Monday, May 11, 2020

P-25 mobile firefighting vehicle on the flight deck of the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln


 Ammo Offload
PACIFIC OCEAN
05.09.2020
Courtesy Photo
USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN 72)  


200509-N-HW207-1108
PACIFIC OCEAN (May 9, 2020) Crash and salvage team members man a P-25 mobile firefighting vehicle on the flight deck of the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN 72) during a replenishment-at-sea with the dry cargo and ammunition ship USNS Matthew Perry (T-AKE 9). Abraham Lincoln is underway conducting routine operations in the U.S. 3rd Fleet area of operations. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist Seaman Apprentice Louis Lea/Released)

Ammo Offload
 (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist Seaman Apprentice Louis Lea/Released)

Sunday, May 10, 2020

U.S. Navy Seabees with NMCB-5 support White Beach Naval Facility’s Fire Station

U.S. Navy Seabees with NMCB-5 support White Beach Naval Facility’s Fire Station
OKINAWA, AICHI, JAPAN
05.05.2020
Courtesy Photo
Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 5  

OKINAWA, Japan (May 5, 2020) Utilitiesman 3rd Class Richard Robledo, from Saint Marry, Georgia, and Builder 3rd Class Jaqueline Maleckar, from Cedar Lake, Indiana, both deployed with Naval Mobile Construction Battalion (NMCB) 5, cut sheets for the walls of a new mezzanine structure at White Beach Naval Facility’s Fire Station, in support of Commander Fleet Activities Okinawa. NMCB-5 is deployed across the Indo-Pacific region conducting high-quality construction to support U.S. and partner nations to strengthen partnerships, deter aggression, and enable expeditionary logistics and naval power projection. (U.S. Navy photo by Lt. Joshua Moore/Released)

Saturday, May 9, 2020

Dyess conducts high-expansion foam system test

Dyess conducts high-expansion foam system test

DYESS AIR FORCE BASE, TX, UNITED STATES
05.06.2020
Photo by Staff Sgt. David Owsianka 
7th Bomb Wing Public Affairs  

Members of the Dyess Fire Department and contractors conducted a test of a high-expansion foam fire suppression system within a hangar at Dyess Air Force Base, Texas, May 6, 2020. There are switches inside each hangar to activate the system, and the foam will begin working within 30 seconds of being activated. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. David Owsianka)

Dyess conducts high-expansion foam system test

Water comes out of a hose during a high-expansion foam fire suppression system test within a hangar at Dyess Air Force Base, Texas, May 6, 2020. The system is designed to extinguish fires within an aircraft hangar in less than 90 seconds. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. David Owsianka)

Dyess conducts high-expansion foam system test

Foam sits within a hangar during a high-expansion foam fire suppression system test at Dyess Air Force Base, Texas, May 6, 2020. The foam is a quick-acting way to put out a fire and reduce the amount of damage done to aircraft within the hangar. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. David Owsianka)

Friday, May 8, 2020

New face in town, Camp Pendleton Fire gets a new Chief

New face in town: Camp Pendleton Fire Department gets a new chief
Ken Helgerson, the fire chief of Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton Fire Department, poses in front of a fire engine at Camp Pendleton Fire Station 7, in the 52 Area on Camp Pendleton, California, May 4, 2020. Helgerson has been fire chief since January. Helgerson is a native of Somerset, Massachusetts. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Drake Nickels.)

CAMP PENDLETON, CA, UNITED STATES
05.04.2020
Story by Lance Cpl. Drake Nickels 
Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton  

The Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton Fire Department has a new leader for the upcoming fire season. As of January, Chief Ken Helgerson has taken the reins as the new fire chief.

Helgerson may be new to the Camp Pendleton Fire Department but is no stranger to leadership in the firefighting community. He served as a firefighter with the U.S. Air Force for 20 years and retired from active duty in 2005. Since then, he has held the role of fire chief at three other installations.

“Camp Pendleton feels like a natural fit,” said Helgerson. “My focus is to make sure we are doing everything in the way we are supposed to according to policy.”

Helgerson is in charge of over 100 firefighters spread across 11 stations that respond to all emergency calls on Camp Pendleton. The firefighters stay vigilant by strategically placing gear and personnel in different areas of the installation.

“I promote the firefighters handling and managing stress with the hazards they are presented with,” said Helgerson. “The ability to do that has to be generated with resources, by putting the right amount of people and equipment in the right places.”

While also working with the resources inside the gate, Helgerson also works with neighboring communities and their departments to ensure aid, training, resources and personnel are given where it's needed.

“The mutual aid partnership is about working together to ensure readiness for large scale emergencies,” added Helgerson. “It's important to get a large response footprint.”

Similar to the Marine Corps, the Camp Pendleton Fire Department leadership may change but the mission continues. Helgerson and his team are a key component to ensuring Marines continue to train while keeping the installation and the community safe.

