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Public Safety

Cal Fire Fighting More Fires With New Tools

One of Cal Fire's new Blackhawk helicopters is seen taking in water in this undated photo.
Cal Fire
One of Cal Fire's new Blackhawk helicopters is seen taking in water in this undated photo.
New Blackhawk helicopters are replacing the state agency's Vietnam-era Hueys. Newly hired firefighters will replace many of the inmate crews no longer available because of COVID-19 precautions or early release.

The state of California has seen nearly 2,000 more wildfires in California from January through July 2020 than in the same period of 2019.

The good news is that the acreage burned is less than half the annual average acreage burned over the last five years.

San Diego's Cal Fire Captain Isaac Sanchez attributes the positive results to the cooperation and communication between California's many fire agencies and the aggression with which wildfires are tackled. In addition, Cal Fire is acquiring 12 new Blackhawk helicopters to replace the fleet of aging water-dropping Hueys.

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The agency is also hiring about 1,000 firefighters to replace the hand crews of qualified prison inmates now unavailable because of early release or because of COVID-19 fears.

Sanchez talks with Midday Edition about how the agency is fighting the state's wildfires in 2020.

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