Right Column
HISTORY OF CAL FIRE By: Mark V. Thornton, Consulting Historian, 1995 (Updated in February, 2002)
Editorial Note: This is a really fine article on CAL FIRE’s history. It was written by Mark V. Thornton in 1995 who, at that time, was working for CAL FIRE under contract as a consulting historian. Mark was assisting CAL FIRE Archaeologist Dan Foster in the task of conducting inventories of CAL FIRE properties for historic buildings and archaeological sites, and in the preparation of a comprehensive plan for their management. Mark prepared the chapter on CAL FIRE History for the Management Plan in order to provide a context from which to evaluate the significance of surviving buildings. That Management Plan was completed in November, 2001 and the complete plan is posted on this web site. CAL FIRE elected to isolate Mark’s chapter as a separate article in order to make it more accessible to those interested in CAL FIRE’s history.
CAL FIRE has been in existence for over 80 years. It is the largest
fire department of its type in the world and has established an international
reputation as one of the premier wildland fire fighting organizations today.
CAL FIRE has at its call an arsenal of equipment, personnel, and property than many
nations can only dream of. CAL FIRE is uniquely endowed with a mission that sets it
apart from other governmental agencies.
CAL FIRE is a State agency responsible for protecting natural
resources from fire on land designated by the State Board of Forestry as State
Responsibility Area (SRA). CAL FIRE also manages the State Forest system and has
responsibility to enforce the forest practice regulations, which govern
forestry practices on private and other non-federal lands. Two major themes
are attendant to the CAL FIRE mission. One is the protection of the State's
merchantable timber on all non-federal lands from improper logging activities
and the other is the protection of the State's grass, brush, and tree covered
watersheds in SRA from wildland fire. CAL FIRE is a "conservation agency"
with origins stemming from the "Conservation Movement" of the last
century.
In
the latter half of the 19th century, Americans collectively voiced concern
about the health and long term availability of the Nation's timber supply.
They were alarmed by newspaper accounts of a succession of conflagration fires
that had burned millions of acres in the upper mid-West and by the continuing
reports of massive timber destruction by homestead and lumber industry land
clearing practices. The prevalent idea that at least one-fifth of a given land
area should be covered in trees to sustain a successful agricultural industry
added weight to the anxiety and led to deliberations on how to control western
development of the public domain (Federal land). A widely circulated belief
that America might face a timber "famine" or shortage gave momentum
to the dialogue. Many also believed that trees caused it to rain and by
removing them the Nation ran the risk of converting its western territories, if
not the whole country, into a vast desert. Also, the prevailing attitude that
the forests of America were infinite, and infinitely forgiving of mankind's
exploits, was beginning to wane especially now that the American frontier had
reached the western shore.
The 19th century was a period of rapid western expansion
for America and the general rule was to transfer the public domain (Federal
land) into private ownership. But a growing number of Americans wanted to see
the Federal Government withdraw certain tracts of the public domain from
private settlement and manage the areas in trust for present and future
generations. Two parallel movements emerged to address the disposition of the
public domain. One was the drive to "preserve" the Nation's natural
wonders from privatization. The other was to "conserve" the Nation's
storehouse of lumber trees. The first could be said to have started in 1864
when the United States Government gifted the Yosemite Grant and Mariposa Grove
to the State of California. In 1866, the California State Legislature accepted
this land grant with the understanding that the areas were to be managed for
the benefit of present and future generations. Although it was a State park,
these two grants signaled the beginning of a federal park program. The advent
of a true national park system came with the creation of Yellowstone National
Park in 1872 in Wyoming, some 18 years before Yosemite itself became a national
park.
The United States Army was assigned the responsibility
to patrol and protect this area. The Army's role included the detection and
suppression of wildfire within park boundaries. This was no small task
considering the size of the sanctuary, the crude equipment at hand, and the few
troops that were assigned. Even though the U.S. Cavalry was a far cry from the
wildland fire profession of today, they nonetheless represented the beginning
of a Federal wildland fire protection program. One noteworthy Army idea was
the creation of "campgrounds." These were set up as a means to
contain the continuing nuisance of abandoned campfires. In 1890, the Sequoia
and General Grant Parks, and the Yosemite Forest Preserve were created. The
U.S. Army's qualified success in Yellowstone led to the implementation of
Cavalry patrols within these parks in 1891.
