Deputy Fire Chief Returns Home after Fighting Wildland Fires as 2.7 Million Acres Burn out West

Westport Deputy Fire Chief Michael Kronick in Billings, Montana. Contributed photo

Westport’s Deputy Fire Chief Michael Kronick returned home on Saturday after a two week deployment to volunteer in fighting the wildland fires burning throughout the West. (click to read full story)

Contributed photo by Michael Kronick

Kronick was hired by the Westport Fire Department in July of 1998, rising through the ranks to Deputy Chief after becoming a Lieutenant in 2009 and Assistant Chief of Training in 2012. Throughout this time with the Westport FD, he’s been deployed intermittently into Western communities to assist in the wildfire operations - with stints in Utah, Wyoming, Colorado, Oregon, California, Idaho, Montana, Michigan, Minnesota, and Quebec.


As a member of the Connecticut Interstate Fire Crew, the 14 day deployments come from a federal interagency agreement between partners like the Forest Service, Park Service, Bureau of Land Management, and local and state fire and land agencies.


This year’s tour began on July 28th alongside 19 other firefighters, starting in the community of Ely, Minnesota - a rural mountain town of about 3,000 residents. Kronick was requested to assist the Forest Service in fighting fires in the Superior National Forest, where he described that “drought conditions in the region have created conditions in which there have been frequent lightning strike fires across the forest and the Boundary Water Wilderness.”


He continued to explain “Our crew was [one] of four 20-person-crews there to reinforce local resources. There were 10 fires ranging in size from 2 to 250 acres. Our crew assisted on the Delta Lake Fire, 67 acres, and the Nile Creek Fire, 2.5 acres.”


Weather shifted over the Minnesota region and rainfall naturally began to suppress the fires, allowing personnel to regain control - and giving Kronick a new deployment. He was requested to Billings, Montana to help fight the larger Trout Creek Fire, south of Absarokee, Montana - a wilderness community of about 1,000 residents.


Trout Creek Fires in Montana. Westport Fire Department Contributed Photo

In Montana, Kronick and his crew joined local volunteer fire departments, ranchers, and State and Federal personnel in fighting the blazes covering thousands of acres, saying “This was rapidly expanding fire threatening homes in pasture land that grew to 8,500 acres.”


The Trout Creek Fire falls in the larger Northwest Rockies Region, a geographical area specified by interagency wildland fire officials. The National Interagency Coordination Center produces daily situation reports for all major wildland fires in the country - Sunday evening’s situation report stated that 714,424 acres are currently burning in that Northwest Rockies region alone, with 304 fire engines, 40 helicopters, and 4,766 people working to stop them.


One of those people was Kronick. “Our crew supported the local fire department protecting homes and establishing control lines in areas that were only accessible by foot” he continued.


On a larger scale, the situation report states that the United States had a total of 2,710,867 acres burning as of 7:30 yesterday morning, with over 25,000 firefighters, volunteers, ranchers, and public sector personnel fighting for their land. The largest fire remains the Dixie Fire in Northern California, which is occupying over a half-million acres, has destroyed 1,123 structures, and has cost $246 million in damages and operations.


The millions of scorched acres across the region have created smoke plumes large enough to carry over the continent, hazing the skies over Westport earlier this month. In a release today welcoming back Deputy Chief Kronick, Westport Fire Chief Rob Yost stated “Since fires are still ongoing across the west, we’ll likely see some type of resurgence throughout the summer. And it’s possible that smoky summers may become the new reality.”


The Center for Disaster Philanthropy describes this year’s particularly complex situation as due to an early start to the fire season for the United States, which makes it difficult to share resources from Canada - who are battling blazes of their own as resources are dwindling.


Deputy Fire Chief Michael Kronick. Contributed photo

The situation became so extreme that a Boeing 747 water tanker was flown in from New South Wales, Australia - and Mexican firefighters have been deployed into Canada to supplement the dwindling resources as a brutally hot, dry summer pushes onwards. “Both countries have developed their wildfire response plans around having access to resources from their neighbor. However, this year has demonstrated the weakness in those plans as both countries are unable to share resources as they fight multiple wildfires within their respective borders.” stated the Center for Disaster Philanthropy.

Despite the time away from his family and volatility of the seasons, Kronick has now completed 13 deployments into the West to volunteer with the wildland fire teams - learning more about fire suppression and operations every time. “I have not looked back” he said after his 2017 trip.

Westport Fire Chief welcomed home the Deputy Chief in his statement, saying “ I'm proud to welcome back our Deputy who epitomizes Westport's values of sacrifice and service to others. When communities and states need help, we can support our neighbors in their time of crisis battling dangerous wildfires. The experience and knowledge he gained in working a large-scale incident are invaluable to us."

A video of the firefighting helicopter operating over wildland fires out West while Deputy Fire Chief Michael Kronick worked on the ground.

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