USDA Forest Service Release
YAKIMA, WASH., 9/26 U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service Chief Dale
Bosworth today accepted the final investigative report of the Thirtymile
Fire and vowed changes to help prevent future fire fatalities.
"The loss of these four firefighters is a tragedy that we must learn from,"
Chief Bosworth said during a morning news conference. "We have had experts
inside and outside the agency gather facts, review them and make
recommendations. From these, I expect to initiate changes in management and
policy that will make fighting fires a safer business."
Inside Our Coverage

Related Links
|
Following private briefings with victims’ families, Chief Bosworth and
Deputy Chief Jim Furnish met with media, community leaders and firefighters
to review findings of the Thirtymile blaze, which killed four firefighters
north of Winthrop, Wash., on the Okanogon-Wenatchee National Forest on July
10, 2001. The four are Tom Craven, Karen FitzPatrick, Jessica Johnson and
Devin Weaver.
Furnish headed a 13-member investigative team including a lead investigator
from the private sector with experience investigating nearly 50 fatal
accidents. The team established the facts of the fire by conducting 125
interviews with 60 people and by examining physical evidence, weather data,
equipment, records and the fatality site. A separate seven-member Accident
Review Board, chaired by Tom L. Thompson of the Forest Service Rocky
Mountain Region, reviewed the findings and developed recommendations to
prevent similar accidents.
The review board’s recommendations:
Ensure fire managers and firefighters are fully aware of the fire situation
and have decision-making abilities necessary for both managing fire team
transitions and in reacting to significant changes in the fire.
Develop a program to counter the effects of fatigue.
Strengthen command and control performance of agency administrators and fire
managers.
Critically review fire management leadership programs nationally.
Improve fire program safety management by adopting and aggressively
implementing proven components of a comprehensive safety program.
Continue to improve firefighters’ personal protective equipment.
Clarify the relationship between the Endangered Species Act and fire
suppression actions to establish a coherent process that accounts for ESA
requirements with respect to the full range of fire suppression activities.
Chief Bosworth said that while there appeared to be some confusion at the
time over whether water could be taken from Chewuch River, ESA regulations
do not forbid it and, in fact, a 1995 memorandum by the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service directs that firefighter safety comes first.
After reviewing the recommendations, Chief Bosworth said he will announce
specific policy and management actions after reviewing the recommendations.
Other changes could come after a separate Occupational Safety and Hazard
Administration review is completed.
"Make no mistake," Chief Bosworth said, "these deaths and injuries affect me
very personally. My heart is with their families, friends and co-workers.
I will take whatever steps are necessary to ensure that everything possible
is done to enhance the safety of our firefighters."
Related: