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Forestry Commission deploys wildland firefighters to California

Photo courtesy of MFC

Mississippi is sending assistance as a wildfire spreads out West. 

The Mississippi Forestry Commission (MFC) has deployed a 20-person crew of wildland firefighters to assist state and federal partners with wildfire suppression efforts in California. According to the MFC, the crew will be assisting on the Salt Fire in the Shasta Trinity National Forest in northern California. The fire is currently estimated at 2,800 acres.

“We appreciate our employees volunteering to be part of these efforts to help our state and federal partners in California,” Russell Bozeman, MFC state forester, said. “Fighting the destructive power of wildfire means our wildland firefighters are working long hours in extreme conditions protecting people’s lives, homes and forestland.”

The members of the 20-person team are trained in wildland firefighting tactics and work together to help contain wildfires by constructing a fireline with hand tools. The MFC describes a fireline as a strip of land cleared of flammable vegetation down to the mineral soil, creating a perimeter clear of fuel around the wildfire.

Due to the mountainous terrain and accessibility issues associated with using heavy equipment to create firelines in many areas out West, hand tool crews are frequently utilized on-the-ground to battle wildfires. While hand tool crews are still used in some parts of the state due to rough or inaccessible terrain, bulldozers and tractor-plow units are the primary tools used by wildland firefighters to contain wildfires in Mississippi.

The crew names will be released upon their safe return to Mississippi in approximately two weeks.

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