Crime & Safety

South Bay Fire Departments Prepare For Dangerous Wildfire Season

Three-day prevention exercise in the Lexington Basin, south of Los Gatos, will help public safety agencies better coordinate response in case of large-scale wild land inferno.

A three-day wildfire prevention exercise June 18-20 in the Lexington Basin, south of Los Gatos, signals preparation by the Santa Clara County Fire Department, Cal Fire and other first responders for fire season which officially began Memorial Day.

Santa Clara County Battalion Chief Kendall Pearson said in a statement that multiple area agencies will participate in the three-day wild land fire training to be ready when the next inferno strikes, more possible this year due to a dry winter.

The annual event, coordinated by the Santa Clara County Fire Chiefs  Association, will allow firefighters, police officers, medical volunteers, and other emergency responders to work together during simulated emergency scenarios, the release stated.

Find out what's happening in Cupertinowith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Cooperating agencies include the Cal Fire Santa Clara Unit, Town of Los Gatos, Santa Clara County Emergency Medical Services Agency, and local government
fire departments.

During a large fire emergency, different agencies and groups will be involved in addition to fire departments.

Find out what's happening in Cupertinowith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Large animal evacuation groups and medical volunteers will participate in this year's drill and experience large-scale coordination of resources first hand, he said in the statement.

“Whether the patch on your shoulder says state, county, city, or town, the reality is that we will all be working together to meet the challenges of a major wildfire emergency. No one agency can do it all. Practicing together makes us better performers during the real deal,” said Derek Witmer, division chief for Cal Fire and incident commander for this year's exercise.

Below rainfall levels this year have made many public safety agencies be on the lookout for the possibility of a large-scale wildfire. Those who live near the Los Gatos Mountains are close to vast acres of land with dry grass and brush, which could easily ignite in case of hot temperatures and lit embers from careless residents such as those from an improperly discarded cigarette butt or an unattended BBQ, to name a few.


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here

To request removal of your name from an arrest report, submit these required items to arrestreports@patch.com.