California Guard prepares for annual non-virus enemy

California Guard prepares for annual non-virus enemy
U.S. Army Brig. Gen. Jeffrey D. Smiley, joint staff director, California Military Department, and Chief Master Sgt. Thomas L. James, command senior enlisted leader, California National Guard, review firefighting assets of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE) May 4 at McClellan Air Base, Sacramento. CAL FIRE initiated Wildfire Preparedness Week, creating public awareness of the fire season ahead. Via CAL FIRE, being ready for wildfire starts with maintaining an adequate defensible space and by hardening your home by using fire resistant building materials. For nearly three decades, CAL FIRE and Cal Guard share a unique firefighting program as both entities yearly battle a fierce enemy — wildfires. (Army National Guard photo by Staff Sgt. Eddie Siguenza)

CA, UNITED STATES
05.04.2020
Story by Staff Sgt. Edward Siguenza 
California National Guard    


SACRAMENTO, Calif. — It’s not the novel coronavirus, nor is it terrorism, that the California National Guard deems it’s its greatest annual enemy.

This yearly foe is an unforgivable …. that will strike very soon. And it’s usually this time of year when Cal Guard unites with California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE) to prepare for another battle with its nemesis — wildfires.

“We say it every year, and we’re doing it again: It’s not a question of ‘if’ California will burn, it’s when,” said Thom Porter, CAL FIRE director, during a May 4 initiation of Wildfire Preparedness Week. “This year is stacking up to be definitely more difficult looking than last year. Last year we had a lot of snow in the mountains, lots of late-season rain. We had a slow start to our peak fire season. That’s not going to be the same this year.”

Added Porter, “We’ve already started burning. We’re already 400 hundred fires ahead of our average for this time of the year.”

California is still in the mist of the COVID-19 pandemic, but it hasn’t deterred CAL FIRE and Cal Guard from their wildfire readiness. Cal Guard has already initiated air asset training in Southern California, as crews of CH-47 Chinooks and CH-60 Black Hawks are involved. These rotary-powered aircraft utilized “buckets” that can drop hundreds of gallons of water on wildfires that are difficult to reach.

In a matter of weeks, Northern California air assets will commence their preparedness.

Aside from rotary-powered aircraft, Cal Guard is equipped with Modular Airborne Firefighting System (MAFF) air tankers that can drop thousands of gallons of retardant or water on difficult terrain. Cal Guard has provided unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), sometimes known as drones, as eyes in the sky. These UAVs help determine a wildfire’s characteristics, such as its intensity and possible direction.

When necessary, Cal Guard has provided CAL FIRE with ground troops who “mop up” burnt areas. Armed with hand tools, these Soldiers seek and diffuse small fires that could potentially ignite in the future.

Cal Guard has provided other assets, such as military police, fuelers and bridge builders, in previous wildfires.

“We’re better prepared than we normally are. We’ve taken advantage of some of the slowdown in the Department of Defense to leverage money and time that we would otherwise not have available to dedicate to firefighting to further prepare ourselves,” said Maj. Gen. David Baldwin, adjutant general, California Military Department. “We have trained helicopter crews. We have five hand crews already trained and ready to respond immediately. We have identified another 800 Soldiers, Airmen and Sailors that could be available to be trained as firefighting hand crews. We continue to leverage our unique technologies that we have in the military.”

Added Baldwin, “We stand ready.”

Cal Guard activated more than 1,000 Soldiers, Airmen and State Guard personnel for COVID-19 humanitarian support. It recently reached a milestone as Cal Guard troops helped surpass more than 15 million meals packed and distributed to the community via food banks. Cal Guard has assisted at almost two dozen food banks throughout the state since mid-March, when Gov. Gavin Newsom activated the reserve component.

Since 2015, the state has weathered 10 of California’s Top 20 destructive fires in history, according to Mark Ghilarducci, director of California Office of Emergency Services (Cal OES). He noted the Camp Fire in 2018 “being more catastrophic than the ones before.”

“We’re not immune to disasters,” Ghilarducci explained. “We’re challenged regularly.”

CAL FIRE, Cal Guard, and Cal OES unite with the U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management as well as California law enforcement to encourage everyone to create a fire prevention plan.

“As firefighters, we know that over the last several years we’ve had drought conditions that caused 147 million trees to die in the sierra,” Porter explained. “Those trees are still out there. No amount of rain is going to bring those trees back.”

The public and all California communities to prepare for wildfires during this COVID-19 term. More information can be found at www.fire.ca.gov or www.readyforwildfire.org. 

California Guard prepares for annual non-virus enemy
Thom Porter, director, California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE), announces the beginning of Wildfire Preparedness Week May 4 as California Military Department adjutant general Maj. Gen. David Baldwin supports the announcement during a press conference at McClellan Air Base, Sacramento. Porter commended Cal Guard, noting their partnership has “gotten so tight over the last few years” as firefighting operations became so demanding due to the large and destructive wildfires of late. (Army National Guard photo by Staff Sgt. Eddie Siguenza)

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