Fresno Air Attack Base

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The Fresno Air Attack Base was established in 1955 By the US Forest Service, Sierra National Forest and is located at the Fresno Yosemite International Airport. The US Forest Service leases office space to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection's (CAL FIRE) Fresno/Kings Unit. In 1994, it was completely rebuilt to become a model modern AirTanker Base which includes a modern interagency communication/command center.

Fresno Air Base

The Fresno Air Base responds to an average of 100 calls per year in its immediate response area which spans from the California-Nevada border to the east, Interstate 5 to the west, Merced River to the north, and Fresno-Tulare county lines to the south. On average, the base pumps about 500,000 gallons of retardant a year. With the base’s pumps, four loading pits, plus one maintenance or auxiliary pit (in a major event can be used as a loading pit), Fresno has a possible peak output of 300,000 gallons of retardant each day. The Air base is also approved for the Modular Airborne FireFighting System (MAFFS) with a maxminum of 6 aircraft. there is sufficient aircraft parking for up to 8 aircraft at a time. [1]

The Airbase is owned by the US Forest Service which permanently staffs the base with a forest aviation officer (Division Chief), air base manager (battalion chief), assistant base manager(Captain) and a seasonal staff which is a combination of either three Seasonal or regular fire fighters.

The US Forest service has one Air Attack Aircraft (AA15) a Rockwell Aero Commander 690A and one type 1 or one type 2 Airtanker which is only Administered by the base.


In July 2012 The CAL FIRE Fresno-Kings Unit withdraw both personnel and aircraft from the FAAB. CAL FIRE will still use the base for the reloading of Fire aircraft and for refueling of those aircraft has needed. before the start of the 2012 fire season CAL FIRE lease office space and the right to use the base in an emergency and had a permanent Staff of a unit air officer (battalion chief), air base Manager (fire captain) and a seasonal staff of one Assistant air base manager (fire apparatus engineer (FAE)), and three firefighters.


The Former CAL FIRE aircraft assigned to Fresno included one North American Rockwell OV-10A Bronco Air Attack (AA430) which has been relocated to McClellan Reload base to act as a statewide spare Air attack aircraft. The one Grumman Marsh S-2F3AT Turbo Tracker airtanker(T78) was relocated to Porterville.

Fresno Emergency Communication/Command Center

The Fresno Emergency Communication/Command Center (ECC) is an interagency communication and command center that is located at the Fresno Air Attack Base. It is jointly operated by the US Forest Service (Sierra NF Emergency Communication Center) and CAL FIRE (Fresno/Kings Unit Emergency Command Center).

The US Forest Service uses the emergency Communication center (ECC) for the Sierra NF and the US Fish & Wildlife Service San Luis National Wildlife Refuge Complex.

CAL FIRE uses the Emergency Command Center (ECC) for its Fresno/Kings Unit, Fresno County Fire, Fowler City, Laton Volunteer Fire Department, Riverdale Public Utilities District, Orange Cove Fire, Auberry Volunteer Fire, Bald Mountain Fire, Shaver Lake Volunteer Fire, Huntington Lake Volunteer Fire, Big Creek Volunteer Fire, Mountain Valley Volunteer Fire, Pine Ridge Volunteers, and Pleasant Valley State Prison Fire Department. They also have contracts for fire protection within the Cities of Mendota, Huron, and Parlier. Along with these departments, they are also the California Governor's Office of Emergency Services (OES) coordination center for the Fresno County Operational Area, and OES Region V which covers Fresno, Kings, Kern, Tulare, Madera, Merced, and Mariposa Counties. As the coordination center, the personnel are tasked through the chain of command by the Governor to request local government support for major incidents throughout the state, and even the country if needed. In 2007, the ECC processed 16,607 events of which 13,629 were emergency incidents within its area of responsibility. In 2006,

File:Ecc floor duo.jpg
Fresno ECC 2 CAL Fire Dispatch Consoles

CAL FIRE Dispatch Stations

In 2007 CAL FIRE completed a 1.2 million dollar center remodel which equipped the ECC with Northrop Grummans' CommandPoint Computer-assisted dispatch (CAD) system that automatically recommends equipment to a call once received via 9-1-1 or radio. If you look at the monitors on the picture to the right, (from left to right) you have the computer controlled telephone system. This system controls 8 9-1-1 lines, 7 seven digit emergency lines, 6 direct dial (ring down) lines to other local agencies, and 11 business lines. The second monitor is the computer radio touch screen. This screen is where they monitor 32 different frequencies. they also "tone out" the fire stations from this screen with the touch of a finger. The next three screens are part of the CAD. These screens have different windows within the CAD system including a map, equipment status, and incident information. The next monitor on the right is a work station where personnel can complete reports and other tasks as needed. some stations also have an additional Radio Control computer that is tied in to the Fresno County Emergency Medical Services communications system. This system allow the fire dispatchers to communicate with the Fresno County EMS ambulances. There are 4 identical consoles on the command floor, with one additional console available in "expanded" when an incident becomes very large and requires dedicated personnel just for that incident. [2]

Forest Service Dispatch Stations

The Forest Service's four Dispatch Stations use the same software for the Telephone and radio control computers as the Cal FIRE Dispatch Stations. the monitors are arranged from left to right: one computer controlled telephone system touchscreen monitor, one Computer controlled Radio touchscreen monitor, one Computer-assisted dispatch (CAD) monitor; the Forest Service Uses software from Bighorn Information Systems for Fire Planning (IIAA, FireBudget), Fire Prevention (PWA, WPAP, BuildFBD), Aircraft Management (AMIS, AUTOAT), Fuels Management (FORBS, FATE), Historical Fire Analysis (PCHA), Computer-Aided Dispatch (WildCAD), GIS Utilities Legal<->Lat/Lon<->UTM), Readiness Review (READY), Fire Cache Management (CACHE) and Weed Abatement Model Concept and the last Monitor is a workstation for reports and other tasks. One of the dispatch stations also has access to the Fresno County Emergency Medical Services communications system and another different station as a Notebook computer which has access to the National Law Enforcement Telecommunications System (NLETS), the National Crime Information Center (NCIC), the Criminal Justice Information System (CJIS), the California Law Enforcement Telecommunications System (CLETS), the California Department of Motor Vehicle (CalDMV) and the Oregon Law Enforcement Data System (LEDS).

References

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External links