Submitted by Orcas Island Fire & Rescue.
As September marks the transition to cooler weather and the beginning of heating season, Orcas Island Fire & Rescue reminds residents to prepare their homes for the safe use of wood stoves, fireplaces and heating systems. Early detection and prevention remain the most effective tools for protecting lives and property from fire. Before lighting that first fire of the season, schedule professional chimney inspections and cleaning to remove summer debris and ensure proper ventilation. Clean gutters thoroughly and test all smoke and carbon monoxide detectors, replacing batteries as needed. These simple steps can prevent the majority of heating-related fires that typically increase during fall and winter months.
Since May, OIFR has responded to four significant structure fires across the island. While three resulted in substantial property loss to the primary structures, firefighters successfully protected numerous nearby buildings, vehicles and other valuable property in each incident. This protection of “exposures” – preventing fire spread to adjacent structures – represents one of the most critical aspects of fire suppression work. On Orcas Island, where many homes outside of Eastsound sit in forested areas, every structure fire carries the additional risk of wildland fire spread. Early detection through working smoke alarms and prompt reporting allows fire crews to arrive while fires are still manageable and before they threaten neighboring properties or spread into surrounding forest.
OIFR’s response capabilities depend on a complex coordination system involving seven strategically positioned fire stations and volunteers living throughout the island. The department’s goal is to have engines rolling from Station 21 in Eastsound within 90 seconds of dispatch, while volunteer firefighters respond to their assigned stations or directly to emergency scenes. Response times across the island range from minutes to 30 minutes or more, depending on location, volunteer availability and multiple calls at the same time. Daily operations involve continuous coordination between station lieutenants, duty crews and volunteers who report their availability for coverage. This 24/7 personnel and apparatus management, also coordinated with San Juan County dispatch in Friday Harbor, ensures the fastest possible response to every emergency call across the island’s 55 square miles.
Maintaining these emergency response capabilities requires significant ongoing training investment. OIFR volunteers complete a minimum of six to 18 hours per month in training based on their disciplines: fire, EMS, rescue and wildland. Most active responders easily double these minimums through specialized courses and weekend training sessions. Recent examples include eight department members completing a 32-hour rope rescue operations course over two weekends, with upcoming October training featuring 16-hour weekend sessions in hazardous materials operations and scene command. This continuous professional development ensures OIFR members stay current with evolving emergency response techniques and safety protocols, providing the island community with emergency services that meet or exceed state and national standards.
Room for everyone
Fire suppression welcomes firefighters of all ages and experience levels. Cadets aged 15-18 learn basics and support operations, while new volunteers start with academy training regardless of age. Experienced firefighters bring leadership and mentorship, and senior members contribute decades of knowledge and wisdom. Your age doesn’t matter – your commitment does. Fire suppression needs dedicated people who want to protect their community, can work as part of a team, are willing to train hard and continuously, can stay calm under pressure and are physically capable of demanding work. We’ll teach you everything else. OIFR is currently accepting applications for new firefighter recruits, with a full Fire Academy beginning in the new year. Interested community members can contact the department at info@orcasfire.org or 360-376-2331 to learn about volunteer opportunities and training requirements.
