#East Contra Costa Fire Protection District
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Oakley: 4 Teenagers Injured After Vehicle Crash on Big Break Road
Oakley: 4 Teenagers Injured After Vehicle Crash on Big Break Road
At 8:49 pm Saturday, Oakley Police and East Contra Costa Fire Protection District firefighters were dispatched to a report of a vehicle rollover crash in the 80 block of Big Break Marina in the City of Oakley.
Upon arrival, units located a vehicle that had hit a cement barrier and had flipped over with four juveniles inside the vehicle. In total, three patients sustained minor injuries and a…
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#AMR#City of Oakley#East Contra Costa Fire Protection District#ECCFPD#Oakley#Oakley Police Department#Oakley vehicle crash
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Bay Area Morning Report Thursday, February 11, 2021
A Bay Area News Group analysis shows public schools that have reopened are mostly in the wealthiest districts. Those serving children in big cities, or children who come from poor families or families of average means, remain in online “distance learning,” widely acknowledged as inferior to in-person instruction. ••• Newsom says a school reopening deal may arrive by Friday. ••• San Ramon Unified opened some schools for in-person learning, one of the first East Bay districts to do so. ••• Palo Alto middle and high schools could open as soon as March 1, the district superintendent says.
More pandemic news: The more contagious South African coronavirus strain has been found in Santa Clara and Alameda counties. ••• The CDC says double masking can block 92% of infectious particles. ••• California overtook New York in overall deaths from COVID-19. ••• Federal authorities are investigating a massive counterfeit N95 mask operation. ••• Borenstein: Kaiser requires the same nurses to treat COVID patients and uninfected patients.
Impeachment: Prosecutors unveiled chilling new security video in Donald Trump’s impeachment trial Wednesday.
State plans & policy: A new California law makes it easier to get treatment for mental health and substance abuse. ••• A proposed California law seeks to ban NDAs that prevent workers from speaking up about discrimination and harassment. ••• California high-speed rail officials want to tap $4.1 billion in bond funds to finish ongoing construction in the Central Valley.
Editorial: The pandemic proves the need for net neutrality and an open internet.
Arson investigators with the Contra Costa County Fire Protection District arrested seven people in a one-month stretch after eight fires in the county. Cleanup continues after an oil spill at Richmond’s Chevron refinery sent at least 100 gallons of petroleum product into San Francisco Bay waters. Over three years, a Stanford employee stole $2.2 million in laptop computers, federal prosecutors alleged in court records. San Jose officers were cleared of criminal liability from a deadly 2019 shooting during a freeway stop. San Jose passed a mandatory $3-an-hour pay raise for grocery workers.
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Amtrak train collides with vehicle at California intersection without crossing arms, killing three
Amtrak train collides with vehicle at California intersection without crossing arms, killing three
[ad_1] All five victims were in the vehicle and were attending an event near the train route, said East Contra Costa County Fire Protection District Marshal Steve Aubert. The two people injured, an adult and a child, were airlifted to local hospitals and sustained major injuries, he said. Aerial video of the scene from CNN affiliate KPIX shows a crumpled silver vehicle at rest near the train…
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Bay Area rancher dies after apparent bull attack
A bull apparently killed a Northern California rancher and then was shot dead when it threatened first responders, authorities said.
The incident occurred Thursday afternoon in rural Contra Costa County, the San Francisco Chronicle reported.
A report of an unresponsive rancher lying in a field drew sheriff’s deputies, firefighters and an animal control officer to the scene, said Steve Aubert, a fire marshal public information officer with the East Contra Costa Fire Protection District.
“It is believed that the bull may have attacked the rancher,” Aubert said.
The bull approached emergency personnel in a threatening manner and deputies shot it to protect them, Aubert said.
The county medical examiner will determine the cause of death of the rancher, whose identity was not released.
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Scary, Scary Night
by Cynthia Brian
“Starry, starry night Flaming flowers that brightly blaze Swirling clouds in violet haze.” Don McLean
In 1889, post-impressionist, Vincent Van Gogh, painted one of his most memorable paintings, The Starry Night, as he looked out of his asylum east window. On October 10, 2019, when I looked out our east window, the starry night was aglow with flames and they were not the brightly blaze of flaming flowers. Normally, I look forward to the month October because of the frivolity of Halloween. Costumes, candy, scarecrows, black cats, ghosts, ghouls, jack o ’lanterns, and trick or treating offer children a scary evening of amusement. It was a scary, scary night, but it was not Halloween.
