KEY POINTS
  • As deadly fires spread through California, first responders lack a crucial part of their emergency response team: prison inmate firefighters. 
  • The coronavirus has swept through correctional facilities and infected many vulnerable California inmates, leaving fewer available to help contain more than two dozen major fires and over 300 smaller ones. 
  • The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection has roughly half as many inmate fire crews than it originally had to work during the most dangerous part of wildfire season. 
  • Inmates are often on the front line doing dangerous work and making low pay, between $2 and $5 per day and $1 extra per hour when fighting a fire.
Inmate firefighters prepare to put out flame on the road leading to the Reagan Presidential Library during the Easy Fire in Simi Valley, California on October 30, 2019.

Deadly wildfires are still ripping through California, decimating land and homes and forcing thousands of people to evacuate. 

But first responders lack a crucial part of their emergency response team this year: prison inmate firefighters.