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Oregon Prepares To Fight Wildfire During Coronavirus Pandemic

Ayva Burkhart practices a firefighting technique called “pump and roll.” It would normally involve putting out a live fire, but this year’s training eliminated live fire to avoid the health risks of smoke during the coronavirus pandemic.
Cassandra Profita/OPB
Ayva Burkhart practices a firefighting technique called “pump and roll.” It would normally involve putting out a live fire, but this year’s training eliminated live fire to avoid the health risks of smoke during the coronavirus pandemic.

One thing that isn’t being canceled this summer because of the coronavirus pandemic is wildfire season, so training for hundreds of wildland firefighters has changed to reduce the risk of spreading COVID-19.

There is a lot of hand-washing, new outdoor classrooms and social distancing rules, and there’s no practicing with live fire because the smoke would increase health risks — both for the firefighters and the people who live nearby.

"You could have between 1,000 and 3,000 people living in a fire camp," he said. "They’re naturally known for not being the most sanitary places to live when you’re out there sleeping in tents and in the dirt."

Firefighters living in fire camps often work exhausting 16 hour days and share the same spaces for meals and showers.

"So it’s an environment that’s just ripe for transmission," Larson said. "There’s been a history of camp crud running through, just the different colds people get."

The state is planning to redesign its fire camps to reduce the risk of an outbreak among firefighters, according to ODF spokesman Jim Gersbach.

"The goal will be to maintain social distance and minimize the mixing of people," he said. "There will be a real look at who needs to be at the fire camp and what can be done remotely."

Firefighters use a hand-washing station with socially distanced sinks at a training event in June, 2020.
Cassandra Profita
Firefighters use a hand-washing station with socially distanced sinks at a training event in June, 2020.

Firefighters are being arranged into units that can function like households, he said, so they will only interact with each other and use the same equipment for the season.

"You treat your work unit like you would your household," he said. "When they go to the campground, they stay away from other families. They will be assigned one engine, and they will eat together, camp together."

"Lots of logistical things are already routine for fire camp administrators," he said. "They’ve just got one more thing to add to the mix."

Officials are expecting an above-average fire season this year, and so far Oregon has seen more wildfires than usual. However, Gersbach noted the fires on lands protected by ODF have been smaller this year, with just 190 acres burned so far compared to the 10-year average of 1,409 acres burned by Monday.

For firefighter training in Southern Oregon this month, ODF implemented new procedures for hand-washing and sanitizing equipment. Each trainee is required to self-administer a "fit for duty" check that involves taking their own temperature and reporting any symptoms of COVID-19 before reporting to work. 

The agency created new outdoor classrooms by putting chairs 6 feet apart in their bus barns, and it separated trainees into smaller groups that require less space to maintain social distancing.

Oregon Department of Forestry wildfire trainees learn new skills in a classroom with social distancing.
Cassandra Profita
Oregon Department of Forestry wildfire trainees learn new skills in a classroom with social distancing.

Larson said agency leaders are "writing the book as we go" while trying to follow federal and state guidelines for reducing the risk of an outbreak among firefighters. 

“We’ve always had an aggressive firefighting strategy, and that’s not changing,” he said. “But if you were on your day off and you got called to a fire, normally you’d jump in any available engine and be off. That’s not going to be the case today.”

Copyright 2020 Oregon Public Broadcasting