SBCFire Annual Report FY13-14 | Page 13

annual report | 9 office of emergency services In 2013-14 OES answered the call to activate the Operational Area Emergency Operations Center (EOC) five times, for a total of 16 response days, all but one EOC activation was for a fire incident. In the fall of 2013, a pair of 200+ acre vegetation fires caused evacuations in the community of Wrightwood and in unincorporated communities in the Cajon Pass. In both cases the OES Duty Officer was deployed to the Incident Command Post as the OES Field Liaison Officer and the OA EOC was activated to Level I to support the incident. The deployment of an OES Field Liaison Officer has been an invaluable opportunity for the Duty Officers to enhance the coordination of information between the ICP and the EOC during significant incidents. In February of 2014, the SBCOA EOC was activated to Level I to support the Flood Area Safety Taskforce (FAST) preparations for the extreme flood potential forecast by National Weather Service. The EOC remained activated as several waves of heavy precipitation swept the County causing multiple road closures, power outages and interrupted phone services. During the 4 day activation, the EOC coordinated the Lytle Creek CERT activation to a Level 1 “Alert” and monitored the Rim Communities COAD (Community Organizations Active in Disaster) activation to assist a Running Springs resident relocate evacuated pets. The Rim Communities COAD is one of seven COAD groups countywide that includes non-profit and community-based organizations who may support response and recovery efforts after a disaster. The seven COADs are organized under the San Bernardino County Voluntary Organizations Active in Disaster (VOAD) in partnership with County OES. In April 2014, there were two EOC activations in quick succession. The SBCOA EOC activated in support of the Etiwanda Fire and the City of Rancho Cucamonga. During the first day of the incident the EOC staffed a 24-hour A/B shift and OES Field Liaisons were deployed to the ICP and to the Rancho Cucamonga EOC. Before the EOC could ramp down from the Etiwanda Fire, the EOC stood up support for the City of Hesperia. The Ranchero Incident thrust San Bernardino County into the National spotlight and thrust the City of Hesperia into a transportation nightmare as welding sparks set the Ranchero Overpass on fire and it collapsed during primetime, causing the temporary full closure of Interstate 15 and forcing tens of thousands of commuters to seek alternate routes. For the first time, OES entered into a 3-year contract with the Cities of San Bernardino and Fontana for emergency management services.