As for forestry management, simple laws to protect
certain types of trees had been around since colonial times. The creation of
the Department of Agriculture in 1862 marks the beginnings of a national effort
to protect the nation's agricultural health. It wasn't until 1875, though,
that Congress allocated $2,000 to the Department for the purpose of hiring a
forestry agent to investigate the subject of timber management. This was
unanticipated, since the discipline of forestry was new and there were very few
trained foresters in America at this time. In 1881, a Division of Forestry was
created and in 1889, the Department of Agriculture was raised to Cabinet level
status. Meanwhile, all Federal land remained under the control of the
Department of Interior, specifically the General Land Office (GLO).
Bernhard Fernow, Division of Forestry Chief from 1886 to
1898, endorsed the creation of forest reserves and pointed out the need to
transfer control of these lands from the General Land Office to the Department
of Agriculture. This would insure that government foresters would have the
leverage needed to enforce proper timber management practices. Fernow even
drafted an organizational scheme that included the idea that
"rangers" would be in charge of the smallest administrative units.
Stiff opposition against creating federal reserves was overcome in 1891 when
Congress passed the Forest Reserve Act. The President was given the
authorization to permanently withdraw from the public domain, forestlands he
deemed of national importance. The Act did not, however, specify what
constituted "forest" land. The people of Southern California
capitalized on this by successfully lobbying for the creation of the San
Gabriel Forest Reserve, a largely brush covered region whose value lies in its
being an important watershed for the Los Angeles Basin. Southern Californians
had long been witness to the devastation that wildland fire could bring. They
had seen how hillsides denuded by fall fires became a catalyst for flooding and
mudslides when winter rains hit. This, in turn, wreaked havoc on the
agricultural lands in the Basin below. The Sundry Civil Appropriations Act
(Organic Act) of 1897 clarified the intent of the Forest Reserve Act and
specifically endorsed the validity of watershed protection. In fact, timber
and watershed protection were the cornerstones upon which existing reserves
were expanded and future reserves established.
As for Fernow's efforts to wrestle control of the Forest
Reserves from the Department of Interior, this fell to his successor, Gifford
Pinchot. Pinchot is viewed as the "father" of the Forest Service.
He served as Chief Forester from 1898 to 1910. His close friendship with
President Theodore Roosevelt undoubtedly played a key role in the latter's executive
order, of early 1905, which transferred the growing collection of Forest
Reserves from the Interior Department to the Department of Agriculture. Had he
been so inclined, Pinchot probably could have gained control of the federal
parklands. But Pinchot was a forester intent on instituting wise management
upon timber-producing lands for commercial use. He was not out to cultivate
trees for recreational enjoyment (utilitarian conservation as opposed to
aesthetic preservation). Within a few weeks of Roosevelt's order, Pinchot
reorganized the Agriculture Department's Bureau of Forestry into the United
States Forest Service. In 1907, the Forest Reserves were renamed National
Forests.
The U.S. Forest Service became the Nation's primary
instrument, for protecting natural resources on Federal land from fire and from
timber exploitation. In the teens the National Park Service was established,
and charged with protecting the Nation's scenic wonders. Both agencies,
however, were protecting only those areas of Federally owned land under their
jurisdiction and such private in-holdings that could potentially threaten the
well being of the Federal lands. The large areas of timber and watershed lands
privately owned that were beyond the National Forests and Parks came under the
State authority.
In the midst of the national debate over the merits of
having a Federal forest reserve system, the California State Legislature had
established a State Board of Forestry. Founded in 1885, the Board was one of
the first State appointed forestry boards in the nation. They were authorized
to investigate, collect, and disseminate information about forestry. In 1887,
the Board members and their assistants were given the power of peace officers
to enforce compliance with the few laws that the State had enacted concerning
brush and forest lands. A State-level interest in the well being of its natural
resources had materialized. But a hostile political climate eventually
succeeded in abolishing the State's first Board of Forestry, which was
disbanded in 1893.
