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Telephone Fire

Unit Information

431 Patterson Bridge Rd 
John Day, 
Oregon 
97845 
431 Patterson Bridge Rd 
John Day, 
Oregon 
97845 

Incident Contacts

  • Telephone Fire Information (same as Falls Fire)
    Phone:
    541-208-4370
    Hours:
    8 AM - 8 PM

Falls and Telephone Fires Update 07-31-2024

Falls Fire, Telephone Fire
Publication Type: News - 07/31/2024 - 10:31

Falls and Telephone Fires Update for July 31, 2024 

Telephone Fire Quick Facts: 

Size: 36,668          Start Date: July 22, 2024   Location: 12 miles NE of Burns, OR 

Containment: 15%.   Total Personnel: 364 personnel   Cause: Lightning/Natural 

Resources Assigned: 9 hand crews, 15 engines, 6 bulldozers, 7 water tenders, 3 skidders 

*Resource numbers are changing rapidly as crews are re-allocated to this Fire. 

 

Falls Fire Quick Facts:  

Size: 142,307 Start Date: July 10, 2024  Location: 13 Miles NW of Burns, OR 

Containment: 69% Total Personnel: 769 Cause: Human-caused, under investigation 

Structures Triaged: Residences: 386; Commercial: 119 Outbuildings: 760 

Resources Assigned: 34 hand crews, 44 engines, 16 bulldozers, 24 water tenders, 6 masticators, 8 skidders 

 

Sand Mountain Fire Quick Facts: 

Size: 4,927          Start Date: July 25, 2024 Location: 17 miles SW of Seneca, OR 

Containment: 0%    Total Personnel: Staffed by Falls Fire personnel   Cause: Lightning/Natural 

 

Ritter Fire Quick Facts: 

Size: 459          Start Date: July 23, 2024 Location: Stinking Water Mountain NE of Crane, OR 

Containment: 52%.   Total Personnel: 41 personnel   Cause: Lightning/Natural 

Resources Assigned: 1 hand crew, 4 engines, 1 water tender 

 

4 Oregon National Guard hand crews will be arriving to assist with the firefighting effort on these fires (2 crews arrive on July 31st and 2 arrive on August 1st. Learn more at:  

https://odffire.com/2024/07/29/oregon-department-of-forestry-orders-resources-from-the-oregon-national-guard/ 

Aerial resources available: 3 Type 1 helicopters assigned and available to all fires in the area. 4 Single Engine Airtankers (SEATs) available for initial attack. To date, aerial resources have dropped about ½ million gallons each of water and retardant on these fires. Helicopters drop water and fixed wing planes drop retardant. Air resources can fly 10 flight hours per day. Additional planes come from a pool of resources serving the northwest and go to fires designated with the highest priority in the U.S.  

 

New Fire Activity Quick Facts: 

Whiskey Mountain: 4,212 acres; Cow Creek: 86 acres; Parasol: 485 acres; Poison: 593 acres.  

Total Personnel: Staffed by Falls Fire personnel.       

 

Community Meetings Scheduled: 

Wednesday, July 31 at 3 pm: Izee, OR at the Izee Schoolhouse; 45477 Izee-Pauline Lane; Izee, OR 97873

Leaders of the Alaska Incident Management Team will be in Izee for a community meeting to provide an update on the Telephone Fire, Falls Fire and several other fires we are working to suppress in the area. The meeting will also be shared on the Malheur National Forest Facebook page, as well as the Falls and Telephone Fires Facebook page. 

Priorities for Wednesday, July 31: In all areas, crews will continue to improve lines over the next 48 hours to increase their chances of holding through the next weather event.  

  1. Initial Attack: The potential for new fire starts in the area remains significant at this time, and firefighters remain vigilant and focused on initial attack (IA) and are ready to respond to any new threats. 
  2. Along the east side of Telephone Fire, crews will work towards anchoring off of the 2850 road, prepping for small-scale ignition along the road system and dozer line, and working toward the southwest. 
  3. On the southwest side of Telephone Fire, crews will continue to hold and improve existing line. 
  4. Poison Fire: Crews will conduct small-scale firing operations on the northeast corner, working in both directions to continue containment. 

Fire Summaries: 

Many areas are in mop up/hold/improve status, including the Whiskey Mountain Fire area, the northwest sides of the Sand/Falls fires, and east sides of the Falls, Parasol, and Ritter fires. This is due to crews’ great progress in securing good line which continues to hold in these areas. Mop up is a rigorous process used by wildland firefighters to extinguish or remove burning materials near a fire’s control lines after it has been contained. The goal of mop up is to make the fire safer, reduce smoke, and prevent spread to unburned areas.

