Are NoVA and other DC areas prepared to handle forest fires near populated areas?

Anonymous
What do communities need to build resilience? What are best practices for outside environments and best building practices and materials?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Judging by the number of homeless illegally camping in Rock Creek Park….no.


+1. This is a serious problem. I can’t believe how many people are living in Rock Creek Park dumping trash and polluting the water. It’s ridiculous.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Well arlington isn't.

https://www.wusa9.com/article/news/local/virginia/arlington-county-fire-companies-brown-out-staffing-shortages/65-6eb6d89b-fbe7-4cff-b27b-23c04a32c934


Big problem in Maryland including Montgomery County now due to water main breaks- restricted water use since fire departments need normal supply to hydrants https://wtop.com/local/2025/01/wssc-water-urges-residents-in-prince-georges-montgomery-counties-to-conserve-water/

ARL article was 10/21/24. County was short 35 firefighters and had to temporarily shut down the Ballston station on a Sunday morning. . Arlington and Fairfax Counties have full time fire and EMT. Loudoun does have some volunteers who perform the actice fire and EMT [?] work. The February 2024 propane tank explosion sadly took the life of a fireman who was a volunteer.

Montgomery County MD is loaded with volunteers- fighting fires, driving trucks, EMT, etc. Some are non fire EMT trained volunteers and others can be picking up shifts from full time fire/emt in other jurisdictions I guess.

Montgomery County MD does NOT fully fund their personal use safety equipment etc - on the same level as Fairfax County VA.
Anonymous
I'm less worried about wildfires in our area and more worried about preparing for unsafe air coming down from Canada, where they have been having wildfires. Thinking about investing in some air purifiers and keeping masks stocked. I think I saw there is a more effective mask than the KN-95, so I'm going to do some research.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The winds are a significant factor in the LA fires. With those windspeeds they can't use a lot their equipment and it moves incredibly fast.


So if a fire began along GW Parkway / Spout Run, Arlington has sufficient resources to contain it because we have no wind? Easy peasy?


We don’t get dry 100+ mph winds, nor do we have 8+ months without rain. We live in a very different climate and do not have the same issues as California.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Well arlington isn't.

https://www.wusa9.com/article/news/local/virginia/arlington-county-fire-companies-brown-out-staffing-shortages/65-6eb6d89b-fbe7-4cff-b27b-23c04a32c934


Big problem in Maryland including Montgomery County now due to water main breaks- restricted water use since fire departments need normal supply to hydrants https://wtop.com/local/2025/01/wssc-water-urges-residents-in-prince-georges-montgomery-counties-to-conserve-water/

ARL article was 10/21/24. County was short 35 firefighters and had to temporarily shut down the Ballston station on a Sunday morning. . Arlington and Fairfax Counties have full time fire and EMT. Loudoun does have some volunteers who perform the actice fire and EMT [?] work. The February 2024 propane tank explosion sadly took the life of a fireman who was a volunteer.

Montgomery County MD is loaded with volunteers- fighting fires, driving trucks, EMT, etc. Some are non fire EMT trained volunteers and others can be picking up shifts from full time fire/emt in other jurisdictions I guess.

Montgomery County MD does NOT fully fund their personal use safety equipment etc - on the same level as Fairfax County VA.



Thank you for answering! This is the kind of information I’m after. I’m not anticipating wildfires on the same scale as California. I am concerned whether our first responders are adequately staffed as determined by their departments and some accepted standards (eg, x number of personnel per residential buildings or however they calculate that). That they have working equipment (trucks and water supply, etc.).

Sounds like water mains are temporary issue.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Well arlington isn't.

https://www.wusa9.com/article/news/local/virginia/arlington-county-fire-companies-brown-out-staffing-shortages/65-6eb6d89b-fbe7-4cff-b27b-23c04a32c934


Big problem in Maryland including Montgomery County now due to water main breaks- restricted water use since fire departments need normal supply to hydrants https://wtop.com/local/2025/01/wssc-water-urges-residents-in-prince-georges-montgomery-counties-to-conserve-water/

ARL article was 10/21/24. County was short 35 firefighters and had to temporarily shut down the Ballston station on a Sunday morning. . Arlington and Fairfax Counties have full time fire and EMT. Loudoun does have some volunteers who perform the actice fire and EMT [?] work. The February 2024 propane tank explosion sadly took the life of a fireman who was a volunteer.