At the beginning of the 20th century, a few loosely
organized groups, including at least one logging company, had taken steps to
bring about wildland fire protection upon a few scattered properties outside of
the Federal Reserves. A major step forward, though, in bringing about a
State-level commitment to protect these areas came in 1903. Shortly after
assuming office Governor George Pardee communicated to Gifford Pinchot his
desire for a joint Federal-State study and survey of the forest situation in
California. C. Raymond Clar, in his report Brief History of The California
Division of Forestry suggests that Pardee's request energized Pinchot's
lobbying efforts for direct control of the federal forest reserve system and no
doubt it helped sway President Roosevelt to transfer the Federal Reserves to
the Department of Agriculture. The California survey was conducted from 1903
into 1907. Commencement of the project set the stage for the establishment of a
new Board of Forestry and the creation of the position of State Forester. On
March 18, 1905 the State Legislature approved both. The enabling Act, as Clar
puts it, became "...the statutory cornerstone for the State forestry
agency as it has existed through the ensuing years."
The Board of Forestry appointed E. T. Allen, an
Assistant Forester in the Forest Service, as California's first State Forester.
Unfortunately, Allen had to leave office the following year (for personal
reasons). Not surprisingly, another Forest Service employee, Gerard B. Lull,
filled his position. After all, the Federal Agency was practically the only
source for qualified foresters. In passing, it might be mentioned that 1906 was
also the year that the State Legislature returned the Yosemite Grant and Mariposa
Grove to the Federal Government. While touching upon the subject of parks, the
Act of 1905 had placed the State's Big Basin Park in Santa Cruz County under
the authority of the Board of Forestry. The State's park system remained under
the jurisdiction of the Board until 1927.
The Act of 1905 granted to the State Forester the right
to appoint local fire wardens. The State Forester could also "maintain a
fire patrol at places and times of fire emergency." The fire patrol
system, however, was to be funded by the County in which the action took place.
Although the CAL FIRE could be said to have started in 1905 with the creation of the
position of State Forester, from 1905 until 1919, the State Forester and the
"forestry department" were one-and-the-same. The "department"
consisted of the State Forester and a few office staff and assistants based in
Sacramento. The remainder of the department was the large body of local fire
wardens. They were, however, funded and supported by their local jurisdictions.
The State of California was not spending money to maintain a wildland fire
protection force.
In 1911 Congress passed the "Weeks Law" which
provided fiscal aid for cooperative fire protection work between the Forest
Service and qualifying States. In 1919, the California Legislature finally
appropriated money for fire prevention and suppression work. The sum of
$25,000 was approved and the Forest Service, under the Weeks Law, provided
$3,500 for salaries of field men. The State's first four rangers or
"Weeks Law Patrolmen" were hired for a four month period covering the
summer of 1919. They worked wherever needed but were individually
headquartered in Redding, Oroville, Placerville, and Auburn. The State
Forester reported that three million acres of watersheds covering the
Stanislaus, Mokelumne, Cosumnes, American, Bear, Yuba, and Feather rivers
outside of the Federal reserves were to be afforded protection. No explanation
has been given as to why the river systems and the "headquarters"
locations didn't exactly match. In 1920, the ranger organization was
restructured and expanded with ten rangers overseeing ten districts. The
districts were: 1) Shasta County; 2) Butte and Yuba Counties; 3) Placer and
Nevada Counties; 4) El Dorado and Amador Counties; 5) Tehama County; 6) Colusa
County; 7) Lake County; 8) Mendocino County; 9) Napa County; 10) Santa Cruz,
Santa Clara, and San Mateo Counties. Over the next decade the district system
and the ranger force slowly grew.
In
1917, the State Legislature authorized the establishment of a forest nursery.
In 1919 a bill was introduced to purchase land for a nursery site but failed.
Meanwhile, the State Highway Commission had become an enthusiastic supporter of
a State forestry nursery. They, and many members of the general public, wanted
to use the planting stock to beautify public land including roadsides. In 1920
the Commission and the State Board of Forestry agreed to a cooperative venture
to establish a nursery. The State Highway Commission had the resources and authority
to purchase a tract of land and thus acquired thirty acres in Yolo County near
Davis for a nursery site. In 1921 the State Legislature appropriated
$20,000.00 to the Board of Forestry for building construction upon this land.
This marks the beginning of the building of a physical operating plant for the
CAL FIRE.
