"We started to figure out 'who was who in the zoo' so to speak. We got all the right people in the right room—that's kind of what the incident management team does—and we were able to make decisions much easier as we built that team out."
An Unprecedented Event
The Camp Fire was eventually considered to be "contained" a full three weeks after it had started, and in its aftermath began the largest search-and-rescue operation ever conducted in the state of California. A total of nearly 10,000 homes were completely destroyed. When PPD, BSCO, and the Highway Patrol eventually did allow people back into the area to search for any surviving valuables and family mementos, thousands of people were still listed as missing.
In the aftermath, every first responder involved had memories from which they would have 20/20 hindsight and clarity of understanding that was impossible at the time of the incident.
Chief Waters says that public safety leaders in areas potentially affected by any sort of large scale disaster—flooding, wildfire, earthquakes, volcanoes, and everything else—carefully map out evacuation zones.
"In the county, the sheriff has jurisdiction for evacuations—so they're the driving force—and obviously fire plays a big role during a fire," Waters says.