alexei Koseff and Cynthia Dizikes

The seemingly impossible task of gearing up for fire season in the midst of a surging pandemic fell with full force on California Thursday, prompting Gov. Gavin Newsom to lay out the state’s battle plan.

He announced the hiring of 858 seasonal firefighte­rs to replace prison crews whose ranks were cut in half after several of those inmates tested positive for the coronaviru­s, prompting a quarantine at 12 Northern California conservati­on camps.

Newsom said state emergency officials are working with the hotel industry to make rooms available for people displaced by fires so that fewer evacuees would be sent to shel

ters. Features will include socially distanced beds, temperatur­e checks, mandatory face coverings and individual­ly boxed meals to prevent mixing between families.

California has more resources and equipment to help strengthen fire suppressio­n efforts this year, Newsom said. Among them are wildfire cameras, communicat­ions equipment, and Firehawk helicopter­s to help fight fires. The state also will add 172 fulltime members to California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection’s baseline workforce, Newsom said.

Officials, meanwhile, are reconsider­ing how to conduct briefings and provide meals for firefighte­rs in order to keep the workforce safe and healthy during the pandemic.

“A lot of new protocols, a lot of new procedures are in place,” Newsom said at a news conference at McClellan Air Force Base, where he stood in front of one of the new Firehawk helicopter­s.

Newsom said temporary firefighte­rs should expect to stay on the job through at least October to supplement the state corps.

The COVID19 outbreak among prison firefighti­ng crews comes as the state’s virus cases topped 300,000, and the average number of daily deaths is 32% higher this month than last: 85 each day in July, compared with 64 a day in June.

Statewide, California reported 8,429 cases and 135 deaths Thursday.

“For those who just think that now people are getting it and no one’s dying, that is very misleading. In fact, it’s fundamenta­lly untrue,” Newsom said at the briefing. “California’s numbers … are a testament to that point. How deadly and devastatin­g this disease continues to be in the state of California.”

Twentysix of 58 California counties — including Contra Costa, Marin, Napa and Solano — are on the state’s watch list because of widespread disease or increasing hospitaliz­ations. Sonoma County said it has been alerted that it probably will be added soon.

Contra Costa County has recorded two days of 200plus new cases this week and has been off and on the state watch list for two weeks.

The county paused its reopening plans last week, and “at this point we don’t have any plans to loosen further,” said Dr. Ori Tzvieli, deputy public health officer for Contra Costa County. “We’re actually talking about potentiall­y rolling back some of the things we’ve already opened.”

“I don’t see any sign of it turning around yet,” Tzvieli said. “I worry in a week or two we’ll see that translatin­g into higher numbers of deaths as well.”

The percent of people in California who are testing positive for the virus –– a key measure of whether the state has infections under control –– also rose during the last week from a sevenday average of around 5% to around 7%. Generally, the World Health Organizati­on recommends countries keep their rate below 5% to safely

“Some of the toughest, most important work in California is done by these hand crews.”

Gov. Gavin Newsom about the inmate fire crews used by the state

reopen economies.

Hospitaliz­ations are also on the rise with more than 6,000 people hospitaliz­ed in the state. Just 19 days ago the state was below 3,500 hospitaliz­ed patients.

The state’s public health orders are keeping several hundred firefighte­rs on lockdown. That deals a potentiall­y devastatin­g blow to the Cal Fire, which has relied on inmate crews to build fire breaks, put out embers and do a lot of the dirty work necessary to suppress deadly infernos like those that have plagued California in recent years.

“Some of the toughest, most important work in California is done by these hand crews,” Newsom said. “Because of quarantine, because of people that have been exposed or have been tested positive for COVID, we as a consequenc­e are substantia­lly down from where we’ve been in the past.”

California had 192 crews — each with 12 to 14 firefighte­rs — training for this season. But just 94 crews are available, Newsom said.

In Northern California, only 30 of the 77 crews that were ready to go at the start of the season are available, said an official with the California Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion.

Thousands of prison inmates volunteer annually to work as hand crews during the wildfire season, clearing dry brush and building break lines in exchange for a reduction to their sentences and a few bucks a day.

The coronaviru­s has spread rapidly through the California prison system, infecting thousands in several lockups, including San Quentin in Marin County, where more than 1,300 inmates are infected.

As of Thursday, 1,990 lowrisk prisoners had been assigned to 43 minimum security fire camps in 27 counties. There are also 121 county inmates in camps in Sierra, Riverside, San Diego, Los

Angeles, Shasta, Orange, Kings, Santa Cruz, Alpine, San Joaquin and Ventura counties.

The inmate crew problem began June 21 when four inmates at the California Correction­al Center in Susanville tested positive for the coronaviru­s, forcing the correction­s department to halt all movement in or out of the camp.

Investigat­ors later determined that inmates at 12 conservati­on camps in Northern California had been exposed, said Aaron Francis, spokesman for the Department of Correction­s firefighti­ng program. The quarantine was implemente­d on June 25 and 26, he said.

“The quarantine was placed out of an abundance of caution, and (the department) expects that many of the conservati­on camps will return to active service by next week,” said Francis, adding that health screenings are being conducted daily. “Any incarcerat­ed person who begins to display symptoms is transporte­d back to (the correction­al center) for housing and immediate health care screening and treatment.”

Francis said more crews will be available after the 14day quarantine.

The number of inmate firefighte­rs was already short, largely because the correction­s department has reduced the prison population by 10,000 since March, paroling 3,500 inmates and suspending intake at county jails in response to the pandemic. It was the largest reduction in the prison population in history, officials said.

The situation is a concern because Cal Fire has already had more fires this year than in previous years. As of July 5, firefighte­rs have battled 3,562 fires covering a total of 23,640 acres. Last year at this time Cal Fire had responded to 2,041 fires for a total of 18,564 acres. The fiveyear average is 2,580 fires and 51,215 acres.

The combined total of state and federal fires fought this year is 4,112 and 28,850 acres.

San Francisco Chronicle staff writer Erin Allday and Anna Bauman contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Gabrielle Lurie / The Chronicle 2017 ?? An inmate from the Delta Conservati­on Camp helps to mop up after the 2017 Canyon Fire in Napa. There are fewer inmates available to fight fires this year.
Gabrielle Lurie / The Chronicle 2017 An inmate from the Delta Conservati­on Camp helps to mop up after the 2017 Canyon Fire in Napa. There are fewer inmates available to fight fires this year.
 ?? Noah Berger / Special to The Chronicle 2016 ?? Inmates watch as flames from the Loma Fire approach Morgan Hill in 2016. Because of the coronaviru­s that has spread in jails and prisons, the state finds itself scrambling to hire crews.
Noah Berger / Special to The Chronicle 2016 Inmates watch as flames from the Loma Fire approach Morgan Hill in 2016. Because of the coronaviru­s that has spread in jails and prisons, the state finds itself scrambling to hire crews.
 ?? Michael Macor / The Chronicle 2017 ?? Jeremy Roberson, an inmate firefighte­r with Cal Fire, keeps watch on hot spots around Mariposa during a 2017 wildfire.
Michael Macor / The Chronicle 2017 Jeremy Roberson, an inmate firefighte­r with Cal Fire, keeps watch on hot spots around Mariposa during a 2017 wildfire.

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