Montgomery County MD is loaded with volunteers- fighting fires, driving trucks, EMT, etc. Some are non fire EMT trained volunteers and others can be picking up shifts from full time fire/emt in other jurisdictions I guess.

Montgomery County MD does NOT fully fund their personal use safety equipment etc - on the same level as Fairfax County VA.



Thank you for answering! This is the kind of information I’m after. I’m not anticipating wildfires on the same scale as California. I am concerned whether our first responders are adequately staffed as determined by their departments and some accepted standards (eg, x number of personnel per residential buildings or however they calculate that). That they have working equipment (trucks and water supply, etc.).

Sounds like water mains are temporary issue.


The above is a great example of focusing on the wrong thing, IMO. Water mains that break are a major issue, even if any individual break is temporary. But it's expensive to fix water mains, and unpopular because you have to dig up streets and people's yards, and the connection to firefighting is not as obvious. It’s much more satisfying to buy a new fire truck.

If you are worried about fire department capacity, time to train, etc, it might be useful to look at what the most common calls are that firetrucks respond to (I'd bet it's not fires) and address those issues with, e.g., paramedic response, traffic safety measures, etc.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Well arlington isn't.

https://www.wusa9.com/article/news/local/virginia/arlington-county-fire-companies-brown-out-staffing-shortages/65-6eb6d89b-fbe7-4cff-b27b-23c04a32c934


Big problem in Maryland including Montgomery County now due to water main breaks- restricted water use since fire departments need normal supply to hydrants https://wtop.com/local/2025/01/wssc-water-urges-residents-in-prince-georges-montgomery-counties-to-conserve-water/

ARL article was 10/21/24. County was short 35 firefighters and had to temporarily shut down the Ballston station on a Sunday morning. . Arlington and Fairfax Counties have full time fire and EMT. Loudoun does have some volunteers who perform the actice fire and EMT [?] work. The February 2024 propane tank explosion sadly took the life of a fireman who was a volunteer.

Montgomery County MD is loaded with volunteers- fighting fires, driving trucks, EMT, etc. Some are non fire EMT trained volunteers and others can be picking up shifts from full time fire/emt in other jurisdictions I guess.

Montgomery County MD does NOT fully fund their personal use safety equipment etc - on the same level as Fairfax County VA.



Thank you for answering! This is the kind of information I’m after. I’m not anticipating wildfires on the same scale as California. I am concerned whether our first responders are adequately staffed as determined by their departments and some accepted standards (eg, x number of personnel per residential buildings or however they calculate that). That they have working equipment (trucks and water supply, etc.).

Sounds like water mains are temporary issue.


Not really since there are extensive networks of aging infrastructure. FY21 MOCO had 1200 full time and 900 volunteers who were active duty not office. PPE=personal protective gear was not furnished adequately by MOCO so that means sewage or unsanitary or high water gets staffers in the muck unlike FX.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Well arlington isn't.

https://www.wusa9.com/article/news/local/virginia/arlington-county-fire-companies-brown-out-staffing-shortages/65-6eb6d89b-fbe7-4cff-b27b-23c04a32c934


Big problem in Maryland including Montgomery County now due to water main breaks- restricted water use since fire departments need normal supply to hydrants https://wtop.com/local/2025/01/wssc-water-urges-residents-in-prince-georges-montgomery-counties-to-conserve-water/

ARL article was 10/21/24. County was short 35 firefighters and had to temporarily shut down the Ballston station on a Sunday morning. . Arlington and Fairfax Counties have full time fire and EMT. Loudoun does have some volunteers who perform the actice fire and EMT [?] work. The February 2024 propane tank explosion sadly took the life of a fireman who was a volunteer.

Montgomery County MD is loaded with volunteers- fighting fires, driving trucks, EMT, etc. Some are non fire EMT trained volunteers and others can be picking up shifts from full time fire/emt in other jurisdictions I guess.

Montgomery County MD does NOT fully fund their personal use safety equipment etc - on the same level as Fairfax County VA.



Thank you for answering! This is the kind of information I’m after. I’m not anticipating wildfires on the same scale as California. I am concerned whether our first responders are adequately staffed as determined by their departments and some accepted standards (eg, x number of personnel per residential buildings or however they calculate that). That they have working equipment (trucks and water supply, etc.).

