The largest and most visible part of CAL FIRE operations is fire protection. Operations are divided into 21 operational units, which geographically follow county lines. Each unit consists of the area of one or more counties. Operational units are grouped under either the North Region or South Region. The Office of the State Fire Marshal (OSFM) is the CAL FIRE program that protects life and property through the development and application of fire prevention, engineering, training and education, and enforcement. The Office of the State Fire Marshal provides support through a variety of fire safety responsibilities including: regulating occupied buildings; controlling substances and products which may cause injuries, death and destruction by fire; providing statewide direction for fire prevention within wildland areas; regulating hazardous liquid pipelines; developing and reviewing regulations and building standards; and providing training and education in fire protection methods and responsibilities. There are two CAL FIRE training centers. The original academy is the CAL FIRE Training Center in
Ione, east of Sacramento. The second academy is at the Ben Clark Training Center in
Riverside. Both centers host the Fire Fighter Academy (FFA). All CAL FIRE Fire Protection employees go through this academy once they become permanent employees. The Company Officer Academy (COA) is only held in Ione. All new company officers (Engineer, Captain, Forester I, etc.) attend this academy.
Rank structure Leadership The uniformed executive staff of CAL FIRE includes the following individuals. •
Director: Joe Tyler •
Chief Deputy Director: Anale Burlew •
State Fire Marshal: Daniel Berlant •
Assistant State Fire Marshal: Vickie Sakamoto •
Deputy Director, Communications/Incident Awareness: Nick Schuler •
Southern Region Chief: Mike van Loben Sels •
Northern Region Chief: George Morris III •
Deputy Director, Resource Management: Matthew Reischman •
Deputy Director, Cooperative Fire Protection: Matthew Sully •
Deputy Director, Fire Protection Programs: Jake Sjolund •
Deputy Director, Community Wildfire Preparedness & Mitigation and Fire Engineering & Investigations Division: Frank Bigelow
Pay As of 2017,
median pay for full time firefighters (which includes base pay, special pay, overtime and benefits) is $148,000.
Representation Firefighters employed by the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection are represented by IAFF affiliate, CAL FIRE Local 2881, which represents 5,700 members within CAL FIRE Local 2881 and is also associated with the California Professional Firefighters (CPF) and the
International Association of Firefighters (IAFF).
Operational units Operational units are organizations designed to address fire suppression over a geographic area. They vary widely in size and
terrain. For example, Lassen-Modoc-Plumas Operational Unit encompasses three
rural counties and consists of eight fire stations, one Helitack Base, three conservation camps and an inmate firefighter training center. Fire suppression resources include 13 front-line fire engines, 1 helicopter, 3 bulldozers and 14 inmate fire crews. The unit shares an interagency emergency command center with federal agencies including the
US Forest Service,
National Park Service, and the
Bureau of Land Management. An interagency center contributes to economies of scale, supports cooperation, and lends itself to a more seamless operation. The area has fragmented jurisdictions across a large rural area along the
Nevada and
Oregon state lines. The Riverside Operational Unit (RRU) by itself would be considered one of the largest fire departments in the nation, with 95 fire stations and approximately 230 pieces of equipment. The Riverside Operational Unit operates as the Riverside County Fire Department under contract with
Riverside County, as well as eighteen municipal fire departments and one community services district fire department. Nine of the stations in Riverside County belong to the state, while the rest are owned by their respective local government entity. The unit operates its own emergency command center in
Perris. Terrain served includes
urban and
suburban areas of the
Inland Empire and the desert communities in the metropolitan
Palm Springs area. The area includes forested mountains, dry scrub forest, chaparral, agricultural land, the
Colorado River basin, the
Colorado Desert, the
Mojave Desert, and
Interstate 10 from the Los Angeles Metropolitan area to the Arizona state line. The counties of Marin (MRN), Kern (KRN), Santa Barbara (SBC), Ventura (VNC), Los Angeles (LAC) and Orange (ORC) have an agreement with the state to provide fire protection for state responsibility areas within those counties rather than CAL FIRE providing direct fire protection, and are commonly known as the "Contract Counties". Lawmakers in Sacramento have mandated that every operational unit develop and implement an annual fire management plan. The plan will develop cooperation and community programs to reduce damage from, and costs of, fires in California. One metric used by fire suppression units is
initial attack success: fires stopped by the initial resources (equipment and personnel) sent to the incident.
Northern Region units and identifiers • Amador-El Dorado Unit – AEU / 2700 (Including Sacramento and Alpine Counties) • Butte Unit – BTU / 2100 • Humboldt-Del Norte Unit – HUU / 1200 • Lassen-Modoc-Plumas Unit – LMU / 2200 (Including Plumas County as of June 2008) • Mendocino Unit – MEU / 1100 • Nevada-Yuba-Placer Unit – NEU / 2300 (Including Sutter and Sierra Counties) • San Mateo-Santa Cruz Unit – CZU / 1700 • Santa Clara Unit – SCU / 1600 (Including Contra Costa, Alameda, Santa Clara, and parts of San Joaquin, and Stanislaus Counties) • Shasta-Trinity Unit – SHU / 2400 • Siskiyou Unit – SKU / 2600 • Sonoma-Lake-Napa Unit – LNU / 1400 (Including Solano, Yolo, and Colusa Counties) • Tehama-Glenn Unit – TGU / 2500
Southern Region units and identifiers • Fresno-Kings Unit – FKU / 4300 • Madera-Mariposa-Merced Unit – MMU / 4200 • Riverside Unit – RRU / 3100 • San Benito-Monterey Unit – BEU / 4600 • San Bernardino Unit – BDU / 3500 (Including Inyo and Mono Counties) • San Diego Unit – SDU / 3300 (Including Imperial County) • San Luis Obispo Unit – SLU / 3400 • Tulare Unit – TUU / 4100 • Tuolumne-Calaveras Unit – TCU / 4400 (Including portions of San Joaquin, Stanislaus, and Alpine counties) ==Equipment==