Telephone Fire:  On Tuesday, Crews began work on ignition operations to prevent any northern progression. Local partners from the BLM and the Rangeland Fire Protection Association (RFPA) assisted in creating line to the south and east of the Upper Pine Fire footprint and are also bringing line down to the 2850 road with dozer lines, prepping for small-scale ignition, to corral the fire in a catcher’s mitt shaped area. This work will continue Wednesday. Some of the acreage increase shown for this fire from yesterday is due to firing operations, which are burning fuels during favorable conditions to keep the fire in the desired area. Crews worked in the Poujade Field area using skidgines, which are a cross between skidders and engines containing large water tanks. This equipment can work in steep or loose terrain that engines and water tenders would not be able to access. The west side of the fire is looking good.

On the north side, there was lots of active fire on Tuesday. A shortage of resources requires managers to pick the most effective operations that can hold. We are flexible with the resources we have, pivoting when needed to send them to the most critical areas. Crews are working 24/7 towards reaching priorities on the Telephone Fire, including more than 290 people working the night shift on the fire. Night shift firefighters work in the highest priority areas and places with imminent effects and concerns, and two interagency hotshot crews, highly specialized firefighters, were added to the Telephone Fire overnight Tuesday.

Falls Fire:

The south end of the continues to look good and is patrol and monitor status. The Coral Springs area is holding some heat, but is doing okay. On Tuesday, crews had success in firing operations on the nearby Whiskey Mountain Fire, and the fire is staying within containment line. A contingency line behind existing line is being constructed. The north portion of the fire in the direction of Izee has not moved in the last 2 days. Wednesday, crews will continue mop up in the Whiskey Mountain Fire area, and continue progress on a fuel break along the 31 road.

Sand Mountain Fire:

Crews worked Tuesday on holding line around Smokey Creek on the northwest side of the fire; work also continued to tie line into the 31 road. The intent is to secure line to protect community of Izee, bringing dozer line around into 31 road to use as indirect line. This process is going smoothly, and crews making good progress with 2.4 miles  completed as of Wednesday morning. Crews will continue to work to secure this line on Wednesday. Along the 3145 road, prep work is complete.

Parasol and Poison Fires: The Parasol is completely surrounded with line which crews are continually reinforcing. On the Poison Fire, crews continued small-scale firing operations to hold the fire where it is along the west and south sides of the fire; they will continue this work on Wednesday and are anticipating completion soon.

Ritter Fire: Line is completed around 100% of the fire; crews continue to grid, mop up interior green islands, and hold line. Gridding is an important process done when line is complete where firefighters search for any small fires that could potentially exist inside line, by systematically traveling over an area on parallel courses or gridlines.

Weather: Seasonably cool temperatures prevailed on Tuesday with some afternoon sunshine. Lingering low level moisture led to moderate afternoon humidity values. Today there will be a warming and drying trend, with temperatures increasing by 5 to 10 degrees and relative humidity dropping 5-10%.  Light winds this morning will give way to typical afternoon westerly winds.

Evacuations: Due to the continued growth east of the Telephone Fire, evacuations have expanded. For the most accurate evacuation information, please visit the Harney County Sheriff’s evacuation map here: https://tinyurl.com/3zst4sjy, or the Grant County Emergency Management Facebook page at: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100068819321423.

Closures: Due to active wildfires compounded by extremely unfavorable weather conditions, limited firefighting resources and County Resources, Malheur National Forest officials have temporarily closed lands within the Malheur National Forest.

Investigation: U.S. Forest Service fire investigators are seeking the public’s assistance with any tips or information pertinent to the start of the Falls Fire on the Malheur National Forest. Please submit any information that could assist fire investigation efforts to SM.FS.R6TipHotLine@usda.gov.

Temporary Flight Restriction (TFR): TFRs in the area have been changing; pilots should check the latest information on the Federal Aviation Administration TFR website prior to flying: https://tfr.faa.gov/tfr_map_ims/html/index.html 

 

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/p/Falls-Fire-2024-61562126623985/ 

Falls Fire InciWeb:  https://inciweb.wildfire.gov/incident-information/ormaf-falls-fire 

Telephone Fire InciWeb: https://inciweb.wildfire.gov/incident-information/ormaf-telephone-fire 

Fire Information Line: 541-208-4370, staffed 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. 

Email: 2024.Falls@firenet.gov 

Harney County non-emergency evacuation questions: 541-589-5579 

Air quality questions: 541-573-2271. Air quality information, searchable by zip code: www.airnow.gov  

Smoke Outlooks: https://outlooks.airfire.org/outlook