Newport Beach adopts resolution to support cityâs fire department and firefighters
Nearly 30 firefighters have been deployed from the Newport Beach Fire Department to help fight some of the 26 remaining major wildfires burning up and down the state.
State fire officials said Wednesday that since the beginning of the year more than 8,000 wildfires have collectively burned over 3.6 million acres in California. Since Aug. 15, there have been 26 fatalities and over 6,000 structures destroyed.
âThese last couple of months, our fire season has grown beyond anything like weâve ever seen in the state of California,â Newport Beach Fire Chief Jeff Boyles said.
The department has four firefighters in Los Angeles County fighting the Bobcat Fire, which the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection reported Wednesday is at about 38% containment. Two firefighters are also deployed in Fresno and one in Mendocino. The department employs 118 fire personnel.
City officials said the first call for mutual aid was on May 31, and over the course of a 43-day period between the end of July to early September, 26 fire personnel and one civilian from the department had responded to 13 wildfires.
Local fire crews saved three Costa Mesa residents trapped in an apartment fire Saturday morning, then later doused a small brush fire that had broken out in Talbert Park.
The City Council unanimously adopted a resolution elaborating on its support for the department. Firefighters and their families were in attendance in person at Tuesdayâs council meeting.
âThis is something that the council obviously takes very seriously,â Mayor Will OâNeill said. âWe look constantly at the budget every year and within that budget, itâs important what line items mean. They mean the people not only there, but the families that are with them.â
âThis is something that a lot of people, often times when they see the rigs rolling through town ... you wear uniforms,â OâNeill said. âThe whole point of a uniform is to look uniform, but each of you are individuals. Each of you have families at home.â
Mayor Pro Tem Brad Avery spoke to the struggles of the pandemic, describing the pivot from pandemic woes to wildfire as shifting from an âinvisible threatâ to a âvisible oneâ all over the state.
âThere is, to me, a purity in the mission of this fire department and all responders to this very visible threat,â Avery said. âThere was no indecision. Thereâs no politics. Itâs duty, itâs bravery, itâs brotherhood, itâs sisterhood and then youâve got the support of family, friends and certainly your community.â
âIn a way, itâs a beautiful thing. Weâve got a society right now thatâs really struggling in so many ways,â Avery said. âHaving something so pure going on, itâs absolutely selfless.â
Council members conveyed their thanks to the department, with Councilman Jeff Herdman describing his feelings as âawe.â
âItâs such a hard emotional as well as physical endurance that youâre going through,â Councilwoman Diane Dixon said, âand itâs just so important for all of us â and for all of you to realize how all of us value and respect and honor what youâre doing to keep our community healthy and safe during the pandemic and to protect other communities.â
âItâs just noble work, and itâs an honor we could call our Newport Beach Fire Department our own,â she said.
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