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Mutual Aid in El Dorado County
There are ten local government fire districts on the west
slope of El Dorado County. They are Cameron Park CSD, El Dorado County FPD,
El Dorado Hills Fire Dept, Garden Valley FPD, Georgetown FPD, Latrobe FPD,
Mosquito FPD, Pioneer FPD, Latrobe FPD and Rescue FPD. Each fire agency has
its own governing board. In addition, the California Department of Forestry
and the United States Forest Service are fully staffed during fire season.
All of these fire agencies have one thing in common: they respond to
the emergency and take care of it. In 1997, local fire agencies and their
governing boards agreed to work by the "closest resource" concept.
The idea is straight forward: the closest available emergency resource is
dispatched to the emergency, regardless of which fire district the emergency
is actually in. In essence, this means that the taxpayer will get the quickest
response to their emergency regardless of who actually has statutory responsibility.
All of the west slope agencies, including the forest agencies, have signed an
agreement to operate in this fashion. By dropping geographical boundaries, the
fire districts now operate as a functionally "consolidated" fire district
yet still maintain local control. In El Dorado County, it is commonplace to see
fire apparatus from several agencies at one emergency.
What happens when the emergency exceeds the capabilities of the El
Dorado County resources? The State of California has perhaps one of the best systems
in the United States for mitigating emergencies. By written agreement, fire agencies
routinely move fire apparatus from one end of the state to the other. The movement
of all of those resources is controlled via a state network of local fire chiefs and
officials from the California State Office of Emergency Services. During the recent
devastating fires in Southern California, hundreds of fire personnel and apparatus
from Northern California responded to help. In fact, the firefighter who died in the
Southern California fires was from the Bay area. During the Oakland Hills fire,
firefighters from Southern California were there to help. This type of mutual aid
assistance is pre-planned and used to deal with any major disaster including floods,
earthquakes or other natural disaster.
The key to the success of the mutual aid system is the willingness of
the fire agencies statewide to work together. The inter-agency cooperation is the
reason the mutual aid system works so well. It has become a model for the rest of the
nation to follow.

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