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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Error Played Role In Blaze, Officials Allege
Title:US CA: Error Played Role In Blaze, Officials Allege
Published On:2001-10-01
Source:Los Angeles Times (CA)
Fetched On:2008-08-31 17:03:46
ERROR PLAYED ROLE IN BLAZE, OFFICIALS ALLEGE

TRUCKEE -- Local fire officials are accusing the California Department of
Forestry of dragging its feet on a probe into the cause of the 14,500-acre
Martis forest fire east of here.

Truckee Fire Protection District Chief Mike Terwilliger and North Tahoe
Fire Protection District Division Chief Bryce Keller said they wonder if
state fire officials are trying to cover up a mistake.

Terwilliger said he's convinced the June 17 fire grew out of a small blaze
near Hirschdale that state crews extinguished the day before but later
failed to inspect. Fire officials have said the Martis fire broke out about
an hour before state crews were due to inspect the site.

The Martis fire destroyed a mobile home, cabin and three vehicles, and
threatened hundreds of homes in the Reno, Nev., area until it was contained
July 1.

It shut down Interstate 80 and a rail line the first day. It cost about
$18.5 million to suppress.

"In my mind, if they'd gone back and checked the [small] fire later that
day and the next day, this fire would not have happened," Terwilliger told
the Tahoe World newspaper in Tahoe City.

State fire investigators have ruled out a link between the Martis fire and
a marijuana cultivation operation, the World reported.

Tony Clarabut, a unit chief, said a hectic fire season and the complexity
of the case have prolonged the investigation, but he expects the report to
be released this week. He declined to comment on allegations concerning the
origins of the Martis fire.

Doug Rinella, battalion chief for the state's Truckee unit, said his crew
had plans to check the small fire the day after it was extinguished. The
small blaze grew out of an escaped campfire.

"We got diverted. Our intentions were to go out there before lunch Sunday,
but we decided to go out after lunch Sunday," he said.

Terwilliger said state crews should have inspected the site at least twice
before the Martis fire erupted at 12:04 p.m. that Sunday.

"There's something that happened that distracted them. . . . It fell
through the cracks," he said.
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