From Pacific Paradise to Canadian Wildfires: One Firefighter鈥檚 4700-mile Journey

After almost 4,700 miles, Eric Johnson, the Assistant Fire Management Officer for the Hawaiian and Pacific Islands for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USbet365下载ios), finally arrived in Canada. Landing at the airport, he made his way to Lebel-sur-蚕耻茅惫颈濒濒辞苍, a small town of about 2,000 people, in Quebec. Lebel-sur-蚕耻茅惫颈濒濒辞苍 is where the Incident Command Post was established to manage the Lebel-sur-蚕耻茅惫颈濒濒辞苍 Complex, which consisted of 17 wildfires. The complex, at about 600,000 acres at the time of his arrival, would expand to consume 1.5 million acres by the end of his assignment.  

The Southwest Area Incident Command Team poses for a group photo. Eric Johnson is pictured at the top center of the photo.

Except for fire personnel, the small town of Lebel-sur-蚕耻茅惫颈濒濒辞苍 was deserted, having been evacuated prior to Johnson鈥檚 arrival. Johnson filled the role of Fire Behavior Analyst (FBAN) on the Southwest Area Incident Management Team (IMT) to assist with the wildfire situation in Canada, currently experiencing their worst fire season on record.  

As a FBAN, Johnson is responsible for collecting weather data, developing strategic and tactical fire behavior information, predicting fire growth, and interpreting fire characteristics for use by incident overhead (personnel assigned to supervisory positions). All this information is used to inform managers and firefighters about what fire behavior is likely to do over a specific timeframe, typically five days. On wildfire incidents in the United States, Johnson would typically work with an Incident Meteorologist. However, on this assignment, the team did not have one, so he functioned as the onsite weather expert too.  

Every assignment has its own set of unique challenges, and this assignment was no different. Quebec鈥檚 official spoken language is French. Johnson, who does not speak French, mentions a heartfelt gratitude whenever he encountered a local fluent in English. 鈥My high school French teacher would have been quite disappointed in me, said Johnson.  

Eric Johnson in the helicopter during a reconnaissance flight over the recently burned landscape in Quebec, Canada.

There were times when I would be doing a reconnaissance flight to check on fire activity and the pilot didn鈥檛 speak English and I don鈥檛 speak French,鈥 shares Johnson, with a laugh. 鈥淭here was a lot of pointing and gesturing going on.鈥 

At other times, Johnson had access to Google Translate. He found utilizing this software helped him communicate when more than gestures were needed. There was also a bilingual administrator who monitored all the radio traffic at the Incident Command Post to ensure multi-language communications weren鈥檛 missed. 

鈥淎nother challenge I hadn鈥檛 anticipated was Canadian, Portuguese and Korean firefighters familiarity with the metric system rather than imperial units,鈥 said Johnson. It was important to translate units of measurement for both audiences. Instead of focusing on finite measurements for fire activity, I tried to focus on more qualitative descriptions of expected fire behavior. So, instead of saying 鈥fire will spread at 5 meters per minute with spotting to 1 kilometer, I would sayfire transition to crown fire on all flanks by early afternoon, with medium-range spotting to the southwest, likely crossing Belle Rivi猫re south of the boat ramp today鈥.鈥 

The Aviation Branch poses for a photo at the 蚕耻茅惫颈濒濒辞苍 airport. The group is made up of a few from the Southwest Area IMT and Sacramento Interagency Hotshot Crew (aerial firing group). Johnson is on the far left.

Johnson also needed to decipher differences in Canada鈥檚 Fire Behavior Prediction (FBP) system from the U.S. system to determine weather (fuel moisture) and fuel types to apply. There are significant differences to the systems, most important are the way weather (fuel moisture and wind) and fuel models (fuel types) are applied. This required Johnson to do a bit of homework to better understand their system, interpret the data, and make sound predictions to share with fire personnel. 

Johnson is used to adjusting to assignments in emergency management. At the time of this interview, he was sitting in an airport in Hawaii traveling to Guam to assist with prioritization and recovery at Guam National Wildlife Refuge, which was impacted by Super Typhoon Mawar in late May of this year.  

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Fire management