BACKGROUND:
Fire crews are
the infantry of any fire department. The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, or
CALFIRE relies heavily on fire crews as one of the three types of ground attack resources
used for wildland fires. The other two types of ground resources are
engines and
dozers. Fire crews work where other mechanized equipment such as engines and dozers do not
easily work and also work directly with engines and dozers supporting their actions. Crews build
fire line in support of containment efforts at wildland fires. Fire crews also assist at search and
rescue, technical rescues including urban search and rescue and at other non-wildland type
emergencies. When not fighting fire, fire crews do work projects in support of CAL
FIRE's Fire Plan to reduce fuel accumulations throughout the state and also perform
conservation and general work projects for other agencies.
The labor or
firefighters for CAL FIRE fire crews comes from its partner agencies including the California
Department of Corrections (CDC), the California Youth Authority (CYA) and the California
Conservation Corps (CCC). CAL FIRE is very proud of its long standing partnerships with
CDC, CYA and CCC. Camps where fire crews are assigned are administered by a CAL
FIRE Assistant Chief with partner agencies assigning a camp program supervisor to work with
the Assistant Chief.
FIRE CREW PROGRAM
HISTORY
CAL FIRE, formally
known as CDF, first implemented fire crews in 1949 using adult male inmates when a tent camp
operation was established at the Minewawa Camp in southern
San Diego
County
. Within a few
years, approximately 12 such CDF-CDC camps existed throughout
California
. Incident
commanders or “fire bosses” as they were then called, soon realized how valuable fire crews could
be to the total wildland fire suppression chore. Today, there are 33 partner camps with CDC, three
within Riverside County.
In the early
seventies, Governor Ronald Reagan instituted the California Ecology Corps. The Corps were an
alternative for young men who were conscientious objectors.
The CDF-Ecology Corps program lasted from 1973
through 1977. Governor Edmund G. Brown, Jr. eliminated the Ecology Corps replacing it with the
CCC,
California
’s new version of
the earlier federal Civilian Conservation Corps. CCC Corpsmember Firefighters are free,
non-incarcerated members. At its peak in the seventies, there were eight CDF-CCC Fire Centers.
Today, there are two fire centers,
Butte
and La Cima
Centers.
CDF reached a peak
of 245 fire crews during the late eighties. Budget cuts reduced the number of crews to today’s
total of 197 crews assigned to 41 camps. During serious fire sieges, 170 to 175 fire crews are
committed to major fires leaving only about 20 crews available for new incidents.
The late eighties
saw the assignment of women inmates and wards to fire crews. Currently, the Puerta La Cruz and
Rainbow Camps in
San Diego
County
and the Ventura
Camp (CYA) have women crew firefighters. Women fire crew firefighters have proven their
effectiveness in working equally well with male crews.
CREW TRAINING
& EQUIPMENT:
CAL FIRE fire
crew firefighters must take and pass a rigorous physical fitness and fire training program before
assignment to a fire crew. The fire crew training course lasts for 64-hours and is strongly task or
performance oriented. Components of the training class include orientation to wildland fire, fire
behavior, working with hand and power tools, fire line construction, working as teammates on a fire
crew and working with engine and dozer companies.
CAL FIRE fire
crews travel to fires and projects in crew transport trucks. The trucks have a box type build-up or
rear crew compartment. The rear crew compartment seats 17 firefighters for a total of carrying
capacity of one captain and 18 crew firefighters. Soon, all crew transports will be equipped with
red lights and sirens to better facilitate fire crew response particularly in urban areas.
Fire crews are
identified by their camp name and crew number. An example for Bautista Camp is Bautista Crew 2. The
crew transport has the abbreviated crew name on the truck. For Bautista Crew 2, the abbreviated
vehicle marking is BAT-2.
Fire crews carry
the same hand tools for fire fighting as does any other fire crew. Primary fire tools include the
chain saw and specific hand tools including the axe, Pulaski Fire Tool (named after the famous USFS
Ranger Ed Pulaski who held dozens of firefighters in a cave saving their lives at a fire in the
early 1900’s), the McLeod Tool and the shovel. Tools are separated into cutting, grubbing and
scraping categories.
OPERATIONAL CREW
USE:
Fire crew tool
assignment is based on the type and height of vegetation. If the fuel is heavy, more cutting and
grubbing tools are assigned. If the fuel is lighter, then less or no chain saws are
assigned.
Each crew is
commanded by a Fire Crew Captain and is separated into functional work groups using the, “Rule of
Fours.” The Rule provides that each crew should have at least four cutters, four grubbers and four
scrapers. If the crew has more than twelve assigned firefighters, the crew captain may assign
additional grubbers, scrapers or “hot shovels” (hot spotting or dirt throwing shovel firefighters).
A chain saw team includes the sawyer and the puller who pulls cut vegetation out of the way of the
sawyer and casts it aside often to the unburned side of the fire line. The saw teams are followed
by the grubbers who loosen the fuel for the scrapers. Some fire crews assign a “drag broom” which
is a firefighter with a large, stiff straw broom who actually sweeps the line to mineral soil clean
of vegetation and duff. The entire line-up of firefighters is called the “hook line” after the
original fire crews who used brush hook tools before the invention of the chain saw. Consequently,
the lead sawyer is still called the “Lead Hook.”
Fire crews work
both direct (on the fire edge) and indirect (away from the fire’s edge) fire assignments. Indirect
assignments are the most dangerous since it is more difficult to get into the burn or the black
when working indirect.
A fire line is
generally 1.5 times as wide as the fuel is high. If the crew is working in 4’ foot high brush, the
fire line will probably be about 6’ wide. In that six foot width will be the canopy cut which is
the entire width of the line through the brush. The scrape or part cleaned to mineral soil will not
always be as wide as the canopy cut.
Fire crews are
very adept at hot line fire fighting. In that mode, the fire crew will anchor from some favorable
point from which the fire cannot fish hook behind them and begin rapidly cutting a narrow fire line
(scratch line) to attempt to pinch off the head of the fire before it develops a strong head of
steam.
In addition to
taking the regular CAL FIRE basic firefighting courses, ICS courses, fire behavior,
intermediate and advanced incident management and firing courses, CAL FIRE captains also take a two
week course in working with fire crews. The course covers both administrative and operational
aspects of fire crews including working with CDC, CYA and CCC firefighters.
Information Provided by CAL FIRE Chief John R. Hawkins