National Guard soldiers leave from Hermiston to fight fires

Published 3:00 pm Wednesday, September 16, 2020

Oregon Army National Guard members board a bus at the Oregon National Guard Armory in Hermiston on Tuesday, Sept. 15, 2020. From Hermiston they will travel to Astoria for wildland firefighting training before joining fire crews throughout the state.

HERMISTON — National Guard soldiers from around the Pacific Northwest gathered at the Hermiston armory on Tuesday, Sept. 15, before heading out to assist in Oregon’s firefighting efforts.

While some soldiers with previous firefighting experience have been on the fire lines since last week, the 41 members of the 3rd Battalion, 116th Regiment leaving from the Hermiston armory were heading to Camp Rilea in Astoria for five days of firefighting training first. They hailed from parts of Oregon, Washington and Idaho.

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“We’ve got soldiers that last week were evacuating their own families and now are helping here,” 1st Lt. Rider Mills of Enumclaw, Washington, said.

Mills said they didn’t know for sure how long they would be gone from their families and jobs — just “as long as they need us.”

Spc. Casey Hayes of Joseph said his employer was “extremely understanding and very supportive” of him leaving to go fight fires.

“We normally have a pretty good guess when the fires start getting as bad as they are that we’ll go out,” he said. “We’re a line of defense for the state.”

Hayes previously worked on the Taylor Creek fire near Grant Pass in 2018, and said they were treated well by the U.S. Forest Service, with good food and good people. He said Guard members there were able to take on the “grunt work,” such as mopping up fire lines and checking for lingering hot spots that could reignite, freeing up the more experienced career firefighters to focus on more complex work.

Spc. Noe Ramirez of Salem said he knows a lot of people over on the west side of the state, who have been evacuated or even had their homes or businesses burn down. His family also lives in the area and he said he was concerned for them.

“I want to be with my family right now, but I know I’m helping,” he said.

Ramirez has never fought wildfires before, and said he was excited to learn new skills at Camp Rilea before getting to help with the state’s fire suppression efforts.

After finishing training at Camp Rilea, the soldiers will be deployed to one of the dozens of wildfires around the state, although they weren’t sure yet where they would end up.

They left Hermiston with Umatilla County Commissioner Bill Elfering and Morrow County Commissioner Jim Doherty there to see them off.

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