Wildfires

Firefighters Return to Conn. After Battling California Wildfires

Allan Waterman, Red Salmon Complex Fire

A group of 10 firefighters from Connecticut and Massachusetts has returned home after spending the last several weeks helping to battle wildfires in northern California.

The group left Connecticut on Sept. 4 and initially worked with the Hoopa Tribe on the Hoopa Valley Reservation, which is located in the northwestern part of the state. They later helped with the fire response in the Shasta-Trinity National Forest in northern California.

The firefighters were scheduled to appear Saturday at the Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection’s Eastern District Headquarters. The group includes four full-time DEEP employees, one full-time employee from Rhode Island’s Department of Environmental Management, and five private individuals who were hired temporarily by the federal government. Nine are from Connecticut and one is from Massachusetts.

Connecticut’s environmental protection agency maintains a roster of agency staff who have been certified to fight forest fires or wildfires. They must complete a rigorous training program and participate in an annual physical test, as well as refresher training. It’s part of a reciprocal aid program run by the U.S. Forest Service, which makes trained personnel available from other states to help Connecticut in case there’s a fire emergency or other natural disaster.

The state’s expenses associated with the deployments are fully reimbursed by the U.S. Forest Service.

This was the second group of Connecticut Interstate Fire Crew firefighters that Connecticut has sent this season. A previous group of 10 was deployed in late July to assist with wildfire response in the Modoc National Forest area in northeastern California. Two full-time DEEP staff members were part of that group.

Copyright The Associated Press
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