Unique Partnership Between CAL FIRE and Cal Poly Humboldt

This is a press release from CAL FIRE:

Cal Poly Humboldt and CAL FIRE are joining forces to share expertise and resources in an effort to improve fire management and response, as well as forest health and land management practices in California and across the West. The memorandum of understanding between CAL FIRE Humboldt-Del Norte Unit and the University spells out ways in which the two agencies can benefit employees, students, the community, and the State. 

“This is an incredible opportunity for CAL FIRE, as well as Cal Poly Humboldt,” says Kurt McCray, (Forestry, ‘93) CAL FIRE Unit Chief for Humboldt, Del Norte, and western Trinity Counties. “I’m excited about this opportunity to learn from the faculty and the students of Cal Poly Humboldt to hopefully better educate us on what we could possibly achieve more efficiently and effectively.” 

“We want to leverage the resources that are available for Cal Poly Humboldt and at CAL FIRE to be able to better meet all the challenges that are facing California’s forests, rangelands and woodlands,” says Erin Kelly, chair of the Humboldt Department of Forestry, Fire & Rangeland Management. 

“We’ve worked with CAL FIRE for many years, and a lot of our students go to work for the Department. But this was really formalizing that agreement and making it clear that we want to have more partnerships going into the future. A lot of our students walk right out the door with the ability to go into the field and into a job that they really love.” 

 Cal Poly Humboldt is launching a new Applied Fire Science & Management this fall, the largest in the state and one of the largest in the nation, and one of only two four-year bachelor’s degree fire programs. The campus Wildland Fire Lab is among the most well-equipped fire research facilities of any university in the country with Cal Poly Humboldt researchers among the top fire and forestry experts in the nation. 

“Humboldt currently has a fire internship course where students learn about the many different roles at CAL FIRE available to students in majors related to forestry and fire, and what they might do in their careers,” says Jeff Kane, professor of Forestry, Fire & Rangeland Management. 

“Now, we’ll be able to expand those opportunities, bringing more CAL FIRE folks into the classroom as guest lecturers to talk about the real problems they face,” says Kane. “That way students know that the knowledge and information they’re getting here at Cal Poly Humboldt is translatable to what they’ll be doing in the profession.” 

The agreement could also mean more paid internships for students, Kelly says. Students have joined CAL FIRE to monitor controlled burns and get real-world experience in the field, for example. “It’ll give students more chances to go work with professionals and then bring those experiences back to the classroom.” 

The agreement can also expand research opportunities. Trevor Haltermann, a Natural Resources graduate student, is working with a group of other students to determine the efficacy of CAL FIRE’s wildfire investigation processes. 

“We’re working in the Wildland Fire Lab on campus burning grasses in a wind tunnel, and we’re seeing the accuracy of how well they point towards the origin of the fire,” he says. This could help CAL FIRE improve its practices and prevent and respond to future fires.” 

“I have CAL FIRE personnel that have graduated from Humboldt. They are foresters, fire captains, as well as firefighters,” says McCray. “In my time at Humboldt, the most important lesson I learned is the power of relationships, collaboration, and cooperation. All of that has to be founded on respect and professionalism, which I have enjoyed receiving from Cal Poly Humboldt faculty and staff.” 

Watch the video: CAL FIRE’s visit to Cal Poly Humboldt. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AjD6QKN9fsM

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16 Please improve the conversation by disagreeing thoughtfully and backing your claims with facts
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Steve Koch
Guest
Steve Koch
2 years ago

“Cal Poly Humboldt is launching a new Applied Fire Science & Management this fall, the largest in the state and one of the largest in the nation, and one of only two four-year bachelor’s degree fire programs. The campus Wildland Fire Lab is among the most well-equipped fire research facilities of any university in the country with Cal Poly Humboldt researchers among the top fire and forestry experts in the nation.”

Applied Fire Science and Mgmt is a great discipline for Cal Poly Humboldt to focus on and excel in (lots and lots of fires to fight up here). Love the partnership between Cal Fire and Cal Poly Humboldt.

Martin
Guest
Martin
2 years ago
Reply to  Steve Koch

Steve, I completely agree with your comment. Do you know if the campus Wildland Fire Lab gives tours of their facilities during the year. I would love to check this program out and meet some of the Cal Poly Humboldt finest forestry experts in the field. Hope the partnership between Cal Fire and Cal Poly Humboldt will last for years.

Steve Koch
Guest
Steve Koch
2 years ago
Reply to  Martin

Wow, what a great idea!

Martin
Guest
Martin
2 years ago
Reply to  Steve Koch

Thanks Steve. I was hoping you might know or someone else.

Permanently on Monitoring
Guest
Permanently on Monitoring
2 years ago

It’s a growth industry…

Can I take Helicopter Lessons?

I wanna fly the Super Scooper!

Screw nursing, the real money is in Fire Management!

D'Tucker Jebs
Member
2 years ago

Having a bad day?

Permanently on Monitoring
Guest
Permanently on Monitoring
2 years ago
Reply to  D'Tucker Jebs

?

Retired people never have a bad day…

You could say that it’s a different world, and there are different options…

D'Tucker Jebs
Member
2 years ago

True. Maybe, however, you could try framing your opinions in ways that don’t seem so disparaging.

Thatguyinarcata
Guest
Thatguyinarcata
2 years ago

And the option you choose is to gripe about anything and everything happening in a community you don’t live in and don’t seem to like.

Sounds like a bad day to me.

Permanently on Monitoring
Guest
Permanently on Monitoring
2 years ago

Rude people.

Regionist.

Humboldt State belongs to the community of California.

If I wanna fly the Super-Scooper, then what’s your problem?

Next time, save the “you’re not from here” attitude for the tourists…

In all of Humboldt, I enjoyed the folks in Hoopa most, and the folks in Arcata, least…

Hunter'sCrackPipe
Guest
Hunter'sCrackPipe
2 years ago
Reply to  D'Tucker Jebs

He’s correct fire management is a huge business in this state, and as they say “the business of business, is business”.

Wasn’t always that way.

Martin
Guest
Martin
2 years ago

Looks like someone woke up on the wrong side of life this morning.

a neighbor
Guest
a neighbor
2 years ago

Huge industry! $2million+ per day on one of the local Federal fires last year.
But a partnership with CalFire is hopeful. Better than with the Feds. Calfire puts them out.

Permanently on Monitoring
Guest
Permanently on Monitoring
2 years ago
Reply to  a neighbor

Cal fire rocks!

Hunter'sCrackPipe
Guest
Hunter'sCrackPipe
2 years ago

There goes the state, up in smoke.

Steve Koch
Guest
Steve Koch
2 years ago

youtube “Up in Smoke video”?

https://youtu.be/FAaTp_WCREw?si=nRDEnVSQRkIrIaUN