A firefighter with
Forest Bend Fire Department
extinguishes flames at the site of the 2022 Borrega wildfire. Lawmakers approved legislation to create a database to help fire departments track equipment.
Credit:
Michael Gonzalez
for
The Texas Tribune
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Senate Bill 767, filed by state Sen.
Kevin Sparks
, R-
Midland
, creates a database of statewide firefighting equipment that is available during a wildfire. The inventory will include descriptions of the equipment, allow for searches by location and equipment types, and have contact information for fire departments.
The database will be operated by
Texas A&M Forest Service
, a state agency that manages Texas’ forests and natural resources. Sparks previously told a
Senate
committee that the agency already tracks emergency response equipment at fire stations. The bill makes that information widely accessible to fire departments statewide, including volunteer fire departments, which often operate on shoestring budgets and old equipment in rural areas. The agency would also be required to update the database annually.
“This would allow fire departments to share and locate equipment more effectively during emergencies, improve coordination and planning,” Sparks previously told a
Senate
committee on the bill.
The bill received unanimous approval in both the
Texas House
and
Senate
. The bill also had the support of firefighters and people in emergency services, who testified to lawmakers that fire departments need this service.
Texas
lawmakers filed a bevy of bills to address the devastating wildfires that killed three people last year and burned millions of acres in the rural
Panhandle
. Sparks, along with state Rep.
Ken King
, R-Canadian, and freshman state Rep.
Caroline Fairly
, R-
Amarillo
, all filed legislation suggested in a report by a House committee that investigated the fire. The bills include proposals such as creating a statewide network that would connect all first responders and state agencies, boosting funds to rural volunteer fire departments, and putting oversight on unregulated power lines.
Two priority pieces of legislation — House Bill 13, which creates the
Interoperability Council
, and Senate Bill 34, a comprehensive bill on wildfire preparation and response — were approved by their originating chambers and are now in committee discussions.
The House
investigative committee concluded that unmaintained electrical lines for oilfield equipment started at least two of the blazes. The Smokehouse Creek Fire, which grew to be the largest fire in
Texas
history, was ignited after a decayed power pole snapped and landed in dry grass, the committee found.
The committee also concluded that there are voluntary aid agreements between fire departments near each other, but volunteer fire departments can’t easily find and request the equipment they may need. During the wildfires, there was an uncoordinated response between responding agencies and uncertainty about what equipment was available and needed to stop the blaze from spreading.
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