California National Guard lends hand against wildfires in 30 years
California's wildfire season has become so severe so swiftly that for the first time in more than 30 years, National Guard troops have been deployed to fight the flames on the ground.
California's wildfire season has become so severe so swiftly that for the first time in more than 30 years, National Guard troops have been deployed to fight the flames on the ground. Many are arriving at the fire line just after returning from combat zones.
For Mirander, the two jobs share some similarities. In combat, she said, ``you worried about the bullets. Here, you got the fire.''
The Guard is stepping in as crews across the state struggle to contain hundreds of lightning-sparked fires that have burned more than 1,000 square miles (2,600 square kilometers) and destroyed nearly 100 homes in the last three weeks.
Mirander, a 27-year-old student, left behind her husband and a 7-year-old stepson in Riverside to spend one month working 12-hour days battling the flames.
``It's pretty awesome,'' she said of working alongside other troops. ``We really stand by each other.''
``It'll really relieve a lot of pressure out there,'' Burns said. ``The state got hit by so many fires at once _ we couldn't staff them all.''
Because this fire season started so early, the firefighting conditions have been among the worst in memory, even among longtime crews, said Terence McHale, policy director for CDF Firefighters of Cal Fire, the union representing the firefighters.
``We have firefighters who've been working nonstop since mid-May, who haven't seen their families or homes, who are working 24-hour shifts, 21 days on, sometimes putting in 36 hours in the initial attack of a fire,'' McHale said. ``It's an incredible challenge.''
Firefighters on Thursday positioned themselves on the banks of the Feather River opposite the town of Paradise, preparing for a wind change. The winds expected Friday morning are similar to ones that caused the damaging flare-up Monday night.
Along the scenic Big Sur coast, 27 homes and 31 other structures have burned in a fire that has consumed 140 square miles (363 square kilometers).
Farther south, a separate blaze in the Santa Ynez Mountains had blackened more than 15 square miles (39 square kilometers). It was more than half contained. And at the southern tip of Sequoia National Forest, 90 miles (145 kilometers) north of Los Angeles, a 53-square-mile blaze was almost a third contained.
Strong winds also spread wildfires in Washington state, where three new blazes flared in suburban Spokane and at least three homes burned. Residents of more than a dozen homes were asked to leave.
In California, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger ordered the California National Guard to the front lines and expects to call up more troops. On Thursday, he requested additional resources from President George W Bush.
``We now face extremely high temperatures and increased fuel loads that are exacerbating fire conditions and putting our communities and firefighters and other first responders at risk,'' the governor wrote. ``We sit at a critical tipping point in California that requires immediate federal help.''
Conditions are expected to worsen, with a continuing heat wave and additional lightning storms predicted for the rest of the week, Schwarzenegger said.
Fire officials who trained the Guard members were impressed by the morale of the troops as they prepared to face wildfires for the first time.
``It feels good _ not that it didn't feel good to serve in Iraq. It really feels good to be helping out at home,'' said Jacques Lewis, 51, a postal worker in San Francisco who spent a year in Iraq training soldiers on safety around nuclear, biological and chemical weapons.
About half of the approximately 35 troops training for the wildfires had served in Iraq or Afghanistan, said state fire Captain Walter Williams, who led the training.
But even for troops with combat experience, fighting fires is new, Williams said.
They must learn how flames can double back, leap over trenches and surprise even experienced firefighters. They also have to figure out how and where to dig, and how to feed out a fire hose. And they must get accustomed to hard labor in temperatures that peak around 110 degrees Fahrenheit (43 Celsius).
``We're going to find out how much stamina we all have,'' Williams said.
They won't carry chain saws and won't be placed on an active fire by themselves. Instead, they will work alongside more experienced firefighters, Burns said.
``This is the first time, but I can see this as the future _ utilizing the National Guard when our resources are tapped out,'' he said.
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