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Park Fire

Unit Information

2550 Riverside Ave 
Susanville, 
96130 
2550 Riverside Ave 
Susanville, 
96130 

Incident Contacts

SWCIMT2
Email: 2024.Park@firenet.gov
Phone: (530) 414-9298
Hours: 8:00 am-8:00 pm

Highlighted Activity

Actualización Sobre El Incendio Park: Martes, 3 de Septiembre de 2024Equipo Administrativo De Incidentes Complejos Del Área Suroeste Equipo 2- John Truett - Comandante Del Incidente Tamaño: 429,603 acresFecha de Inicio: 24 de Julio de 2024Contencion: 98%Personal Total: 606Recursos: 1 helicóptero, 12 cuadrillas, 9 camiones de bomberos, 8 topadoras, 12 camiones de agua, 3… Read more
Publication Type: News -
Park Fire Update: Tuesday, September 3, 2024 Southwest Complex Incident Management Team 2Incident Commander John Truett Size: 429,603 acres Start Date: July 24, 2024Containment: 98 percentTotal Personnel: 606Resources: 1 helicopter, 12 crews, 9 engines, 8 dozers, 12 water tenders, 3 masticators, 16 excavators, 2 feller bunchers, 2 skidsteers  … Read more
Publication Type: News -

Map showing fire perimeter, containment lines and suppression repair

On July 24th, 2024, the Park Fire started near Bidwell Municipal Park in Chico, California. The fire quickly spread with rapid rates of spread and extreme fire behavior. The fire quickly burned through the 41,000-acre Ishi wilderness and has moved deeper on to the Lassen National Forest as well as private, state and other federal lands.  

The Park Fire is a CAL FIRE incident but the US Forest Service and Lassen National Forest are fully engaged with our partners and working toward full suppression of this fire in order to protect our communities and natural resources.

For more information on the ParkFire please visit:  

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Basic Information
Current as of Tue, 09/03/2024 - 12:24
Incident Time Zone America/Los_Angeles
Incident Type Wildfire
Cause Arson
Date of Origin
Location Upper Bidwell Park, Butte County, Tehama County, Shasta County
Incident Commander John Truett - SWCIMT2
Jesse White - CAL FIRE
Incident Description Wildfire
Coordinates 39° 49' 7'' Latitude
-121° 48'
9
'' Longitude
Current Situation
Total Personnel: 606
Size 429,603 Acres
Percent of Perimeter Contained 98%
Estimated Containment Date 09/01/2024
Fuels Involved

Timber (Grass and Understory)

Timber (Litter and Understory)

Brush (2 feet)


Observed fire behavior consisted of smoldering pockets of heat within dozer berms and dozer piles which were created during active fire suppression. As cleanup, line rehabilitation, and line strengthening occurs, these pockets are discovered and mitigated. Elsewhere, along exposed higher elevation ridges, pockets of smoldering debris were stoked by the gusty winds igniting the lower canopies of fire-cured timber adjacent to the smoldering hot spots. No growth occurred or significant threats to lines, but the resultant smoke was observable along surrounding roadways.

Significant Events

Minimal

smoldering

Outlook
Planned Actions

Continue to execute the Fire Suppression Repair Plan to minimize adverse effects to resources identified from impacts resulting from fire suppression. The Roads Group will continue repair of Pondersosa Road and FS Road 17 with Graders, Excavators and Water Tenders. Suppression Repair Groups are working with Resource Advisors near sensitive areas and identifying suppression lines needing repair. Operations include Chipping, water-baring with equipment along dozerline, scattering brush/slash along identified areas. Hazard Tree mitigation being implemented by saw teams and equipment along identified areas. Hazards are identified and mitigated.

Projected Incident Activity

12/24 hours: Smoldering will continue within the interior of the northern half of the fire area although it is anticipated to be quite distant from control lines. While the smoldering does not constitute a threat to containment or values at risk, isolated smokes may be visible from roads.  Existing heat sources within the Park Fire perimeter will continue smoldering. The primary concern regarding fire behavior is the usage of heavy equipment continuing tasks with the potential to create sparks, and fire weakened trees containing heat-cured foliage falling near existing hot spots.

48 hours: Smoldering within the fire perimeter. The weather is predicted to enter a warming and drying trend which will result in a corresponding decrease in dead fuel moisture. This will not change the fire potential within the existing fire footprint, but the potential for new ignitions in the surrounding area is likely to begin increasing as ERC, BI, and fuel moistures continue to decrease throughout the area.

72 hours: Many of the residual smoldering heat sources on the interior of the fire area will continue to slowly burn themselves out as remaining fuel is consumed. As the warming and drying trend continues, fuel moistures will decrease down to seasonal norms while ERC increases and approaches long-term seasonal averages, recovering from the rain event on August 24. Fuels remain conducive for new ignitions outside the burned area but limited to no activity is anticipated within the fire perimeter.

Current Weather
Weather Concerns

High Pressure is building back in over the upper elevation fire area.  Temperatures which have been below normal are expected to climb. dramatically over the next few days to above normal. Winds will decrease over the fire area and the humidity will remain fairly consistent. There is a possibility that another Low-Pressure system will cross the fire area next weekend. There are no precipitation events forecast through at least the next five days.