Brendan McDonough Archives - 国产吃瓜黑料 Online /byline/brendan-mcdonough/ Live Bravely Thu, 12 May 2022 18:18:59 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cdn.outsideonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/favicon-194x194-1.png Brendan McDonough Archives - 国产吃瓜黑料 Online /byline/brendan-mcdonough/ 32 32 How We Can Make Wildland Firefighting Safer /outdoor-adventure/exploration-survival/how-we-can-make-wildland-firefighting-safer/ Thu, 16 Jun 2016 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/how-we-can-make-wildland-firefighting-safer/ How We Can Make Wildland Firefighting Safer

Hotshots take on exceptional risk. Could unionizing give them the voice they need to avoid deadly situations like Yarnell Hill?

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How We Can Make Wildland Firefighting Safer

Even though I made progress, there were things that triggered the bad old thoughts. Even now, every time we get to March and April, I can feel myself tensing up. Fire season is starting again. Despite all the investigations and reports on Yarnell, nothing鈥檚 really changed on the ground for hotshots. It鈥檚 still the same tools, the same procedures, the same fire conditions, if not worse. I dread waking up one day and hearing on the news that a crew got trapped in a wildfire and a bunch of guys died.聽

It鈥檚 inevitable. Someone has to fight the flames and fire is an unpredictable and dangerous thing. But I wish there was a better way.

I wanted to change things. How can we make it safer out there? I got a call the other day from someone working on a new fire shelter. The old ones, the ones used in Yarnell, can withstand heats up to maybe 700 degrees of radiant heat. The guys working on this new one want a shelter than can take up to 1700 degrees.聽

That鈥檚 great. That would be a big plus for hotshots. But every solution seems to have a hidden black lining. With the shelter, I know firefighters and fire chiefs, and the better equipment you give them, the deeper into the fire they鈥檙e going to want to push. They鈥檒l use the better equipment to become more effective firefighters. It鈥檚 a Catch-22: give a man a bulletproof vest, he鈥檒l get that much closer to his adversary.聽

But there are things we can do to make hotshots safer. The first is a tracking system for each firefighter. Right now hotshots have GPS on them and can report in where they are by radio. But in extreme conditions, when the fire is bearing down on you, you鈥檙e not thinking about giving your position. You鈥檙e thinking about living for the next 120 seconds. Comms during a fire can be sketchy. The 鈥榮aw is buzzing in your ears and the fire is ripping up a stand of trees; it鈥檚 loud out there. Sometimes guys just don鈥檛 hear the radio. And sometimes it鈥檚 hard to hear what someone in the field is trying to tell you.聽

Wildland firefighters are continuously being put into dangerous situations where they have no voice and no power.
(Michael Thompson)

So we need a locator that can transmit the hotshot鈥檚 position continuously and that everyone in the field can see in real time. A supervisor sitting in a truck somewhere would have a computer on his lap with the up-to-the-second location of every hotshot. With eyes on the fire, he could tell them what鈥檚 coming at them. The fire is shifting your way. Get out.

These locators exist. They鈥檙e called SENDs, or Satellite Emergency Notification Devices, and they look like a small walkie-talkies that can fit in the palm of your hand. They often work off satellite when there is no cell service available and they function even in the 20 percent of forest terrain that cannot get radio coverage, so they鈥檙e perfect for fighting fires in the wilderness. In April, 2012, over a year before Yarnell, the U.S. Forest Service notified tech companies that it was in the market to buy the device. They ended up purchasing thousands of them, but Granite Mountain didn鈥檛 have them at Yarnell.聽

Every hotshot in America should have one.

A SEND also contains an SOS button. The firefighter hits it and the dispatchers monitoring the system instantly know two things: the hotshot is in trouble, and his exact location. That alert also warns his fellow hotshots that鈥檚 something really dangerous at the exact spot their buddy is working.

A helicopter pilot bringing in a load of water would be able to spot a trapped crew and dump right over them. Other hotshots could roll toward them on their UTV鈥檚. It would be a complete, coordinated response and it would be fast.

A system like that might have helped at Yarnell. The pilot in that VLAT that was hovering above the ridge would have known instantaneously that the crew was in trouble and their exact position. Could he have laid a line of retardant across them? He would have had only one shot at it. Maybe he makes it. Maybe not. But it was more of a chance than they had.

