4.3 Article

The Impact of COVID-19 Prevention Measures on Interagency Hotshot Crews in 2020

Journal

JOURNAL OF FORESTRY
Volume 121, Issue 1, Pages 37-48

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/jofore/fvac032

Keywords

wildland fire; operations; fire camp; survey; crews

Categories

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In the 2020 fire season, the fire management community developed and tested new practices to address the challenges posed by the coronavirus pandemic. A survey conducted with Interagency Hotshot Crew (IHC) superintendents revealed that innovations in paperwork, briefings, and fire camp setup led to improved operational efficiency and crew health and wellbeing. Challenges primarily arose from logistical and communication issues. The implications of this study suggest that virtual paperwork, virtual briefings, and dispersed camp setups may have long-term benefits for large-scale fire suppression operations.
In the 2020 fire season, the fire management community developed and tested a wide range of new practices to meet challenges posed by the coronavirus pandemic. To better understand the effectiveness of different innovations and which should be considered for more permanent use, we surveyed Interagency Hotshot Crew (IHC) superintendents in January 2021. We focused on identifying innovations that, regardless of COVID-19, the IHCs would want to keep and why, as well as those that proved problematic. The survey focused on paperwork, briefings, and fire camp and incident command post setup. Results found clear benefits from many of the changes to operational efficiency and crew health and wellbeing; challenges were generally tied to logistical and communication issues. The results of this survey speak to the logistics of running large incident command operations and could be applied both outside the US and outside the field of wildland fire management. Study Implications: There may be meaningful benefits beyond mitigation of COVID-19 spread for continuing to use virtual paperwork, virtual briefings, and dispersed camp setups while supporting large fire suppression operations. Operational efficiency was seen as a clear benefit of many of these changes, with the often-mentioned advantage to a particular practice enabling crews to spend more time on the fireline. The new practices also appear to contribute to overall crew physical health. However, the benefits to crew health, efficiency, and effectiveness will need to be assessed against the increased logistical support required from incident management teams.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available