The first State-funded fire lookout building was erected
on Mount Bielawski in the Santa Cruz Mountains in 1922. However, in the
1920’s, other than fire lookouts, the construction of buildings to serve
the needs of the State Rangers was the individual State Ranger's
responsibility. That is to say, the State of California did not fund
construction. The "historic" San Jacinto Ranger's Office now located
at the San Jacinto Forest Fire Station is the only known surviving State
Ranger's office from the 1920s. It was built upon private land through local
efforts. In 1923, the State's forestry program supported 16 rangers, 4
inspectors and 2 lookouts. By 1927 the force was up to 28 rangers, 7 inspectors,
6 patrolmen and 9 lookouts. During the interim, Congress had superseded the
Weeks Act with the Clarke-McNary Act (of 1924). The law greatly expanded
federal assistance to State forestry programs, and California was beginning to
avail itself to this funding source.
In
1927, Governor Clement Calhoun Young orchestrated a reorganization of State
government, creating the Department of Natural Resources with a Division of
Forestry and a Division of Beaches and Parks. Administration of the State's
parks was henceforth no longer a responsibility of the State Board of Forestry.
The California Division of Forestry, as the forestry agency was now officially
designated, would be headed by the State Forester who reported administratively
to the Director of the Department of Natural Resources. From 1927 until the
formation of the CCC, the CAL FIRE fire lookouts nearly tripled in size, with much
of this activity performed in cooperation with the Forest Service. The first
State fire trucks were not acquired until 1929. It's unknown where they were
housed but they are believed to have been sheltered in buildings provided by
the counties they were assigned. The first official State "standby
crews" (seasonal fire fighters) were not hired until 1931.
The
old fire station buildings on Mount Zion are the only pre-CCC era suppression
station facilities remaining in the CAL FIRE property inventory. They were
constructed as part of the State labor camp located at the site in the winter
of 1931-32. The buildings were "reconstructed" in the early 1950s.
By 1931 a number of counties had entered cooperative
agreements with the State Forester in order to have the State place a Ranger in
their territory. However, the State Ranger continued to look to his sponsoring
County's Board of Supervisors for any material aids and staff such as clerks,
truck drivers and even Assistant Rangers that he needed. Almost nothing was
available from the State budget for physical improvements to lookouts,
telephone lines, firebreaks, or offices. It was in 1931 that the Board of
Forestry hired Burnett Sanford, a forest engineer, to study what Clar reports
had become a "complex and generally unplanned system of allotting
operating funds among the numerous geographical sub-divisions into which the
Division of Forestry had been allowed to grow." The "Sanford
Plan" basically proposed that State funds be apportioned along the lines
of "weighted values" of area protected. The values were couched in
the general concepts that had brought about the National Forests.
Specifically, the State was concerned about watershed management and timber
management in the larger sense and also for protection of public recreation and
wildlife habitat areas. Sanford criticized the type of rural organization that
had occurred, for one reason because the higher valued mountain regions were
receiving less fire protection than the low lying range lands and valley
floors. Under the Sanford Plan, the State was divided into three classes.
Class 1 lands had the highest value to the State embracing watershed, timber,
and recreation areas. Here, the State would focus its fire protection efforts.
Class 2 lands had no general value but would be protected as needed because
fires could potentially threaten Class 1 lands. Class 3 lands were left to the
local citizenry to protect.
The Great Depression had a significant impact upon both
Federal and State wildland fire protection programs. As the Nation's economy
degenerated, California became a beacon of hope. Though there was little employment
available, thousands of the unemployed poured into the State. In the summer of
1931, S. Rexford Black met with Finance Director Vandegrift to discuss a work
relief program. Black was Secretary of the lumberman's California Forest
Protective Association and in August he was also appointed to the chairmanship
of the State Board of Forestry. In the winter of 1931-32 the first California
State labor camps were formed. State Rangers were assigned to oversee the
camps; the work was to benefit the public. Jobless men and their families could
come and go from the camps as they wished. In exchange for four to six hours
of labor the men received food, tobacco, and some clothing. The program was
strapped for funds, supplies were low, accommodations poor but the program
succeeded. Hundreds of miles of road and firebreaks were constructed,
telephone lines repaired, campgrounds improved, and roadside hazards removed.
