Delaware wildfire crew returns from dispatch to Colorado and Wyoming
Delaware's wildland fire crew returned to the First State after successfully battling wildfires in Colorado and Wyoming. The Delaware Forest Service dispatched the firefighters to Colorado July 25. Their first assignment was assisting Colorado's Bureau of Land Management on the 492-acre Milk Fire near Craig, Colo.
Next, they were sent by the Rocky Mountain Geographic Area Coordination Center to the 1,287-acre Tokewanna Fire near Mountain View, Wyo.
Finally Aug. 4, they were dispatched to the 12,276-acre Whit Fire, east of Yellowstone National Park near Cody, Wyo. On the Whit Fire, Delaware's team worked with more than 600 personnel as they constructed hand line, patrolled fire lines, and protected structures. As of Aug. 10, the fire was at 85 percent containment.
Delaware has been dispatching a crew almost every year since 1998. Last year, Delaware sent a team to battle the 36,500-acre Fork Complex Fire in northern California. Firefighters are a mix of public agency employees, recruits from volunteer fire companies, and private citizens with a keen interest in fighting wildfires. This year, four are from the Delaware Forest Service, two from DNREC Division of State Parks, one from U.S. Fish and Wildlife's Prime Hook Wildlife Area, and one from New Castle County. Six crew members are rookies, marking their first assignment on a wildfire crew.
Firefighters must prepare both mentally and physically for the annual fire season and achieve certification by the National Wildfire Coordinating Group. In addition to annual training courses held in the spring, crew members must complete a rigorous work-capacity test by carrying 45 pounds over a three-mile course in less than 45 minutes. Although compensated by federal funds, all members volunteer for what could become perilous missions. Crews also helped with hurricane relief efforts for the Federal Emergency Management Agency when Hurricane Irene swept through New England.