Comox Fire Rescue

Prevention, Emergency Response, and the Comox Fire Training Centre

Comox Fire Rescue provides a variety of preventive and emergency services to a population of over 18,000 in an area of 16 square miles. This includes the Town of Comox, the Comox Fire Protection Improvement District, the Bates Huband Local Service Area (Regional District of Comox-Strathcona), and the Comox Indian Band. They also operate the Comox Fire Training Centre, which trains firefighters from all over Vancouver Island, and even parts of BC and the rest of Canada. The training centre is certified by the JIBC.

Fire in North-East Woods, Comox

Comox Fire Rescue received a call on Sunday afternoon, June 21 of smoke in the North East Woods.

A fire was located very deep in the forest area. Sixteen Comox firefighters used over 2000 gallons of water and three hours to extinguish the fire. A small crew from the Coastal Fire Base (forestry) in Campbell River was also dispatched but the Comox firefighters had it well in hand before the forestry crew arrived. Comox firefighters returned to the location the following day to ensure the fire was out.

Sixteen Comox firefighters used over 2000 gallons of water and three hours to extinguish the fire

Chief Schreiner states: “This is the largest of several incidents we have had in the North East Woods in the past week. The area is extremely dry and any small fire can quickly become a major problem. These fires can be very dangerous, extremely difficult to extinguish and can threaten nearby homes. If you are caught lighting one of these fires you would faces severe consequences. I am proud of our firefighters who quickly responded to this incident and worked very hard to limit and extinguish the fire.”

If you see or smell any smoke in any of the local forested areas please called 911.

Comox firefighters returned to the location the following day to ensure the fire was out

Meet our Members: Ron Barrow

This week on Meet our Members, we interview Ron Barrow!

Lieutenant Ron Barrow

CFR: Could you provide a brief background of your fire service career?

My career as a Search and Rescue Technician in the Airforce posted me back to my home town of Comox in 1999.

CFR: Was there any specific event that first interested you in becoming a fire fighter?

I met the dedicated professionals within the CFD which lead me to join in 2002. That atmosphere continues to be a big part of the reward for me.

CFR: What is your favourite part of volunteering for Comox Fire Rescue (or working in the valley in general)?

Contributing to our communities well being and participating in the continuous learning and professional development offered in the Training Centre have motivated me from the beginning.

Lieutenant Barrow training new recruits at the Comox Fire Training Centre

CFR: Outside of the fire department, what are your interests/hobbies?

I enjoy all outdoor activities, with friends and family all year round. Especially boating and fishing with my wife Destinee and spending time with our grown boys Blayne, Jayden and Cedar...woof!

Thank you Ron for your many years of dedicated volunteer service!

BC Fire Expo and Annual FCABC Conference - Penticton 2015

We're back! The BC Fire Expo was a great experience full of networking, learning, and (of course) drooling over trucks. Thanks to everyone who made it and braved the Penticton heat!

From the FCABC website:

The BC Fire Expo is the largest exhibition of fire service equipment and services in the Pacific Northwest. With an average of 120 inside booths and 30 outside displays, the BC Fire Expo attracts over 300 Chief Officers, Emergency Vehicle Technicians and firefighters from across B.C.

Here are a few pictures from the trip!

Firesmart Tips to Protect Your Home!

The calendar says summer starts on June 21st, but the weather is saying otherwise! The warm weather and lack of precipitation are leading up to a long dry summer. Here are some tips to keep your home safe this season!

The 3 priority zones to keep your house safe!

Expert warns fire season in Northern B.C. getting worse

MIKE HAGER

VANCOUVER — The Globe and Mail

Published Monday, May. 18 2015, 6:51 PM EDT

Last updated Monday, May. 18 2015, 11:09 PM EDT

A massive wildfire near Little Bobtail Lake, southwest of Prince George, that has been burning for more than a week has now been confirmed to be human caused, RCMP said Sunday.
(BC Wildfire Management photo)

A massive wildfire in northern B.C. shows that the province’s forests are increasingly primed for such blazes because of climate change and the El Nino weather pattern, an expert says.

The 240-square-kilometre fire, first reported late Friday on May 8 near Little Bobtail Lake southwest of Prince George, is only 15-per-cent contained, according to a Monday update from the B.C. Wildfire Branch.

Since Saturday, heavy winds almost doubled the size of the blaze and halted the progress of 270 firefighters, according to the branch.

Lori Daniels, an associate professor in the University of B.C.’s forestry faculty, said Monday that the Little Bobtail Lake fire is symptomatic of more intense and longer fire seasons the province is now experiencing. Global warming has driven this change, Prof. Daniels said.

She added, however, that it has also been fuelled by debris that has built up after decades of firefighters stopping smaller, more frequent fires that once rejuvenated forests with low-intensity burns. “I hope this is a cautionary message to anybody working in, living in and using our forests, that we have to be careful,” Prof. Daniels said. “Even the forests in what we consider a wetter, cooler forest type within the province currently are burning at a higher intensity, which also shows other parts of the province are hot and dry.”

B.C. could continue to warm over the next 100 years, according to some global climate-change models, exacerbating the forest-fire threat.

Prof. Daniels said this warming has already reduced winter snowpacks and is bringing springs that are drier and summers that have longer periods of drought. These droughts are magnified by the El Nino weather pattern, she said, which brings warmer water up North America’s West Coast and has become more frequent over the past three decades.

The amount of rain that falls in the next month will be the “telltale sign” for how intense this summer’s wildfire season will be, according to Prof. Daniels.

Meanwhile, RCMP are investigating the trigger point of the Little Bobtail Lake fire they suspect was started by someone, but authorities still don’t know whether it was an accident or arson.

Corporal Craig Douglass, spokesman for the Prince George RCMP, said that Mounties got to the fire’s point of origin on Saturday, but “then the fire came back on us so we had to get out of there for another day.”

“We’re going to get in there as soon as it’s safe to do so to continue gathering evidence,” said Cpl. Douglass Monday, noting that he didn’t know if investigators were able to return to the site Sunday.

“I would hope that this isn’t deliberately set and that’s what our hope is, that somebody wouldn’t actually want to cause that much damage,” he added. “There’s a fine line; even when it’s accidental there could be negligence involved, i.e. throwing a cigarette butt out the window during a hot, dry summer and into grass that leads up to a forest.”

Cpl. Douglass appealed to the public to contact the RCMP or leave an anonymous tip with CrimeStoppers if they know anything about the start of the fire.

“Any suspicious vehicles that were out there last Friday, any suspicious activity, anything that’s just out of the ordinary that somebody might have seen, we might be interested in,” he said.

The wildfire has forced roughly 80 people to evacuate their homes near Norman and Bobtail lakes, while those living near Bednesti and Cluculz lakes have been notified they might have to evacuate their residences soon, as well.

Any blaze larger than a campfire is now banned in the area, according to a notice from the wildfire management branch of the B.C. Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resources.

Comox Fire Rescue

1870 Noel Ave, Comox, BC, V9M 2K9, Canada

250.339.2432