Sonoma County Fire District Explained

Sonoma County Fire District (SOCO Fire)
Motto:"To compassionately care for the safety of our communities and our visitors through progressive professional emergency preparedness and response"
Subdivision Type1:State
Subdivision Type2:County
Subdivision Type3:City
Subdivision Name2:Sonoma
Established:April 4th, 2019
Staffing:Combination
Chief:Mark Heine
Blsorals:ALS
Iaff:1401
Battalions:1
Stations:10

The Sonoma County Fire District (SOCO Fire) is a special district, that provides fire protection, rescue, and emergency medical services to the Town of Windsor, Larkfield-Wikiup, Mark West, Mountain, Middle Rincon, Bennett Valley, Bellevue, Graton Casino, Fulton, Forestville, Bodega Bay, Guerneville and the surrounding unincorporated areas. The Sonoma County Fire District includes 75,000 residents, covers 160 square miles, and is the second busiest fire protection agency in Sonoma County.[1] [2]

History

Significant regional fires in recent years, including the Tubbs Fire and Kincaide Fire created a need to merge at least some of the nearly 50 different fire agencies within Sonoma County to better combat large-scare disasters as well as respond to day-to-day emergencies.

The Sonoma County Fire District (SCFD) was established in April 2019 after the process of consolidation of the Rincon Valley Fire District (established 1945) and the Windsor Fire Protection District (established 1965) who had already merged administrative and leadership oversight, the Bennett Valley Fire District (established 1948) and the Mountain Volunteer Fire Department (established 1968). In July 2020, the Russian River Fire Protection District (established 1922 as the Guerneville Fire Protection District) was merged into SCFD which allowed the total organization to provide Advanced Life Support first-response and transport care, followed by consolidation of the Forestville Fire Protection District (established 1938 and became a District in 1958) in 2021 and the Bodega Bay Fire Protection District in 2022.

In May 2022, SCFD subcontracted some ambulance services to Medic Ambulance Service, a single-roll EMS company headquartered in Sacramento, California. Fire apparatus and certain ambulances remain staffed by organic agency Firefighter/Paramedics.

In September 2022, stations in Larkfield and Bennett Valley were both upgraded with the addition of Firefighter/Paramedics and Advanced Life Support capabilities.

In October 2022, “Sonoma County 1,” an Airbus H-135 helicopter, was placed into service in public-private partnership with REACH air medical services. The asset, based out of the Sonoma County Airport, can be configured to search-and-rescue, critical care advanced life support level scene response and interfacility transport, and firefighting capabilities. The public-private partnership allowed for better responses directly to scenes and better coordinated firefighting operations.

Operations

The organization is headquartered out of County Station 1, located in Windsor, and dispatched by REDCOM.

SCFD is an all hazards organization operating fire suppression and advanced life support emergency medical response and transport. The organization is composed of career and volunteer Firefighter/EMTs and Firefighter/Paramedics, contracted single-roll EMTs and Paramedics, and REACH personnel.

Outside of fire suppression and emergency medical services, SCFD offers swift water rescue throughout much of the Russian River area and marine firefighting and search and rescue through a fire boat in Bodega Bay. SCFD also maintains coastal cliff, high, and low angle rope rescue capabilities.

SCFD has a federally-certified Urban Search and Rescue K9 program, with previous deployments around the world as a part of the FEMA Rescue Task Force-4 based out of Oakland. K9 "Rocket" and his handler were featured on the initial episode of the Smithsonian Channel series Dogs with Extraordinary Jobs.

Notable Incidents

Pre-SCFD

Post-SCFD2017: Tubbs Fire2019: Kincade Fire2020: LNU Complex Fires

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Home . sonomacountyfd.org.
  2. Web site: Sonoma County Fire District debuts with new station signs, fire engine logos. 4 April 2019.