The camp program ceased in the spring but was re-activated in the winter of
1932-33. It has been suggested that California's relief effort was the model
for the Federal programs instigated during Franklin Roosevelt's Presidency.
President Roosevelt asked Congress to set up a Federal
Relief Administration to oversee a grants program designed to relieve the
Nation's unemployment crisis. Unemployment relief through the performance of
useful public works was the President's philosophy. In April of 1933 the
Emergency Conservation Work (ECW) program was established. It became known
almost instantly as the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC). In California, the
Forest Service's District Forester, Stuart Show, had developed a plan of attack
on how to utilize this new labor pool. Funded by ECW money, the CCC would be
assigned three basic tasks: firebreak construction, lookout station building,
and general improvements. The "Three Cs" would cut fuelbreaks around
the State, with particular emphasis on establishing the "Ponderosa
Way Firebreak." This continuous fuelbreak extended the length of the Sierra
Nevada Mountains, and into the Cascades, ending north of Redding. The
firebreak was intended to be a permanent defensive line between the lower
foothill regions and the higher elevation National Forest lands. The second
project, construction of an integrated, statewide fire detection network would
bring to fruition the recommendations of an investigative group that Show had
organized in 1930 at the California Forest and Range Experiment Station
(Pacific Southwest today) to scrutinize every aspect of the fire detection
problem in California. The group had recommended an integrated, network of
fire lookouts be setup to cover all of the State's fire prone areas from the
Oregon line to the Mexican border. The third task, general improvements,
included the building of administrative and fire suppression bases,
installation of roads, bridges, telephone lines and innumerable other
conservation projects.
The ECW programs lasted from 1933 to 1942. All told,
the CCC-WPA laborers constructed over 300 lookout towers and houses, some 9,000
miles of telephone lines, 1,161,921 miles of roads and trails and erected
numerous fire stations and administrative buildings in California. The CCC had
also planted over 30 million trees and had spent nearly one million "man days"
in fire prevention and suppression activity. Because the CCC was expected to
fight forest fires, they constituted the single largest wildland suppression
force ever assembled in American history.
The Forest Service system of lookouts, guard stations,
and ranger stations had been renovated, replaced, and/or expanded. For the
California Division of Forestry, a system of fire stations and lookouts now
existed throughout many of the fire prone areas of California. The Forest
Service had identified about 60 sites for the CAL FIRE detection system.
Approximately 50 new lookouts were erected by the Civilian Conservation Corps
for the California Division of Forestry. At least 30 of these stations were on
sites previously not utilized by the State agency. Most of these lookouts were
erected from 1934 to 1936. Some of the fire suppression camps located at the
CCC camps became permanent State fire stations. In other instances a
"spike camp" was extended from a base CCC camp. This spike camp
would eventually evolve into a permanent fire suppression camp in the CAL FIRE
system. Clar reports that State Forester Pratt remarked that the CCC program
thrust the CAL FIRE "twenty years ahead of itself." As Clar comments
"That was a modest boast if otherwise anticipated progress was to be
measured by prior achievement."
As the CCC capital improvement plan unfolded, the CAL FIRE
instructed a few of its Sacramento staffers to, as Clar reported, "study
and prepare plans for an orderly development of fire lookouts, crew stations,
telephone lines and the personnel and auxiliary equipment to go with
them." The group was to take stock of the situation and develop long range
goals. In 1938 the Board of Forestry instructed the State Forester to prepare
a comprehensive statewide fire prevention, protection, and suppression plan.
The outbreak of war in Europe added a new dimension and gravity to the fire
planning studies of the 1930s. The war heightened apprehension about the
State's vulnerability to fire. The earlier fire planning provided a foundation
upon which a revised and solidified plan could be established. In 1939, the
Board of Forestry appointed a four-man committee of staff and field men to
prepare a fire plan for 1940. Clar was named chairman of the committee. The
"Fire Plan of 1940" or "Clar Plan" as it became known
redressed the financing scheme laid out in the Sanford Plan. As Clar states,
there were "...two simple concepts. First, the idea seemed clearly
reasonable that a consistent designation of area need should be indicated by
types and numbers of units in the planned protection system, as modified by
climate, geography, and the local fire problem... The second concept required
a strict segregation of State responsibility from that of any other entity,
government or private, and the use of State money to meet that
responsibility."
