For the best experienceDownload the Mobile App
App Store Play Store
📣
📣
📣 "Our Business is Helping Your Business"—and That Includes Protecting What Matters 🌲🔥✈️

Published on: 08/05/2025

This news was posted by Bay Area Chamber of Commerce (BACC)

Go To Business Place

Description

📣 "Our Business is Helping Your Business"—and That Includes Protecting What Matters 🌲🔥✈️

At the Bay Area Chamber of Commerce, we know that strong businesses rely on a strong, safe, and sustainable community. That’s why we support and share important updates like this from the Oregon Department of Forestry (ODF) about their new regional air-attack program—already making a powerful impact in Oregon’s wildfire response.

ODF’s innovation and investment protect the very resources our region depends on—forests, homes, infrastructure, and workforce safety. 🌲💼

🧭 Why are we sharing this?

Because your Chamber is more than networking.
We bring together leaders through committees focused on:

🌱 Natural Resources

🏫 Education

🛣️ Transportation

📈 Business Development

🗳️ Legislative Action

🤝 Ambassadors and Member Engagement

Each plays a role in supporting our mission:
➡️ "Our Business is Helping Your Business"—and we do just that in these ways, and more.

💬 Let’s keep learning, sharing, and building a community that works together from all angles—just like the teams who protect our forests and towns from above and below.

Read the full ODF press release below 👇

📌Forestry’s new regional air-attack platform sees immediate success!
________________________________________

SALEM, Ore. — Oregon’s wildfire response continues to evolve with the Oregon Department of Forestry’s (ODF) recent addition of regional air attack and ongoing investment in severity aircraft.
Deputy Director of Fire Operations, Kyle Williams, explained, “the severity aircraft and regional air attack gives us a huge advantage, both are excellent investments. These help us fight wildfires with surgical precision, quickly cutting off wildfires in critical locations.”
In terms of geographical scope, ODF is the state’s largest fire department. The department typically responds to more than one thousand fires each year. Most fires you never hear of because ODF’s fast, effective response keeps most wildfires under 10 acres.
Chief of Fire Protection, Michael Curran, explained, “this takes a coordinated effort using aircraft and on-the-ground firefighters to quickly stop these fires. ODF has hundreds of firefighters and multiple aircraft strategically located across the state to do this work.”

What is air attack?
Air attack is the airplane and crew that fly above a wildfire to coordinate aircraft and groundwork to stop a wildfire—a flying air traffic control center. Air attack has three primary responsibilities—keeping firefighters safe, ensuring accurate drops of water or retardant, and giving incident commanders a full, clear picture of the fire.
Safety takes priority. Keeping firefighters and air crews safe requires maintaining space between aircraft and coordinating precise water drops. Air attack monitors and directs flight paths based on multiple factors. The key factors are spacing and whether the pilot can drop the water on target while keeping on-the-ground firefighters safe.
Hitting the target keeps fires smaller. Accuracy depends on clear communication from the firefighters to air attack about target coordinates and timing. The firefighters determine the spot to hit, which can change quickly based on the speed that a fire spreads, winds, and aircraft.
Air attack calculates and coordinates based on how soon the aircraft can be on location, whether it is an airplane or helicopter, where the firefighters are, and how many parts around the fire need help. Air attack looks at the whole picture, triages the requests and details, determines which aircraft are best used where and when, then directs drops to stay on target.
While an aircraft drops water or retardant on the leading edge of the fire to check it, this allows on-the-ground firefighters to suppress the fire’s push by digging and creating a fireline, a non-flammable, mineral soil buffer around the fire. This early stage takes clear communication and coordination for precise water drops and keeping firefighters safe and out of the drop zone. Keeping everyone safe and maximizing the effectiveness of this oft called “airshow” on a wildfire takes calm disposition, clear communication, strategic thinking, and decisive action—that’s air attack.
Why does it matter?
Historically, when a wildfire started, aircraft, let alone air attack, were not readily available. When the wildfire grew to a size that warranted air attack, then the dispatcher would order it from a central location. The response time slowed the effectiveness, because of the limited air response and support. Even if an aircraft and firefighters arrived, the lack of big-picture coordination stifled the work.
Recent investments by Oregon’s legislature gave ODF two regional air attack teams.
Williams explained, “now, dispatchers can send air attack during the initial attack phase of emergency response. It’s a game changer.”
The regional air attack builds on the “severity aircraft” program to better use state resources. Over the past couple of decades, the legislature has continued investing in firefighters and technology that return great results.
Curran concluded, “we’re seeing a huge return on investment using these aircraft early—cutting costs, keeping wildfires small, and better protecting natural resources and the public.”
________________________________________

#BayAreaChamber #TeamRojo #ODF #WildfirePrevention #BusinessAdvocacy #ChamberCommittees #CoosBay #NorthBend #Charleston #OregonsAdventureCoast #OurBusinessIsHelpingYourBusiness #SupportLocal

News Source : https://www.facebook.com/800812012091502/posts/1226501629522536

Other Related News

Beloved Portland coffee shop to return to former location
Beloved Portland coffee shop to return to former location

08/12/2025

Starting Thursday the coffee shop will be reopened at its former location at 4951 Northeas...

08/12/2025

An air quality alert was reported by the National Weather Service on Tuesday at 1217 pm in...

‘Uphill battle’: Downtown Portland gay bar to close after 46 years
‘Uphill battle’: Downtown Portland gay bar to close after 46 years

08/12/2025

One of Portlands oldest operating gay bars is closing its doors downtown after nearly half...

UFC fight on White House lawn ‘absolutely going to happen,’ CEO says
UFC fight on White House lawn ‘absolutely going to happen,’ CEO says

08/12/2025

Hours after Paramount and UFC announced a billion-dollar rights deal Dana White said he ha...

A Portland teen designed a Lego set that beat the odds to hit store shelves
A Portland teen designed a Lego set that beat the odds to hit store shelves

08/12/2025

The newest Lego Ideas set which went on sale this week was designed by a Portland teenager...

ShoutoutGive Shoutout
500/500