(Courtesy of Hahette Books)

The tech part is easier than the philosophy. A lot of people think hotshots need to increase their margin of safety, get farther away from the burning edge. That鈥檚 a tough one. There鈥檚 a basic conflict between the effectiveness of a hotshot crew and their safety. How are you going to tell a crew, 鈥淭here are people鈥檚 houses over the next ridge that are under threat, but we鈥檙e holding you here.鈥 What鈥檚 the point of having firefighters in the field then? It鈥檚 like telling Marines, 鈥淎 village is being burned to the ground, but it鈥檚 too dangerous to send you in.鈥 The last people who want to hear that kind of thing is a hotshot.

One thing I do know: more helicopters, more firefighters and more tanker planes would help. The more resources you put into a wildfire, the safer it is for everyone. But either the money isn鈥檛 either there for new tankers or it鈥檚 not going to the places it needs to go.聽

I don鈥檛 blame people who want their houses saved. But some people don鈥檛 want to pay the extra taxes to see that we have everything we need. An on-call tanker costs around $14,000 a day. Put it in the air, and the bill soars to $4,200 an hour. Big helicopters are even more expensive: upwards of $30,000 a day for on-call duty, and over $6,000 an hour for in flight.

Add in millions for a new tanker when the fire is gone? Nine times out of ten, the answer is no.聽

Two years after Yarnell, I was listening to the news when I heard about a wildfire in Washington. A four-man engine crew聽had been trying to get away from the flames and the men had crashed their truck. The fire caught them. Three of them died; one survived but was badly burned.**聽

I sat down and cried and cried. I felt sick. It was happening again. The same elements as Yarnell: dry tinder. Fast-moving winds. A red flag warning in the area. A change in direction in the firewall. And hotshots trying to do their job, dying. I thought of their families, especially, the years of searing pain that lie ahead of them.聽

Something has to change. Has to.

We need a hotshot union in America. It鈥檚 beyond clear to me that wildland firefighters are continuously being put into dangerous situations where they have no voice and no power. It鈥檚 time for a union that will fight for what hotshots need to do their job. Better pay. Better working conditions. More resources. And, most importantly of all, improved safety.聽

When your house catches on fire, the men and women who show up to help you belong to a union. The International Association of Firefighters has a quarter million members, and they all have fairer pay and better working conditions than almost any hotshot in America. That鈥檚 just wrong.

Wildfires are getting bigger. They鈥檙e burning hotter, wider, and longer. As I write this, 20,000 firefighters are in the field in the West and it鈥檚 not enough. The government is giving National Guard troops emergency hotshot training so they can help out crews that are stretched beyond their limits. Even as I鈥檓 writing this, there鈥檚 a crew of 20 firefighters working a 32-hour shift on a fireline somewhere in California. They鈥檙e bone-tired. They haven鈥檛 seen their families in weeks. They鈥檙e working under supervisors who are exhausted and overworked. When that crew kills the fire they鈥檙e on, there are two or three more waiting for them. It鈥檚 inevitable that mistakes will be made.

2015 was a horrible year for wildfires. More are coming.聽

I鈥檒l be the first to admit I鈥檓 not an expert. I鈥檓 not a veteran hotshot; I was a three-year seasonal employee who saw a lot of action during a time of drought. But three seasons was enough to at least see that there was a problem in how we fight wildfires nationally. One headline from Washington is enough, if it talks about fatalities. Innovation in how we fight wildfires needs to start somewhere. If I can help spark that change, I鈥檇 feel what I鈥檝e gone through had some meaning beyond me.

When I go around the country talking about this book, I鈥檓 going to meet with hotshots. I鈥檓 going to ask them about their lives and talk about the future of our profession. Hotshots have insights that the people making decisions about our lives don鈥檛 have. We know what works and what doesn鈥檛. We can be a force for good. Maybe joining together is the way to get there.

The system we have isn鈥檛 working, period. Guys are dying in the same exact scenarios that were killing hotshots 50 or 75 years ago. 聽The exact same scenarios. These hard-working men and women need to come home at night to the people who love them.聽

A union would be a beginning.

*This is an excerpt from Brendan McDonough鈥檚 new book, My Lost Brothers: The Untold Story by the Yarnell Hill Fire鈥檚 Lone Survivor. McDonough is the lone survivor of the Yarnell Hill wildfire that killed 19 hotshot firefighters in Arizona in 2013.

**CORRECTION: A previous version of this story incorrectly stated that the Washington crew that encountered a wildfire in 2015 was a three-man hotshot crew.

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