Sounds like water mains are temporary issue.


The above is a great example of focusing on the wrong thing, IMO. Water mains that break are a major issue, even if any individual break is temporary. But it's expensive to fix water mains, and unpopular because you have to dig up streets and people's yards, and the connection to firefighting is not as obvious. It’s much more satisfying to buy a new fire truck.

If you are worried about fire department capacity, time to train, etc, it might be useful to look at what the most common calls are that firetrucks respond to (I'd bet it's not fires) and address those issues with, e.g., paramedic response, traffic safety measures, etc.


As far as I know, it's car crashes.
Anonymous
LA has fires all the time. The problem is the wind. The likelihood of us having a historically unprecedented windstorm in the middle of a six month rainless period is practically zero. That's why we don't have fires here.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:LA has fires all the time. The problem is the wind. The likelihood of us having a historically unprecedented windstorm in the middle of a six month rainless period is practically zero. That's why we don't have fires here.


We do have fires here, though. Certainly not at the scale of California, because we generally don't get 100 mph winds, and our ecosystem isn't a fire ecosystem. But dry + wind = fire hazard, here, too.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Well arlington isn't.

https://www.wusa9.com/article/news/local/virginia/arlington-county-fire-companies-brown-out-staffing-shortages/65-6eb6d89b-fbe7-4cff-b27b-23c04a32c934


Big problem in Maryland including Montgomery County now due to water main breaks- restricted water use since fire departments need normal supply to hydrants https://wtop.com/local/2025/01/wssc-water-urges-residents-in-prince-georges-montgomery-counties-to-conserve-water/

ARL article was 10/21/24. County was short 35 firefighters and had to temporarily shut down the Ballston station on a Sunday morning. . Arlington and Fairfax Counties have full time fire and EMT. Loudoun does have some volunteers who perform the actice fire and EMT [?] work. The February 2024 propane tank explosion sadly took the life of a fireman who was a volunteer.

Montgomery County MD is loaded with volunteers- fighting fires, driving trucks, EMT, etc. Some are non fire EMT trained volunteers and others can be picking up shifts from full time fire/emt in other jurisdictions I guess.

Montgomery County MD does NOT fully fund their personal use safety equipment etc - on the same level as Fairfax County VA.


Don't forget about Richmond too they had no water for 5-6 days including 3 hospitals!!!!

This issues need way more attention then they're currently getting.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I'm less worried about wildfires in our area and more worried about preparing for unsafe air coming down from Canada, where they have been having wildfires. Thinking about investing in some air purifiers and keeping masks stocked. I think I saw there is a more effective mask than the KN-95, so I'm going to do some research.


The air quality would usually only be bad here in the summer now its year around. The visible smog here in the last few weeks is highly concerning!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Judging by the number of homeless illegally camping in Rock Creek Park….no.


+1. This is a serious problem. I can’t believe how many people are living in Rock Creek Park dumping trash and polluting the water. It’s ridiculous.


Really? Wow, I haven't been there in a while how many people do you think are living there?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Well arlington isn't.

https://www.wusa9.com/article/news/local/virginia/arlington-county-fire-companies-brown-out-staffing-shortages/65-6eb6d89b-fbe7-4cff-b27b-23c04a32c934


Big problem in Maryland including Montgomery County now due to water main breaks- restricted water use since fire departments need normal supply to hydrants https://wtop.com/local/2025/01/wssc-water-urges-residents-in-prince-georges-montgomery-counties-to-conserve-water/

ARL article was 10/21/24. County was short 35 firefighters and had to temporarily shut down the Ballston station on a Sunday morning. . Arlington and Fairfax Counties have full time fire and EMT. Loudoun does have some volunteers who perform the actice fire and EMT [?] work. The February 2024 propane tank explosion sadly took the life of a fireman who was a volunteer.

Montgomery County MD is loaded with volunteers- fighting fires, driving trucks, EMT, etc. Some are non fire EMT trained volunteers and others can be picking up shifts from full time fire/emt in other jurisdictions I guess.

Montgomery County MD does NOT fully fund their personal use safety equipment etc - on the same level as Fairfax County VA.


Don't forget about Richmond too they had no water for 5-6 days including 3 hospitals!!!!

This issues need way more attention then they're currently getting.


Wait. What?? That really is insane. Was there a reserve in case of emergency?
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