Fighting the fires
Jenny Marder
In three days spent trying to protect a neighborhood of 17 homes in
Rancho Cucamonga from being ravaged by uncontrollable fires, Fire
Capt. Brian Gerardi got only four hours of sleep.
Gerardi, 40, was among thousands working long, sleepless hours
under severe conditions to fight the flames that have stretched for
miles along parts of Southern California. While his strike team was
successful, the fires have already taken 16 lives and destroyed more
than 1,500 homes.
“It was pretty scary one time,” Gerardi said. “There were high
winds, a lot of fire and a big front coming toward us. The fire was
going on a diagonal to us, and if the winds would have shifted toward
us, we would have felt a lot of heat.”
The Huntington Beach Fire Department has dispatched four engines
and 25 of its 140 firefighters. Two engines are in San Bernardino,
one in Simi Valley and one in San Diego. Each engine has a captain,
an engineer and two firefighter-paramedics. Gerardi and his crew were
relieved by another engine on Monday, but may be called back out to
Big Bear.
The firefighters report that they’ve seen more fire over the last
72 hours than they’ve seen in their entire careers, Division Chief
Jacques Pelletier said.
“In some cases, they were effectively able to stop the spread of
the fire from the brush into homes,” Pelletier said. “In other cases,
they couldn’t do it.”
Gerardi, who fought the Laguna Beach fires in 1993, said that he’s
never seen anything like this.
“We were out there with a lot of other firefighters with extensive
experience, and they’ve never seen anything of this magnitude,”
Gerardi said.
The fire is only part of the battle. Firefighters must also fight
heat exhaustion and fatigue, which is exacerbated by two layers of
protective wear and temperatures that reach 105 degrees.
“Strenuous activity, heat and a lot of wind really dehydrates
you,” Pelletier said. “They’ve got to take in a lot of water.”
Gerardi said the fatigue factor was the hardest part. He slept two
hours on the hose bed of a fire engine the first night on duty,
worked through the night the second night and slept barely two hours
on the third.
“It’s hot, it’s stinky, you’re dirty, you’re fatigued, and you
miss your family something fierce,” Gerardi said.
Gerardi’s wife, Susan, said it’s hard not knowing what her
husband’s doing or where he’s stationed.
“I didn’t hear from him for two days,” Susan Gerardi said. “It’s
kind of a scary, unknowing feeling. But I’m very proud of him that
he’s out there, doing what he loves. I think of us sleeping in our
nice beds while he’s out there.”
Gerardi’s two teenage daughters stayed up late the other night
consoling each other.
“They ask every day, ‘Did daddy call? Do you know if he’s OK?’”
Susan Gerardi said. “They’re very scared, but they’re also very proud
of him.”
Despite all, morale is high at the Huntington Beach Fire
Department headquarters. Fire engines and equipment are performing
without any hiccups, and safety gear is holding up well.
“Our organization has a really high morale,” Pelletier said. “When
firefighters do what they’re trained to do, there’s a lot of pride
that goes with that. They always feel bad for the victims, and it’s a
tremendous stress, but it’s also an opportunity for them to do what
they were trained to do.”
All engines dispatched to the fires are backfilled with a reserve
engine, and the Huntington Beach stations are fully staffed by
firefighters, many of whom are being called in to work on days off.
“We have 100% staffing currently, and we’re trying to maintain
that the best we can,” Pelletier said.
While danger is always at the back of his mind, Gerardi is hoping
to get sent back to the front.
“We’re here to help people,” Gerardi said. “When we’re given the
opportunity to do that, that’s what it’s all about. When we’re given
the opportunity to save a house, it’s all worthwhile.”
* JENNY MARDER covers City Hall. She can be reached at (714)
965-7173 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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