The power was off and a fire erupted racing down the hill to a neighborhood fast asleep. Firefighters were swift and efficient evacuating the community and containing the inferno. Police officers assisted in maintaining peace and safety. Fortunately, all structures were saved and no injuries were incurred, thanks to the professional first responders. Gardens and landscapes survived the blaze with only a few fences being torched.
What homeowners need to know to be more fire-safe: Lamorinda is rural, wooded, with minimal escape routes. Many of the plants and trees growing throughout our area are highly flammable including pines, cypress, cedar, fir, bamboo, acacia, juniper, Pampas grass, rosemary, ivy, arborvitae, miscanthus, and eucalyptus. Coyote brush, although moderately fire-resistant when it is young and green, is highly combustible as it grows. It depends on fires to regenerate and grows everywhere in our hills. All of these plants need to be removed or carefully supervised. Since heat moves up, fire speed and severity is stronger on slopes where vegetation management is crucial.
Autumn is a prime time to prepare your landscaping for the next season and create a defensible space around your property. A defensible space is an area around a structure that has been cleared of ignitable debris and botanicals that may cause a public safety hazard. No plant is fireproof. Under the right conditions, every plant will burn, especially those that are drought-stressed or not maintained. A “fire-safe” plant means that it tends not to be a significant fuel source in itself with a chemical composition that resists heat and combustion. It is critical to keep plants around our homes well tended and pruned as a fire protection tool. The closer plants are to the house, the more care is needed. Every homeowner is responsible for managing their vegetation to meet Fire District requirements.
Neighborhoods are encouraged to form a committee to receive advice from local fire professionals on how to be Fire Wise. Being Fire Wise is dependent on the diligence of everyone in a neighborhood to keep property fire safe. Fires do not honor property lines. All properties become indefensible when one neighbor has overgrown bushes, brush, or low hanging trees.
What makes flora highly flammable? ϖ Dry and dead leaves, twigs, branches ϖ Abundant, dense foliage ϖ Needles ϖ Low moisture foliage ϖ Peeling, loose bark ϖ Gummy sap ϖ Leathery or aromatic leaves ϖ Content of terpene, oils, or resin ϖ Dry uncut grasses
What makes flora reasonably fire-resistant? ϖ Hardy, slow-growing plants that don’t produce litter or thatch. ϖ Drought tolerant natives with internal high water content. Generally, but not always, California natives are more tolerant of fire and deer. ϖ Trees with thick bark that restrict the growth of invasive shrub species and hardwood trees such as walnut, cherry, maple, and poplar are less flammable. Deciduous trees and shrubs are more fire resistant because they have higher moisture content when in leaf, lower fuel volume when dormant, and usually do not contain flammable oils. ϖ Supple, moist leaves with little to no sap or resin residue. ϖ Low growing ground covers. ϖ Bulbs with dried leaves cut to the ground.
What can you do now to create a more fire-resistant landscape? ϖ Include pavers, bricks, pavement, gravel, rocks, dry creek beds, fountains, ponds, pools, and lawns. ϖ Select high moisture plants that grow close to the ground with a low sap and resin content ϖ Plant the right plant in the correct location. Leave space between plants. ϖ Minimize the inclusion of evergreen trees within thirty feet of structures. Clear the understory. Keep trees twenty feet away from chimneys. ϖ Remove invasive species or swaths of flammable plants including ivy, rosemary, broom, coyote brush, chamise, and juniper. ϖ Keep mulch moist. Create zones of rock, brick, or gravel. Bark and leaves are not mulches recommended near structures. ϖ Prune trees 6-10 feet above the ground to hinder fire laddering. ϖ Keep appropriate clearance to reduce the threat of burning embers from decorative features such as gazebos, fences, sheds, porches, and junk areas. ϖ Irrigate and maintain all flora, lawns, and hillsides. Clover, groundcovers, and grasses that are kept low and green are excellent alternatives. ϖ Due to soil erosion, bare ground is not recommended.