The main significance of the Clar Plan was the
proposition that the "State of California was to assume complete
jurisdiction and responsibility for suppressing forest and watershed
fires" on lands so designated by the State and that all other areas were
the primary responsibility of the respective city, county or Federal agency in
whose jurisdiction it fell. The Clar Plan also proffered that a "physical
plan of protection including personnel, structures, communication facilities
and equipment [should be] developed strictly upon the basis of need to
accomplish the fire control job without the slightest concern for political
boundaries or anticipated source of funds." This internal plan of "unification"
as Clar put it, was being driven by many factors including the Federal work
program and the depletion of "county treasuries" from the continuing
economic depression. Although the CCC-WPA programs had given the State of
California a physical operating plant for the California Division of Forestry
to carry out its wildland fire protection mission the State Legislature had yet
to fund the staffing of this new system. The Clar Plan gave a formula for
spending but the elected officials in Sacramento needed more motivation before
they would commit to the estimated $3,000,000 that the Clar Plan disclosed it
would cost to fully implement.
The growing prospect of war had prompted the U. S. Army
to instruct all State governments to prepare civil defense plans. In September
of 1941, the State of California established the State Council of Defense. The
Council of Defense saw in the Clar Plan a mechanism for a statewide fire
defense plan. The Council advised the CAL FIRE to be prepared to "assume
statewide fire dispatching and standby fire protection on the periphery of
cities and vital industries." With Japan's premeditated and vicious attack
upon Pearl Harbor, the Aircraft Warning System, which utilized a number of fire
lookout facilities to house aircraft spotters, went on war status. Observers
were rushed to their respective posts. The U.S. Army had delegated to the
Forest Service the responsibility of seeing to it that all lookouts (Federal,
State and local) were in readiness. Contingency plans had called for the
winterizing of existing lookout stations and the erection of scores of
temporary cabins at other strategic locations. Clar, as Chief Deputy State
Forester, assumed operation of the CAL FIRE's role in civilian defense and
immediately had 30 fire lookouts staffed, all State fire trucks put on standby,
and organized a 24 hour dispatch team at the central offices in Sacramento.
These civil defense actions quickly added a nearly $40,000.00 deficit to the
State budget. In view of the times, State Officials did not object and
emergency appropriations during the War years brought about the rapid
implementation of the Clar Plan.
Earl Warren was elected California's Governor in 1943.
Warren appointed William Moore as Director of the Department of Natural
Resources. Moore was familiar with and a supporter of the Clar Plan. Without
delay he approved formation of six administrative districts within the CAL FIRE
which the Clar Plan had proposed. He also instructed the Chief Deputy State
Forester to go, as Clar later wrote, "around the State to inform the
boards of supervisors that henceforth the State Division of Forestry would give
such fire protection to the delineated State and privately owned timber and
watershed lands as a specified number of fire crews and other facilities would
provide. And also, whenever necessary the State would pay such emergency fire
fighting costs as might be deemed proper by the State. And further, the State
would augment its forces to any extent and manner desired by the county when
reimbursed for the actual cost of the service provided, plus a five percent
administration fee." Within a State structure for basic service, the
counties had flexibility to build up their own systems with their own fiscal
resources as they saw fit. But the real significance of Moore's action was the
committing of the State of California to hire and pay the salaries of seasonal
and full-time employees in the operation of a statewide wildland fire
protection department. The California State Government was now inextricably in
the business of wildland fire control. The California Division of Forestry had
come of age.
Shortly after the War, two other milestones in the CAL FIRE's
history were reached. The idea of buying cut-over land and establishing a
State Forest system reached a State Legislature that was receptive toward
forestry. In 1945 a special bill was passed to appropriate $100,000 for the
purchase of a tract of land which became designated the Latour Demonstration
State Forest in Shasta County. Another appropriation to the tune of
$600,000.00 soon followed for the acquisition of land in Tulare County. After
the Mountain Home Demonstration State Forest was established in Tulare County
the State Legislature codified and enacted rules under which the State Board of
Forestry and the California Division of Forestry could acquire, manage, and
administer State Forest lands. In 1946 a $2,000,000.00 "purchase
fund" was setup by the Legislature. From this the lands which constitute
the Jackson Demonstration State Forest were procured. Several other State
Forests have been added to the system since then. The State Forest system now
includes eight units totaling over 71,000 acres.
