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ODF Incident Management Teams’ Commitment to Oregon

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Salem, Ore. – This week marked the 12th deployment for the Oregon Department of Forestry’s incident management teams (IMT)—11 during fire season and one following the ice storm earlier this year.

 An IMT is a group of specially trained and qualified personnel who together provide the type of highly adaptable and coordinated infrastructure necessary to manage elements associated with all types of emergencies. ODF’s three Type 1 IMTs are qualified to handle the most complex incidents and deploy all throughout Oregon, nationally and internationally to provide help when it is desperately needed.

The 1955 fire season revealed a gap in Oregon’s wildfire response capacity—a trained, qualified team of people able to come in and handle major fires when the incident management needs exceeded the capabilities of local resources. In 1956, ODF’s first incident management team deployed to do just that. Since then, ODF’s three IMTs have been deployed in state nearly 200 times. About a quarter of those deployments have been in just the past decade, corresponding with the increase in wildfire complexity and intensity we’ve been experiencing in Oregon.

While the majority of team deployments have been wildfire incidents, ODF’s IMTs are all-hazards qualified and have responded to a variety of other emergencies.  In recent years, the agency has supported Curry County’s response to a cyber security incident and Lane County’s response to the ice storm this past February. Early in the pandemic, our team members were tasked with helping establish the incident command structure necessary to sustain the state’s response to COVID-19.

“The professionalism, expertise and adaptability of our IMTs mean that we can answer the call to help our fellow Oregonians and their communities through more than just wildfires,” said ODF’s Protection Division Chief Chris Cline.

Morning briefing

In fact, this week’s deployment is also for something other than wildfire response. This fire season was particularly intense for eastern Oregon, and the work doesn’t stop when the fire is contained. Once the flames are out, actions begin to repair damages caused by suppression efforts. ODF Team 3 was called in to provide the complex logistical and overhead support needed to assess more than 500 miles of fire line for suppression repair needs and get that work started.

Being part of an IMT requires significant commitment, especially during fire season. Standard deployments are 14 days in a stressful, austere environment. Staff typically work 16-hour days and then head to catch some sleep in a tent, in a field, or in a parking lot.

“ODF’s incident management teams are comprised of individuals committed to serving something bigger than themselves,” said Blake Ellis, ODF’s Fire Operations Manager.

community meeting

But the bigger sacrifice is the year after year of missed birthdays, anniversaries, summer vacations and other quality time with family and friends.

“The hardest part isn’t the long hours and days, but rather being away from my loved ones and at times missing important moments,” said Jennifer Erdmann, ODF IMT 1 Planning Section Chief. “But we know that when we sign up to be a part of a team, in a way we’re signing our families up for it as well.”

jess and jen

 

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George Custer lives in Oakridge with his wife Sayre. George is a former smokejumper from his hometown of Cave Junction, a former captain in the U.S. Marine Corps. and ran a construction company in Southern California. George assumed the volunteer duties as the Editor of the Highway 58 Herald in 2022. He loves riding his Harley-Davidson motorcycle, building all things wood, and playing drums on the weekends in his office.

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