Helpful Websites ϖ National Fire Protection Association: https://www.nfpa.org ϖ Moraga Orinda Fire District: http://www.mofd.org ϖ University of California Cooperative Extension: https://ucanr.edu/sites/fire/Prepare/Landscaping/Plant_choice/ ϖ Fire Safe Marin: https://www.firesafemarin.org ϖ Pacific Northwest Fire Resistant Plants: http://www.firefree.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Fire-Resistant-Plants.pdf ϖ Las Pilitas Nursery (Located in Santa Margarita, this website lists deer and fire-resistant flora plus burn times.) https://www.laspilitas.com/easy/deerfire.htm
Sign Up for Alerts ϖ Location-specific alert is Contra Costa County Community Warning System: https://cwsalerts.com
ϖ General alert: http://www.nixle.com
Having had warning of the looming PGE blackout, I had deeply irrigated my entire garden and hillside. An alert from EBMUD instructed that in a power outage, water must be used judiciously, so as a pre-emptive measure, I watered my landscape thoroughly, soaking the grass, shrubs, mulch, trees, and fences. Throughout the summer, thrice, I had weed-whacked the tall grass surrounding my property and that of neighbors, pruned low hanging tree branches, and a week before the fire I had, thankfully, cut the dry perennials to the ground. These are steps I encourage all homeowners to undertake. Maintaining our landscaping is a never-ending task mandatory for both our pleasure and protection.
Let’s participate in keeping the fire-breathing dragon away! Enjoy a safe and scary evening of Trick or Treating under the starry skies!
Happy Gardening. Happy Growing. Happy Halloween! Read more: https://www.lamorindaweekly.com/archive/issue1318/Digging-Deep-with-Goddess-Gardener-Cynthia-Brian-Scary-scary-night.html
Cynthia Brian, The Goddess Gardener, raised in the vineyards of Napa County, is a New York Times best-selling author, actor, radio personality, speaker, media and writing coach as well as the Founder and Executive Director of Be the Star You Are!® 501 c3. Tune into Cynthia’s StarStyle® Radio Broadcast at www.StarStyleRadio.com.
Buy a copy of her books, Growing with the Goddess Gardener and Be the Star You Are! Millennials to Boomers at www.cynthiabrian.com/online-store.
Hire Cynthia for writing projects, garden consults, and inspirational lectures. [email protected]
www.GoddessGardener.com
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Scary, Scary Night
by Cynthia Brian
“Starry, starry night Flaming flowers that brightly blaze Swirling clouds in violet haze.” Don McLean
In 1889, post-impressionist, Vincent Van Gogh, painted one of his most memorable paintings, The Starry Night, as he looked out of his asylum east window. On October 10, 2019, when I looked out our east window, the starry night was aglow with flames and they were not the brightly blaze of flaming flowers. Normally, I look forward to the month October because of the frivolity of Halloween. Costumes, candy, scarecrows, black cats, ghosts, ghouls, jack o ’lanterns, and trick or treating offer children a scary evening of amusement. It was a scary, scary night, but it was not Halloween.
The power was off and a fire erupted racing down the hill to a neighborhood fast asleep. Firefighters were swift and efficient evacuating the community and containing the inferno. Police officers assisted in maintaining peace and safety. Fortunately, all structures were saved and no injuries were incurred, thanks to the professional first responders. Gardens and landscapes survived the blaze with only a few fences being torched.
What homeowners need to know to be more fire-safe: Lamorinda is rural, wooded, with minimal escape routes. Many of the plants and trees growing throughout our area are highly flammable including pines, cypress, cedar, fir, bamboo, acacia, juniper, Pampas grass, rosemary, ivy, arborvitae, miscanthus, and eucalyptus. Coyote brush, although moderately fire-resistant when it is young and green, is highly combustible as it grows. It depends on fires to regenerate and grows everywhere in our hills. All of these plants need to be removed or carefully supervised. Since heat moves up, fire speed and severity is stronger on slopes where vegetation management is crucial.
