Carceral Firefighting in Oregon
By Leigh Johnson, Troy Brundidge, Charlotte Klein, McClean Gonzalez, Eden McCall, and Joanna Merson
On Sacred Fire
“It’s kind of inconceivable to me that fire is the enemy.”
Listen to Joe's biography
Project Overview
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Components of the Project
Fires in Oregon
Where did incarcerated crews respond?
Measuring Incarcerated Labor
How is this work counted?
Magnitude of Deployment Events
How large was each crew deployment?
Case Study Fires
What roles did incarcerated workers play and how many days did they work?
Incarcerated Firefighter Deployments by Fire and Institution, 2015-2021
How big were deployments across the state, and which institutions sent crews?
Fires in Oregon
Maps help to place the story of incarcerated labor in Oregon.
Interagency Fires in Oregon, 2015-2021
From 2015 to 2021, interagency records logged 8,416 wildland fires in Oregon. This includes fires on state, federal, tribal, and private land. In most cases, single points record the center of fires whose spatial footprint was considerably larger. Where a record of a fire’s complete spatial extent exists, it is depicted with yellow shading and a white perimeter.
Fires within Oregon Department of Forestry Fire Protection Boundaries, 2015-2021
7,244 of the recorded fires in this period fell within the boundaries of the Oregon Department of Forestry’s Fire Protection districts. The Fire Protection program covers sixteen million acres, comprised primarily of private forest lands, along with Oregon state forests and Bureau of Land Management lands in western Oregon. ODF is responsible for coordinating fire suppression across this area, including the deployment of state and private contract crews, equipment, and aircraft.
Oregon Correctional Institutions with Fire Programs and Deployments of Incarcerated Crews, 2015-2021
Over this time, crews from eleven state correctional institutions with fire programs were deployed to 288 events with geospatial records. Their work included fire suppression, fire camp support, and equipment preparation. The maps at the end of this chapter depict the size of each response and the institutional origin of the crews assigned, as well as additional deployments for which no geospatial records were available.
Land Ownership and Fires with DOC Deployments
The majority of fires to which incarcerated crews were deployed burned on private timberlands or BLM forest lands, many of which are interspersed in a “checkerboard” pattern in western Oregon as a legacy of railroad land grants. In the far northwestern corner of the state, crews responded to numerous fires in and around the Tillamook and Clatsop State Forests. DOC crews were also deployed to US Forest Service land under interagency cooperation agreements.
Measuring Incarcerated Labor
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Magnitude of Person-Days by Deployment
Fire deployments
Pre-position deployments
*Some uncertainties remain about total person-days worked by crews at particular correctional institutions in specific months of 2015 and 2018. As a result, person-days reported for several fires in 2015 and 2018 may be undercounts: crews worked at least this number of person-days, if not more.4
Case Study Fires
The High Pass Road Fire provides a prototypical example of a significant deployment. Eight crews came from two different correctional institutions on opposite sides of the state (see inset map). Crews from South Fork Forest Camp, located closer to the fire, arrived just one day after the fire’s ignition on August 25. This included South Fork’s specially trained four-person tactical strike team, as well as a camp support crew. Two additional camp support crews from Warner Creek arrived one day later, and remained until the day after the fire was officially brought under control.
At over 1,800 person-days, the Flounce Fire in southwestern Oregon was one of the largest deployments of incarcerated crews. Within four days, eighteen suppression crews arrived from five different correctional institutions. At the peak of activity, 157 Adults in Custody worked on fire suppression at the same time. Crews were deployed from the day after fire ignition until its control eighteen days later.
“MP 97” refers to Mile Post 97 on Highway 5, where the wildfire threatened the state’s primary north-south corridor for vehicle traffic. On the MP 97 Fire, up to seventy-one AICs at a time worked for two weeks, almost entirely in camp support roles. DOC crews from five correctional institutions facilitated a much larger general population incident response that sometimes numbered 1,500 personnel.
The Silver Creek Fire was a relatively unusual deployment. Because of their proximity to the fire on the eastern edge of the Willamette Valley, crews worked individual days, returning to corrections facilities at the end of each shift. Individual day deployments are standard for Coffee Creek women’s prison crews, as the DOC does not allow mixed gender fire camps. Here Coffee Creek women’s crews performed the majority of the DOC fire suppression response, working 130 person-days intermittently over a period of two and a half months, including sixty person-days after the fire was “controlled”. Crews sometimes conduct “mop-up” for days, weeks, or even months after “control” to extinguish the remaining burning material.
Incarcerated Crew Deployments by Fire and Institution, 2015-2021
For the best interactive experience please view the below map on a desktop
*Person-days worked on several fires in 2015 and 2018 may be undercounted due to differences in accounting methods by institution.
Conclusion
The questions raised in this chapter are only the beginning of what we hope will be a larger conversation. Do you have a comment or correction? Are you a former incarcerated firefighter or fire camp support worker? Do you want to become part of a research network? We want to hear from you!
Acknowledgments
Footnotes
1. Oregon Department of Corrections Issue Brief: Wildland Firefighting Crews (5/27/2020).↩
2. For further detail on data processing, cleaning, and interpretation, see McCall, Eden, and McClean Gonzalez (2023) “Learning from Data: Visualizing Incarcerated Firefighting” 2022-2023 Anthology, University of Oregon InfoGraphics Lab. ↩
3. Of this, half is deposited in a spending account, and half in a savings account accessible after release from prison. AICs also accrue monthly performance points that can be redeemed for money, contingent on good behavior. The Oregon DOC calculates that an AIC working an entire month in fire suppression could convert these points to an additional $3.80/day at the end of a month. In practice, deployment records suggest that few AICs are deployed continuously enough to earn this number of points. In any case, calculations and comparisons of actual wages should take care not to convert performance points to wages since they are part of an incentive system that can be revoked at the discretion of correctional officers for disciplinary purposes. ↩
4. Our team spent months checking and cleaning data and conferring with staff at the Department of Corrections. Uncertainties remained due to differences in accounting methods between institutions, staff change, and our lack of direct access to invoice data.↩
5. In some cases, this is because fire names can change as multiple fires merge and geospatial data does not retain the precursor names that were used in dispatch records. In other cases, the event may never have been logged in geospatial records, particularly if it was a small spot fire that was quickly controlled and extinguished by a crew from a nearby correctional institution. ↩
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