Sunday, September 23, 2007

California Fire News

California Fire News

Firefighter Says He Feels Lucky To Be Alive

Posted: 22 Sep 2007 07:10 PM CDT

Pine Fire Dozer burnover survivor, Craig Brown

SAN DIEGO -- A Cal Fire firefighter burned driving a tractor while fighting the 2,000-acre Pine Fire describes his horrifying ordea
Craig Brown was burned when the flames burned right over the tractor he was in on the front lines of the fire. He told NBC 7/39 that he remembers every moment of the incident like it was yesterday. "I really couldn't see any direction without seeing flame, so I had to make a decision right there," Brown said. "If I was going to live, I figured I had to get out."Brown was able to get out and was flown to the UCSD Burn Center for treatment, where he still is.
A firefighter NBC 7/39 spoke with said that in 32 years of fighting fires, he has never seen a tractor burned so badly. The vehicles are made out of solid steel and are self-contained and air-conditioned, which usually makes them the safest way to fight the flames up close.San Diego County has four fire bulldozers in the county and eight operators for them.
The wave of support for Brown has been immense -- among other things, Cal Fire flew his daughters down to be with him while he is hospitalized.
From his hospital bed, Brown told NBC 7/39 that he can't wait to get back to work."It's true that we're all a big family," Brown said. "It's true. I'm proud to work for them."Brown still has a long road ahead to his recovery, with continuing treatment to his hands and a few burn spots on his face.

Rough windy day for Tracy Fire...

Posted: 22 Sep 2007 11:35 AM CDT

Wind breaks an ankle and a windshield

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Bob Brownne / Tracy Press / Thursday, 20 September 2007
Today was calm, but Wednesday's gusts left one firefighter's ankle broken and a damaged fire engine in its wake.

Today's winds have calmed down to 8 mph, but Wednesday's high winds through the Altamont Pass took a toll on the Tracy Fire Department.

Division Chief Germane Friends said a firefighter was injured and a fire engine was damaged after winds played havoc on crews that arrived at an overturned big rig and on the scene of a grass fire.

The firefighter, whose name was not released, was about to step out of a truck as it arrived at the scene of the big rig crash — one of two that afternoon — on Interstate 580, just east of Patterson Pass Road. Friends said the wind, which he estimated at 60 mph or more, grabbed the truck's door, swung it open and then slammed it shut on the firefighter's ankle.

Friends said the firefighter, from the Station 94 crew at Schulte and Hansen roads, went to the hospital and will be off duty until his leg heals.

A short time later, the crew from Station 97, based on West Central Avenue, arrived at a grass fire at Interstate 580 and Corral Hollow Road. In that case, the wind also grabbed the fire engine door and swung it around until the rear-view mirror slammed into the truck's windshield. The impact cracked the glass, which will have to be replaced before the engine can go back into service, Friends said.

These were just two of more than half a dozen wind-related calls to which the department responded. The National Weather Service reported sustained winds at 25 mph at Stockton Metropolitan Airport on Wednesday afternoon, with gusts up to 35 mph. Both the Tracy Fire Department and California Highway Patrol estimated winds as high as 60 mph along Interstate 580.

"The dust blowing in the area, it was so bad it looked like a smoke cloud," Friends said.

The fire department responded to five reports of car crashes, each involving more than two cars, two reports of phone lines down and a report of a lightning strike at Byron and Mountain House roads.

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