05/22/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 05/22/2026 15:41
What you need to know: More than 2,800 state and local personnel and equipment, including firefighters, fire engines, dozers, helicopters, and support personnel have been deployed statewide to support firefighting efforts across Southern California.
SACRAMENTO - As California faces an early start to an anticipated busy fire season, Governor Gavin Newsom announced more than 2,800 firefighting and emergency personnel have been deployed to protect California communities.
Earlier this week, Governor Newsom secured federal assistance to fund emergency response efforts to the Sandy Fire in Ventura County and Bain Fire in Riverside County. To date, more than 28,000 acres have burned statewide, including more than 18,000 acres on federal land with the Santa Rosa Island Fire. Over 15,000 structures were threatened statewide, an estimated 45,000 people were under evacuation orders, and an additional 36,000 under evacuation warnings.
California is deploying all available resources to combat wildfires. Over 2,800 firefighters and emergency personnel are working nonstop with local, state, and federal partners to protect communities. We urge all Californians to stay ready, make a plan, and always listen to local officials during an emergency.
Governor Gavin Newsom
Over the last week, California has surged resources across the state to support firefighters and emergency managers battling active fires.
Coordinating the state's response through the activation of the State Operations Center and the California Fire and Rescue Mutual Aid System, including the deployment of:
Prepositioning 15 fire engines, two water tenders, two helicopters, and more than 90 personnel to Los Angeles, Santa Barbara, San Joaquin, and Glenn counties
20 Cal OES personnel activated in the State Operations Center
15 FIRIS intelligence gathering flights providing real-time information to incident commanders on the ground
12 fire support personnel and equipment
Coordination of California's WFTIIC as the state's integration hub for wildfire forecasting, weather information, wildfire threat intelligence gathering, giving incident commanders on the ground advance planning information
The Golden State's world-leading mutual aid system is bringing resources from across the state to help Californians in need.
290 Cal OES and local government fire engines
1,455 firefighters and personnel
16 water tenders
13 bulldozers
The state's wildland fire department, responding to requests for personnel and equipment to statewide fires:
58 fire engines
826 firefighters and personnel
28 water tenders
10 bulldozers
7 helicopters
Young men and women a part of the CCC are supporting California's fire response by supporting wildfire suppression, incident logistics, and community recovery.
9 crews, including 126 personnel, deployed to four fires statewide with an additional 11 teams and 150 personnel activated to respond to additional incidents statewide.
The Sandy Fire in Ventura County, led by the Ventura County Fire Department for response efforts is at 2,141 acres and 40% contained.
The Bain Fire in Riverside County, led by the Riverside City Fire Department for response efforts is at 1,497 acres and 67% contained.
The River Fire in Kern County, led by CAL FIRE and Kern County Fire Department for response efforts is at 3,535 acres and 98% contained.
Find more information about shelter locations across Southern California for people who may need to evacuate here.
Residents are urged to stay vigilant during this heightened heat and fire weather period. