By Myles Bridgewater-Jackman | Cal State LA News Service
As wildfires rage across California, Cal State LA students are on the front lines battling blazes and helping save lives and property.
The students are firefighters pursuing bachelor’s degrees in the unique Fire Protection Administration and Technology program in the College of Engineering, Computer Science, and Technology.
From the Bobcat Fire in Los Angeles County to the massive Creek Fire in Fresno and Madera counties, Cal State LA students have braved searing heat, choking smoke and constant fatigue during what has become a devastating fire season in California and across the West.
“It's definitely an intense experience out there on the front line,” says Hector Banda, 21, a senior fire protection administration and technology major assigned to a U.S. Forest Service crew fighting the Bobcat Fire in the mountains north of Cal State LA.
As he rested in a base camp, Banda spoke in a phone interview about attacking the wildfire with an army of firefighters from different agencies. Since breaking out in the Angeles National Forest on Sept. 6, the Bobcat Fire has scorched more than 114,000 acres.
For days, Banda and other crews have traversed rugged terrain, blasting hotspots with water, watching for spot fires and cutting fire breaks to slow the advancing flames.
“We’re holding the fire line,” says Banda, who was raised in South Los Angeles and credits Cal State LA with helping him pursue his dream of a career in the fire service.
Like Banda, Anthony Galvez has been fighting fires with the U.S. Forest Service while completing his final year at Cal State LA. Raised in Pico Rivera, the 27-year-old Galvez is assigned to a fire crew in Cherry Lake in the Stanislaus National Forest.
In early September, Galvez and his crew were dispatched to the mammoth Creek Fire, the largest single wildfire in California history. The blaze has burned more than 307,000 acres in the Sierra National Forest.
When the crew members arrived, their immediate concern was protecting the small town of Big Creek in Fresno County. As flames devoured timber and brush in the hills above them, Galvez and his team stretched out hose lines, ready to spray protective curtains of water, and they began burning nearby brush that could fuel advancing flames and turn the town into a raging inferno.
In the end, the defensive measures enabled the firefighters to save dozens of homes nestled in the foothills of the western Sierra Nevada.
“I felt like I made a difference,” Galvez recalled several days later. “I was exhausted. But I felt like if I had to stay up another 78 hours, I’d definitely do it again to protect those houses and do my job."
Cal State LA sophomore and Whittier resident Jocelyn Cardenas is among the legions of firefighters battling the Sequoia Complex Fire, which has burned more than 150,000 acres in the Sequoia National Forest.
It’s a risky assignment, one in which erratic winds and crown fires—intense blazes at the tops of huge trees—can transform a forest canopy into a ceiling of flames.
“The job is dangerous. You really have to be paying attention and be cautious of what's around you,” Cardenas said in a recent phone call between shifts on the fire line.
She pointed out that other hazards abound, including dead trees and boulders, which can roll down the sides of hills and crush unsuspecting firefighters. “It’s not just the fire you need to pay attention to,” Cardenas says.
Amid the intensity of a firefight, safety is a crew’s number-one priority. Conditions can change in an instant, so being aware of threats like weather changes or spot fires can be paramount to firefighting safely. Wildfire crews maintain constant communication with their operations team, and other nearby crews, while staying conscious of escape routes and safe points if the time comes to pull back.
“If you don’t feel like [a situation] is right, you’ve got to speak up.” says Galvez. “Everybody just wants to get the job done, and they want to get it right. Nobody wants to get hurt.”
For crews fighting wildfires, hours are long and demanding. Firefighters can be on the clock for 24-hour shifts, ready to respond to any incident. Some, like Banda and Galvez, have worked 14 days straight, battling both fire and fatigue on the front lines.
Despite exhaustion, the three Cal State LA students dedicate their limited free time to their studies in the Fire Protection Administration and Technology program.
The fully virtual curriculum allows students to acquire their degrees while working for fire agencies, said faculty member Michael Thomas, a former battalion chief with the Los Angeles Fire Department who has been teaching in the program since 2016.
“The program makes efforts to accommodate the in-service firefighter's frequently challenging work schedule in completing assignments,” Thomas says.
Students agree, saying the virtual curriculum has been invaluable during this chaotic fire season.
“If I have a lunch break I try to work on whatever I can,” says Cardenas. “When we’re driving I try to sit in the back of the buggy and try to work on assignments there.”
The courses prepare students for highly competitive entry-level firefighting positions as well as opportunities for promotion.
Galvez, who joined the Forest Service 18 months ago, says the curriculum has been instrumental in teaching him skills applicable to his daily work.
“Knowing how to do basically anything hands on, I learned it from Cal State LA from those courses,” he says.
Banda foresees the degree helping advance his professional goals, as he aims to become a member of an elite hotshot crew. These crews battle the hottest, most demanding parts of a wildfire. Eventually, Banda wants to be promoted to a captain in the Forest Service.
While the work can be dangerous and exhausting, the three Cal State LA students said they have enjoyed the challenge firefighting presents, as well as the opportunity it has provided to help carry out the university’s commitment to engagement and service for the public good.
Photos: Top, Cal State LA student Hector Banda battles the Bobcat Fire with his U.S. Forest Service crew. (Photo courtesy of Hector Banda) Middle, Cal State LA student Anthony Galvez is assigned to a U.S. Forest Service fire crew in the Stanislaus National Forest. (Photo courtesy of Anthony Galvez) Bottom, Jocelyn Cardenas (front center) has been battling the Sequoia Complex Fire. (Photo courtesy of Jocelyn Cardenas)
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California State University, Los Angeles is the premier comprehensive public university in the heart of Los Angeles. Cal State LA is ranked number one in the United States for the upward mobility of its students. Cal State LA is dedicated to engagement, service, and the public good, offering nationally recognized programs in science, the arts, business, criminal justice, engineering, nursing, education, and the humanities. Founded in 1947, the University serves more than 26,000 students and has more than 250,000 distinguished alumni.
Cal State LA is home to the critically-acclaimed Luckman Fine Arts Complex, Pat Brown Institute for Public Affairs, Hertzberg-Davis Forensic Science Center, Hydrogen Research and Fueling Facility, Billie Jean King Sports Complex and the TV, Film and Media Center. For more information, visit www.CalStateLA.edu.
09/30/20