Autumn is a prime time to prepare your landscaping for the next season and create a defensible space around your property. A defensible space is an area around a structure that has been cleared of ignitable debris and botanicals that may cause a public safety hazard. No plant is fireproof. Under the right conditions, every plant will burn, especially those that are drought-stressed or not maintained. A “fire-safe” plant means that it tends not to be a significant fuel source in itself with a chemical composition that resists heat and combustion. It is critical to keep plants around our homes well tended and pruned as a fire protection tool. The closer plants are to the house, the more care is needed. Every homeowner is responsible for managing their vegetation to meet Fire District requirements.
Neighborhoods are encouraged to form a committee to receive advice from local fire professionals on how to be Fire Wise. Being Fire Wise is dependent on the diligence of everyone in a neighborhood to keep property fire safe. Fires do not honor property lines. All properties become indefensible when one neighbor has overgrown bushes, brush, or low hanging trees.
What makes flora highly flammable? ϖ Dry and dead leaves, twigs, branches ϖ Abundant, dense foliage ϖ Needles ϖ Low moisture foliage ϖ Peeling, loose bark ϖ Gummy sap ϖ Leathery or aromatic leaves ϖ Content of terpene, oils, or resin ϖ Dry uncut grasses
What makes flora reasonably fire-resistant? ϖ Hardy, slow-growing plants that don’t produce litter or thatch. ϖ Drought tolerant natives with internal high water content. Generally, but not always, California natives are more tolerant of fire and deer. ϖ Trees with thick bark that restrict the growth of invasive shrub species and hardwood trees such as walnut, cherry, maple, and poplar are less flammable. Deciduous trees and shrubs are more fire resistant because they have higher moisture content when in leaf, lower fuel volume when dormant, and usually do not contain flammable oils. ϖ Supple, moist leaves with little to no sap or resin residue. ϖ Low growing ground covers. ϖ Bulbs with dried leaves cut to the ground.
What can you do now to create a more fire-resistant landscape? ϖ Include pavers, bricks, pavement, gravel, rocks, dry creek beds, fountains, ponds, pools, and lawns. ϖ Select high moisture plants that grow close to the ground with a low sap and resin content ϖ Plant the right plant in the correct location. Leave space between plants. ϖ Minimize the inclusion of evergreen trees within thirty feet of structures. Clear the understory. Keep trees twenty feet away from chimneys. ϖ Remove invasive species or swaths of flammable plants including ivy, rosemary, broom, coyote brush, chamise, and juniper. ϖ Keep mulch moist. Create zones of rock, brick, or gravel. Bark and leaves are not mulches recommended near structures. ϖ Prune trees 6-10 feet above the ground to hinder fire laddering. ϖ Keep appropriate clearance to reduce the threat of burning embers from decorative features such as gazebos, fences, sheds, porches, and junk areas. ϖ Irrigate and maintain all flora, lawns, and hillsides. Clover, groundcovers, and grasses that are kept low and green are excellent alternatives. ϖ Due to soil erosion, bare ground is not recommended.
Helpful Websites ϖ National Fire Protection Association: https://www.nfpa.org ϖ Moraga Orinda Fire District: http://www.mofd.org ϖ University of California Cooperative Extension: https://ucanr.edu/sites/fire/Prepare/Landscaping/Plant_choice/ ϖ Fire Safe Marin: https://www.firesafemarin.org ϖ Pacific Northwest Fire Resistant Plants: http://www.firefree.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Fire-Resistant-Plants.pdf ϖ Las Pilitas Nursery (Located in Santa Margarita, this website lists deer and fire-resistant flora plus burn times.) https://www.laspilitas.com/easy/deerfire.htm
Sign Up for Alerts ϖ Location-specific alert is Contra Costa County Community Warning System: https://cwsalerts.com
ϖ General alert: http://www.nixle.com
Having had warning of the looming PGE blackout, I had deeply irrigated my entire garden and hillside. An alert from EBMUD instructed that in a power outage, water must be used judiciously, so as a pre-emptive measure, I watered my landscape thoroughly, soaking the grass, shrubs, mulch, trees, and fences. Throughout the summer, thrice, I had weed-whacked the tall grass surrounding my property and that of neighbors, pruned low hanging tree branches, and a week before the fire I had, thankfully, cut the dry perennials to the ground. These are steps I encourage all homeowners to undertake. Maintaining our landscaping is a never-ending task mandatory for both our pleasure and protection.
