onsdag 8. oktober 2014

Brann i Yosemite tok liv

Airtanker Pilot Killed in Crash Fighting Yosemite Park Wildfire
S-2T Tracker modifisert av CalFire

The pilot of a single-person airtanker was killed Tuesday afternoon when his plane crashed while fighting a rapidly spreading northern California wildfire, state fire officials said. Crews found the plane after it disappeared while flying over the Dog Rock Fire near the Arch Rock in Yosemite National Park. Fire officials were not releasing the pilot's name until all immediate family members could be notified.

"This crash underscores just how inherently dangerous wildland firefighting is, and the job is further compounded this year by extreme fire conditions," said CalFire Director Ken Pimlott. "We have secured the crash site and will be cooperating with the NTSB on their investigation."

The S-2T tanker went down about 4:26 p.m. (7:26 p.m. ET), less than two hours after the fire started. It rapidly grew to 130 acres in just a couple of hours, forcing the evacuation of about 60 homes in the nearby community of Foresta, CalFire said. El Portal Road, also known as State Highway 140, was closed and wasn't expected to reopen any time soon, CalFire said.

California grounds air tankers after fatal crash; officials say other aircraft can fill gap


SACRAMENTO, Calif.(AP) - California's fleet of 22 air tankers was grounded Wednesday after one of the planes crashed while battling a wildfire in Yosemite National Park, killing the pilot.

A National Park Service helicopter and air tankers from the U.S. Forest Service were filling the gap and assisting firefighters tackling the blaze that prompted the evacuation of 60 homes in the community of Foresta, park spokeswoman Kari Cobb said.

It was not clear how long CalFire's grounding of the S-2T airplanes will last as the agency checks the safety of the aircraft and its pilots, CalFire spokeswoman Alyssa Smith said.

The tankers are part of a CalFire fleet that includes 11 UH-1H Super Huey helicopters and 14 OV-10A planes used to guide the other firefighting aircraft.

The tankers, however, are the backbone of the firefighting fleet and can each carry 1,200 gallons of fire retardant.

"These are our initial attack aircraft," department spokeswoman Lynne Tolmachoff said.

The crash occurred on Tuesday as four California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection aircraft, including three tankers, were fighting the blaze as it climbed a steep canyon wall north of the Merced River, Tolmachoff said.

One of the planes hit the canyon wall and disintegrated, spilling pieces of the twin-engine aircraft onto State Highway 140.

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