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Saipan wildland fire crews help fight California fires

Melanie Banton, Region 5 Fire and Aviation
Shilo Springstead, Mendocino National Forest
September 24, 2024

A wildland fire crew stands behind a fallen tree on a road
As part of the Forest Service’s Cooperative Fire Program, crews work together to clear roads while learning essential wildfire management skills. (USDA Forest Service photo by Shilo Springstead)

CALIFORNIA — Continuing a long-standing partnership between the USDA Forest Service and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, Mendocino National Forest is again hosting wildfire crews from Saipan. Crew 36 has provided gap fill for wildfire initial attack in California public lands since 2001. This year, the Mendocino National Forest hosted a second team, CNMI Crew 32, doubling the capacity to provide wildfire protection in the Pacific Southwest Region.

Through the Forest Service’s Cooperative Fire Program, instructors from the mainland travel to the islands to provide a variety of wildland fire training courses. Graduates of this training are chosen, through a competitive process, to serve as part of the crew each season. When the CNMI crew is ordered to the U.S. to assist with wildfires, instructors may have the opportunity to serve on the crew as a senior firefighter or crew boss.

A crew of men, gathered round in a circle, all wearing black t-shirts, green pants and ballcaps.
CNMI firefighters participating in a briefing, a critical part of fire communication. (USDA Forest Service photo by Shilo Springstead)

The 60-day assignment of the two CNMI crews provided even more crucial aid as Region 5 entered Preparedness Level 5 earlier than usual. The teams have had assignments in the Borel Fire on the Sequoia National Forest, the Boise Fire on Six Rivers National Forest and the Park Fire on the Lassen National Forest. 

The Cooperative Fire Program works with our Pacific partners to increase capability and capacity in the fire community. The partnership also aids firefighters in garnering essential training needed to provide valuable firefighting skills back home where wildfires and ignition of fire-prone vegetation pose an extreme threat to existing forests and contribute to soil erosion. These partners include Commonwealth of Northern Mariana Islands, Guam, Hawaii, Republic of the Marshall Islands, Republic of Palau, American Samoa and the Federated States of Micronesia.

Group photo
Crew 36 has provided gap fill for wildfire initial attack in California public lands since 2001. (USDA Forest Service photo by Shilo Springstead)
group photo
Crew 32, one of two crews from Saipan that are being hosted by the Mendocino National Forest. (USDA Forest Service photo by Shilo Springstead)