![]() ![]() The order he gave me was against everything he had taught me.My friends got burned I won’t ever get that picture out of my head. ![]() In 1976 I watched fellow crewman get burned for $2.81 per hour (GS-2) after I refused an order from my engine crew leader. The forest service needs to do it right or not at all. The leaders in these agencies should be held criminally and civilly liable for these deaths the same as in a construction accident. Can’t believe these young lives are still being wasted. I always thought it was a waste for people to die from wildland fires protecting brush that would grow back next year and property that was insured. Especially after the recent wildland fire fire deaths. I am glad to see safety is a big and important issue. Superintendent Ron Campbell is in the center of the front row (without a hard hat) Assistant Superintendent Al Kuehl is on the left end of the front row Bill Gabbert is fourth from the right in the front row. In 1966 12 people on the crew died as a result of burn injuries on the Loop Fire on the Angeles National Forest in southern California. And in 1959 three members of the crew and four others were entrapped and killed on the Decker Fire just a few miles from their base west of Elsinore, California. The crew has endured other disastrous situations in the past. We wish them luck in reconstituting the El Cariso Hotshots. With the long list of interagency requirements for hotshot crews, it will not be an easy task. ![]() The Forest expects this situation to be temporary, and next year will begin rebuilding the organization. The remaining permanent personnel were transferred to engine stations, but the temporary crew members were laid off. Due to these issues and concerns for firefighter safety, the National Forest shut down the crew when they returned from working on the Rim Fire at Yosemite National Park. The crew lost both of their captains, their superintendent was detailed to the Forest Supervisor’s office, and as the latter part of the fire season approached they were not even qualified as a Type 2 Initial Attack crew. Throughout the year their organization deteriorated, suffering more vacancies, as well as a lack of consistent supervision and crew leadership according to a high-ranking U.S. But they began the 2013 season as a Type 2 crew due to vacancies at critical positions. The crew ended the 2012 fire season as a fully certified Type 1 Hotshot crew. For many decades they have been working out of the Trabuco District on the Cleveland National Forest in southern California. El Cariso was one of the first two hotshot crews created about 60 years ago after World War II. My first job as a firefighter was on the crew. The El Cariso Interagency Hotshots have been disbanded. ![]()
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