The Columbus Dispatch

How camps keep 20,000 firefighters prepared

- Keith Ridler

BOISE, Idaho – Empty cow pastures on one day can be bustling with hundreds of firefighters the next as fire camps with colorful tent cities spring up.

More than 20,000 wildland firefighters are battling some 100 large wildfires in the U.S. West, and truckloads of supplies and equipment are needed to keep them effective at fighting flames for weeks on end.

“We’ll set up a small village,” said Evans Kuo, a Type 1 incident commander assigned to the nation’s biggest and most dangerous wildfires. His incident command team has 44 members. “The main idea of the camp is to not only

house the incident command team, but also house the base camp that has food, water, sleeping and showers.”

How large are fire camps?

The size of each camp is determined by the size and complexity of the wildfire, with the largest blazes drawing more than 1,000 firefighters and support staff that are directed by Type 1 incident command teams.

U.S. Interior Department agencies, primarily the Bureau of Land Management, and the U.S. Forest Service supply firefighters, as do state agencies and tribes.

There also are Type 2 command teams on smaller and less complex blazes that draw from about 200 to 500 firefighters. Type 3 incidents may or may not have a fire camp.

More than 95% of all wildfires are put out quickly or within days by local firefighters, and are classified as Type 4 or 5. They typically don’t have fire camps.

Food caterers, semi-trailers with shower stalls and portable bathrooms are brought into large fire camps to make sure firefighters get enough food and a chance to wash off the dirt, ash and sweat.

“That’s a huge morale boost out on the line,” said Bubba Pugh, who has been fighting wildfires with the Idaho Department of Lands for about a decade. “Having the fire camp helps us get the job done.”

Who’s in charge of a fire camp?

An incident commander with decades of firefighting experience runs the show, plotting short-term and longterm strategy that’s recalibrat­ed daily. Fire camp responsibi­lities are separated into divisions that include planning, logistics, communicat­ions, medical and even security.

Large fires will also have an air operations branch to coordinate fire retardant drops by jets or other aircraft, as well as water drops by helicopter­s. Some camps will also have a person in charge of night operations, when firefighters can make good progress.

Public informatio­n officers help inform area residents through social media and news outlets. They also work with law enforcemen­t officials on evacuation­s and road closures.

While fire camps are hierarchic­al, the system includes an outlet for firefighters to anonymousl­y report safety concerns to an employee relations person at a camp or online.

Camps also include someone tracking the overall cost of fighting the fire, which can run into the millions of dollars. The federal government spent $2.3 billion fighting wildfires last year, a number that’s expected to grow significantly this year.

Where are fire camps?

Kuo said schools make good fire camps because they have electricit­y and internet access, something that has become increasing­ly important in fighting fires. Informatio­n can be distribute­d to firefighters on smartphone­s using code scanners.

Firefighters bring their own tents, and can set up on athletic fields or, if in more remote areas, anywhere from meadows to cow pastures.

“Sometimes we don’t get the most luxurious fields to sleep in,” Pugh said. “But find a nice, flat piece of ground, and just expect to be there for the duration.”

Communicat­ion in remote locations is mainly done through handheld radios. Communicat­ions teams put repeaters – devices that receive radio signals and retransmit them – on ridgetops so commanders can communicat­e with firefighters in the field.

The National Interagenc­y Fire Center in Boise has the largest store of handheld radios outside the U.S. Department of Defense. Center spokeswoma­n Jessica Gardetto said most of the center’s radios, about 23,000, are at large wildfires. All radios are not in use at the same time as they need to be charged.

Remote command posts are often operated from yurts, or office trailers, with different divisions having their own workspace.

Large fires also often have satellite camps to save time because it can take hours to drive from a command post to other areas of the fire.

How and when is food served?

Firefighters get three calorie-heavy meals a day and snacks to keep them fueled for the physically intensive work.

Before the coronaviru­s pandemic, firefighters gathered in chow halls in the morning and evening, enjoying the camaraderi­e of the job while away from the fire line. Now, firefighters disperse to eat their meals, sometimes going back to their tents or finding a tree to sit under. Lunch is typically a bag lunch eaten in the field.

At satellite camps, pre-cooked food is flown to them.

What’s the plan?

Type 1 and Type 2 incident command teams each day produce an incident action plan that spells out goals and responsibi­lities, typically looking four days ahead. Each day the plan is recalibrat­ed based on a variety of factors, chief among them weather. The plan is typically 12 to 20 pages long, and is made available as a PDF so it can be viewed on smartphone­s or other devices.

Kuo gets up at 5 a.m. to prepare for the 6 a.m. morning briefing, which is followed by other briefings and planning sessions during the day that lasts to 10 p.m.

“Somewhere in there you try to grab some food,” he said.

Most firefighters have been on the job for months, and will likely be needed for more than another month as some fires are expected to burn well into September.

“There is some burnout factor,” Kuo said, summing up the current atmosphere among firefighters. “But this is what we signed up for, so you dig deep and get through it.”

 ?? AP FILE ?? Oregon Gov. Kate Brown, left, visits the Bly Fire Camp, on the southern edge of a wildfire, in June in Klamath County, Ore.
AP FILE Oregon Gov. Kate Brown, left, visits the Bly Fire Camp, on the southern edge of a wildfire, in June in Klamath County, Ore.

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