Red Flag volunteers are ready to report
- Share via
OUR LAGUNA
Another 25 recruits signed on Saturday to help make Laguna Beach
more fire resistant.
They will be easy to recognize. Whenever the Laguna Beach Fire
Department declares conditions are ripe for disaster, the volunteers
will don their red caps, display red flags on their vehicles and take
to the back roads, looking for a vagrant puff of smoke, a sniff of
burning brush.
Flags also will be made available to local businesses on Laguna
Canyon Road and North and South Coast Highway. Visibility is one key
to the success of the Red Flag Patrol program.
“We want to see every business in Laguna Canyon and on South and
North Coast Highway displaying the flags on red alert days,” said
Fire Department Battalion Chief Mark Baker.
The Red Flag Patrol is sponsored by the Laguna Coast Fire Safety
Council and organized in conjunction with the Laguna Beach Fire
Department and the Orange County Fire Authority.
“Mark’s really good at this,” said David Horne, council founder.
“We now have over 50 volunteers.”
Saturday’s was the second Red Flag Patrol training session
conducted by Baker.
“Use your common sense, stay safe, but be visible, we want
everybody out there to know people are watching,” Baker told the
recruits.
Volunteers work in pairs, one to drive and one to observe. Each
patrol lasts two hours. Patrols are out from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. until
the fire department calls off the red flag alert. All should carry
cell phones and be aware of “black holes.”
Each volunteer is equipped with an instruction binder that
contains information on what to watch for, actions to take, maps, a
disposable camera, picture identification, and soon, sites of public
telephones.
There are some areas in town -- don’t we all know it -- where cell
phones don’t work.
“Patrols should know the location of public telephone locations,
said trainee Gene Cooper.
He volunteered to get the list.
Ilse Lenschow, of North Laguna has volunteered to be in charge of
flag distribution and display. For more information about the flags,
call 494-1241.
Patrols are only called out when the weather is hot, the humidity
low and the winds high.
On patrol, teams are encouraged to talk to the public as well as
watch for signs of fire. They are told to ask for cooperation and to
encourage membership in the Red Flag Patrol.
“If they are the kind of people who don’t play nicely with others,
back off,” Baker said. “We have an adage in the fire department: At
the end of the day, everybody goes home safely to their family.”
The cell phone is the volunteer’s first line of communication. The
California Highway Patrol will be on the other end.
“Just ask for the Laguna Beach Fire Department or Police
Department,” Mark said. “If you get the wrong one, don’t worry, we
all talk to one another.”
“We also have a great working relationship with the Orange County
Fire Authority, a mutual aid pact.”
911 also works just fine for non-Red Flag members and timely
information is appreciated.
Any illegal activity should be reported immediately.
“If your common sense tells you the activity is illegal, it
probably is,” Baker said.
Fire works and firearms are illegal. So is smoking in fire areas,
even in a closed vehicle. Less egregious activity can be reported the
next day.
Abandoned vehicles should be reported if the engines or tailpipes
are hot.
“If they are dusty and appear to have been there a while, make a
note and we’ll get a code enforcement officer out there the next
day,” Baker said.
Hikers and bikers are out in the wilderness parks everyday, but
the parks are closed on Red Flag Alert days. If seen, patrol
volunteers are advised to contact park officials. That walking ray of
sunshine, Park Ranger Barbara Norton, is a Red Flag volunteer.
Red Flag Alert days are most common from September to November,
but can occur any time of the year, especially during dry years, such
as California has experienced this winter.
Red Flag Patrol training, including a slide show, and equipment is
funded by a grant written by Horne, who lost a home in the 1993
firestorm.
“We don’t want a repeat of ‘93,” said Baker. “We don’t even want a
repeat of a couple of weeks ago.”
On July 26, a fire broke out just after noon in Laguna Canyon,
burning 82 acres before it was contained, officially, at 6 a.m., the
next day.
Quick action by the person who accidentally started the fire and
the rapid response of fire officials is credited with containing the
fire before it raged out of control. With the Red Flag Patrol on the
march, fire officials hope to get an even quicker jump.
Trainees at Saturday’s session included Farmers Insurance broker
Gary Watkins, Debra and Hesh Lensky, Sandy Keith, Craig Wells, Cherie
Fortin-O’Grady, Jeanne Brown and Nancy Grant.
For more information about the Red Flag Patrol, visit
www.lagunacoastfire safecouncil.org or call 494-6220.
Beach wheels
The City Council accepted Tuesday night the donation of a beach
wheelchair by Pat DeMar and Michael Laux, who collected private and
corporate donations for the gift to the city.
Each wheelchair costs $1,900. They are made of lightweight
materials with balloon tires that provide transportation on sand for
physically-challenged surf-lovers.
DeMar is one such. She was a highly-acclaimed jewelry maker and
clothing designer in town when she was stricken more than a decade
ago with a degenerative muscular disease.
Her love of the beach prompted the couple to raise the funds for
two beach chairs in 1995.
The chairs have been housed in the Marine Safety Headquarters.
Check-outs are overseen by lifeguards.
Heavy use has taken its toll of the chairs. So once more, DeMar
and Laux rose to the occasion.
* OUR LAGUNA is a regular feature of the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. Contributions are welcomed. Write to Barbara Diamond, P.O. Box
248, Laguna Beach, 92652, hand-deliver to 384 Forest Ave., Suite 22;
call 494-4321 or fax 494-8979.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.