Hayward, AlCo Firefighters Deploy To Large Wildfire
HAYWARD, CA — Firefighters fought dozens of fires in the East Bay over the holiday weekend, and now they've been deployed to fight the largest wildfire currently burning in the Bay Area.
The biggest fire in Alameda County over the holiday weekend was in Sunol where 85 acres burned. It was originally pegged at 105 acres, but better mapping led to a downward revision in acreage.
No injuries were reported.
Today at 1:28Pm, Firefighters responded to a vegetation fire on Sheridan Rd in Sunol. #SherdianfireFire is currently 100 acres and and 70% contained. Firefighters will be at scene overnight mopping up the fire. @calfireSCU @AlamedaCoFire @LPFDFirefighter @FremontFire pic.twitter.com/KRiPwIFBxi
— Alameda County Fire (@AlamedaCoFire) July 5, 2020
But that wasn’t the only fire. In fact, on the 4th of July alone, the Alameda County Fire Department responded to 22 vegetation fires and 7 structure fires. Add in Con Fire, CAL FIRE, and all of the municipal agencies, and East Bay teams say they were practically overwhelmed.
Monday morning, East Bay firefighters remain on the lines of the biggest fire burning in the Bay Area, the Crews Fire, east of Gilroy in rural Santa Clara County which has blackened an estimated 1,500 acres and is 15 percent contained as of Monday morning, according to Cal Fire. It has burned 2 buildings, threatens more structures, and has forced people to evacuate from their homes.
The East Bay firefighters are part of a California Office of Emergency Services (Cal OES) Strike Team, sent Sunday evening to the Crews Fire. Alameda County, Hayward, Fremont, and Oakland firefighters and their equipment are also part of the strike team. They met at Fremont Fire Station 7 for a quick briefing and headed out together.
This evening, Fremont firefighters on Engine 8231, part of Cal OES Strike Team 2870C, were deployed to the #CrewsFire north of Gilroy. The Strike Team, which also includes crews from @HaywardFireNews, @OaklandFireCA & @AlamedaCoFire met briefly in Fremont before leaving as a team pic.twitter.com/Y0jShwnkCE
— Fremont Fire Department (@FremontFire) July 6, 2020
All public fireworks displays in the East Bay and San Francisco were canceled this year to enforce coronavirus social distancing rules, as cases of coronavirus surge in California, and in several places across the nation. Instead, residents bought their own fireworks, sometimes with disastrous results.
— Patch editor Bea Karnes and Bay City News contributed to this story
This article originally appeared on the Castro Valley Patch