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Wednesday, February 5, 2025 at 4:56 PM

Fire Chief Reflects on CA Wildfires And Livingston’s Industrial Wildfire

Livingston Fire Chief Christopher Mullin wrote the following piece, reflecting on the recent wildfires in California and Livingston’s own wildfire this past fall.

••• The destruction on the California coast has me reflecting on the industrial wildfire we faced in Livingston Township on October 26, 2024. While our incident was thankfully small in comparison, I am reminded of the lasting impact it had on our community. I want to clarify that I am not comparing our experience to the devastation in Los Angeles. Rather, I am expressing gratitude that our wildfire did not escalate into the destructive force that Califomians are tragically experiencing. Though we did battle a steady wind on the day of our wildfire, things would have been dramatically different if we had experienced the 60 to 80 mileper- hour Santa Anna winds that are often seen in California.

We are fortunate in Livingston to have plenty of water at our disposal when it comes to firefighting efforts. In consultation with our township utility engineer, Nathan Kiracofe, he provided the following information regarding our township water system and improvements. “We have 1,338 fire hydrants, and per the stipulations of the Water Quality Accountability Act rules introduced by the New Jersey State Legislature in 2017, we are required to service the hydrants annually. For the past three years, we have achieved 100 percent of hydrants serviced.” Kiracofe added that, “This number does not include the private hydrants, which are maintained by the property owners. I would estimate there are an additional 100 private hydrants in the system. Almost all of the major redevelopment projects of the past ten years or so have included at least one new hydrant near the property due to a mixture of requests from the Fire Department, Engineering Department, and Water Department.”

The County of Essex has a Fire Mutual Aid system that is vibrant when it comes to requests formutual aid. The incident commander (of any department) calls Essex County Fire Mutual Aid on the radio and advises dispatch what type of situation (structure fire, hazardous-mat incident, collapse, etc.), and mutual aid is dispatched to therequestingmunicipalitybasedon pre-determined resources allocation and availability. Should an incident escalate beyond the capability of the Essex County Mutual Aid System, additional resources would be dispatched from neighboring counties through County Mutual Aid, based out of the East Orange Fire Department Dispatch. Additional specializedresources, ifnot available locally, would come from the State ofNew Jersey resource pool, or even the FDNY-Fire Department ofNew York - if needed.

On the day of our wildfire in October of 2024, we were fortunate (Continued on Page A-6) to have a full response locally from our township volunteer firefighters as well as a full response from our mutual aid partners throughout the County of Essex as well as the New Jersey Forest Fire Service. We were fortunate to be able to provide structural protection to our shopping centers and commercial buildings in the line of fire, without any structural damage or injuries. Again, conditions were dramatically different between the two incidents, but we were fortunate to have burned 192 acres in town compared to the tens of thousands of acres that continue to burn in California.

We continue to pray for all the residents who were negatively affected by these wildfires in California, and hope that enough resources become available to finally get these fires under control so the residents of these affected areas can finally get back to some sence of normalcy. Please keep them in your prayers!


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