by Bill Kisliuk
Pasadena Sun
After years of political tension prompted by the response to the Station fire, the U.S. Forest Service has agreed to begin training crews and preparing helicopters for night flights to battle wildfires, several California lawmakers announced Thursday.
Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Burbank) and other lawmakers have pressured the Forest Service to prepare for night flights since the Station fire devastated 160,000 acres of the Angeles National Forest in 2009, burning nearly 90 homes and killing two firefighters. The Forest Service and local agencies failed to get enough resources over the fire in its early stages, and the Station fire burned for more than two months.
Forest Service officials discontinued night flights decades ago, citing dangers to airborne crews.