Let’s participate in keeping the fire-breathing dragon away! Enjoy a safe and scary evening of Trick or Treating under the starry skies!
Happy Gardening. Happy Growing. Happy Halloween! Read more: https://www.lamorindaweekly.com/archive/issue1318/Digging-Deep-with-Goddess-Gardener-Cynthia-Brian-Scary-scary-night.html
Cynthia Brian, The Goddess Gardener, raised in the vineyards of Napa County, is a New York Times best-selling author, actor, radio personality, speaker, media and writing coach as well as the Founder and Executive Director of Be the Star You Are!® 501 c3. Tune into Cynthia’s StarStyle® Radio Broadcast at www.StarStyleRadio.com.
Buy a copy of her books, Growing with the Goddess Gardener and Be the Star You Are! Millennials to Boomers at www.cynthiabrian.com/online-store.
Hire Cynthia for writing projects, garden consults, and inspirational lectures. [email protected]
www.GoddessGardener.com
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Northern California officials say Pacific Gas & Electric Co. equipment caused three fires that broke out in San Francisco suburbs earlier this week. The Contra Costa County Fire Protection District confirmed Friday that the utility's power lines sparked a pair of fires Sunday in Lafayette east of San Francisco. One of the fires destroyed the Lafayette Tennis Club.
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Northern California officials say Pacific Gas & Electric Co. equipment caused three fires that broke out in San Francisco suburbs earlier this week. The Contra Costa County Fire Protection District confirmed Friday that the utility's power lines sparked a pair of fires Sunday in Lafayette east of San Francisco. One of the fires destroyed the Lafayette Tennis Club.
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The Latest: PG&E equipment sparked 3 Bay Area fires
Northern California officials say Pacific Gas & Electric Co. equipment caused three fires that broke out in San Francisco suburbs earlier this week. The Contra Costa County Fire Protection District confirmed Friday that the utility's power lines sparked a pair of fires Sunday in Lafayette east of San Francisco. One of the fires destroyed the Lafayette Tennis Club.
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Northern California officials say Pacific Gas & Electric Co. equipment caused three fires that broke out in San Francisco suburbs earlier this week. The Contra Costa County Fire Protection District confirmed Friday that the utility's power lines sparked a pair of fires Sunday in Lafayette east of San Francisco. One of the fires destroyed the Lafayette Tennis Club.
from Yahoo News - Latest News & Headlines https://ift.tt/36r1NWo
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Northern California officials say Pacific Gas & Electric Co. equipment caused three fires that broke out in San Francisco suburbs earlier this week. The Contra Costa County Fire Protection District confirmed Friday that the utility's power lines sparked a pair of fires Sunday in Lafayette east of San Francisco. One of the fires destroyed the Lafayette Tennis Club.
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The Latest: PG&E equipment sparked 3 Bay Area fires
Northern California officials say Pacific Gas & Electric Co. equipment caused three fires that broke out in San Francisco suburbs earlier this week. The Contra Costa County Fire Protection District confirmed Friday that the utility's power lines sparked a pair of fires Sunday in Lafayette east of San Francisco. One of the fires destroyed the Lafayette Tennis Club.
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Northern California officials say Pacific Gas & Electric Co. equipment caused three fires that broke out in San Francisco suburbs earlier this week. The Contra Costa County Fire Protection District confirmed Friday that the utility's power lines sparked a pair of fires Sunday in Lafayette east of San Francisco. One of the fires destroyed the Lafayette Tennis Club.
from Yahoo News - Latest News & Headlines https://ift.tt/36r1NWo
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Three hospitalized as house burns in Brentwood
Three hospitalized as house burns in Brentwood
BRENTWOOD — Three people were hospitalized Tuesday night when a heater malfunctioned and caused a fire at a home, fire officials said.
All three suffered from smoke inhalation and were taken by ambulance to Kaiser Hospital in Antioch, Battalion Chief Jake Gonzalez of the East Contra Costa Fire Protection District said. The blaze started just after 10:30 p.m.
The heater was located in the attic of…
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