The other milestone was the establishment of a prison
"honor camp" program. Since formation of the second State Board of
Forestry the notion that inmates should be used for conservation projects and
wildland fire protection had been promoted by different individuals. During
World War II, with a critical labor shortage now in effect, selected prisoners
were taken from San Quentin and organized into hazard reduction and emergency
fire fighting crews. The success of this operation paved the way for the
introduction of a Youth Honor Camp system. In 1945 four such camps were
founded and a cooperative arrangement between the California Youth Authority
and the California Division of Forestry was approved. The CAL FIRE would provide
personnel to supervise field work and provide appropriate fire training. The
Youth Authority would maintain custodial care of the wards. The program soon
extended to the California Department of Corrections' adult population and a
system of honor camps (later renamed conservation camps) was developed.
Today 85 million acres of California is classified as
"wildlands." Some 15 million acres are identified as valuable
forestland with about half of this being federally owned. In 1945, the Forest
Practice Act was passed into law to regulate commercial timber harvesting on
the non-Federal lands. The act was revised in 1973 and contains provisions
that timber harvest plans for commercial operations are to be prepared by
Registered Professional Foresters. CAL FIRE administers the law, and logging
operators must be licensed by the CAL FIRE to operate upon non-Federal lands. As of
1994, the CAL FIRE had local government fire protection agreements in 45 of the
State's 58 counties.
CAL FIRE is known for its extraordinary response to emergencies. The
Department is always ready to respond regardless of the emergency - wildland
fires, structure fires, automobile accidents, medical aids of all sorts, swift
water rescues, civil disturbances, lost hikers, hazardous material spills,
train wrecks, floods, earthquakes – the list is endless. CAL FIRE’s firefighters,
fire engines and aircraft respond to an average 6,700 wildland fires, and
nearly 273,000other emergencies each year. Department crews and equipment are
a familiar site throughout the State with responsibility for the protection of
over 31 million acres of California’s privately-owned wildlands, and for emergency
services of all kinds in 35 of California’s 58 counties through contracts
with local governments. The heart of CAL FIRE’s emergency response capability
is a force of approximately 3,800 full-time fire professionals, foresters, and
administrative employees; 1,400 seasonal fire fighters; 5,600 local government
volunteer firefighters; 2,600 Volunteers in Prevention; and 4,300 inmates,
wards, and corps members that provide 195 fire crews.
The Department is divided into two regions with 21
administrative units statewide. Within these units, CAL FIRE operates 634 fire
stations (229 state and 405 local government). CAL FIRE, in collaboration with the
California Department of Corrections, California Youth Authority, and
California Conservation Corps, operates 41 conservation camps spread throughout
the state. CAL FIRE staffs 13 air attack bases and nine helitack bases that allow
aircraft to reach any fire within 20 minutes.
CAL FIRE operates over 1,050 fire engines (370 state and 689
local government), 105 rescue squads, 13 aerial ladder trucks, 58 bulldozers,
five mobile communication centers, and 11 mobile kitchen units. The Department
funds, via contract, an additional 82 engines, and 12 bulldozers used in six
counties - Kern, Los Angeles, Marin, Orange, Santa Barbara, and Ventura. From
the air, CAL FIRE operates 13 800-gallon airtankers, 10 1,200-gallon airtankers,
nine Super Huey helicopters (with two maintenance relief copters on standby),
and 13 air attack planes.
Today, the California Department of Forestry and Fire
Protection incorporates 2,300 buildings distributed over 375 sites. Fewer than
190 of these buildings predate 1946. The majority of these are the remnants of
the CCC-WPA construction era. These survivors, rare specimens, collectively
embody a period of time when the CAL FIRE as a department first acquired a physical
plant to carry out its mission of timber management and wildland fire
protection upon non-Federal lands in the State of California. They represent a
significant milestone in the CAL FIRE's history. The CCC-WPA accomplishments thrust
the CAL FIRE, as State Forester Pratt stated, "twenty years ahead of
itself." The Clar Plan and World War II cemented the State's commitment to
provide wildland fire protection.



