Latino fire crews will now face more scrutiny
Jeff Barnard:
One hot summer day in 2002, as the Biscuit fire was roaring through the Siskiyou National Forest, Steve Karkanen and the Lolo Hotshots were trying to keep it from jumping the line at Bear Camp Ridge.
Part of the U.S. Forest Service's elite corps of expert full-time wildland firefighters, the Lolo Hotshots were working with two contract crews, the grunts of the wildfire fighting business -- one of which did not speak much English and showed they also were short on experience.
"One of my guys who was running a dozer went down the hill to corral part of a spot fire," Karkanen, supervisor of the crew, recalled from his office in Missoula, Mont. "A crew of Latinos was tasked with making sure the line was secure.
"They had no idea what they needed to do with it. And more importantly, they weren't communicating the fact that there was a spot fire across the line," which threatened to overtake the bulldozer crew, he said. "It was just a matter of luck I was walking down the line and saw what was developing. ... It was not a good situation at all."
As the nation publicly debates immigration reform, the state of Oregon is enforcing tough new standards on the 158 contract firefighting crews that it oversees.
Contract crews are composed of firefighters employed by private companies that contract with the government to fight fires.
Crews from Oregon account for 78 percent of the contract firefighters in the country and are made up mostly of Latinos.
Each crew consists of 20 people.
Federal costs for fighting wildfires have been running about $1 billion a year since 2000, the year that 8.4 million acres of rangeland and forests burned around the country.
The wildfires show no signs of declining because of drought, a warming climate and forests thick with fuel from a century of putting out fires.
With declining budgets, federal agencies such as the Forest Service can no longer fill the need for full-time firefighters. Contract crews have filled the gap, even though they generally are more expensive.
But that has led to some problems, such as the close call on the Biscuit fire.
Acting on complaints from fire bosses and fire crew contractors, the Oregon Department of Forestry is phasing in standardized tests to ensure crew bosses speak English and the language of their firefighters well enough to be safe on the fire line.
Inspectors check to be sure contractors maintain proper dispatch facilities, records, training and equipment. It is up to contractors to assure that none of their firefighters are illegal immigrants.
Failure can mean suspension or termination of the contract.
Low bidders no longer have first crack at jobs just by keeping estimates down. Starting this year, dispatchers have been able to call in the crew with the best performance record, not the one offering to do the work for less.
Untrained migrants fight fires
With Illegal Immigrants Fighting Wildfires, West Faces a Dilemma
Oregon Begins To Strictly Enforce Language Law
Oregon's Latino Firefighters Raise Safety Concerns
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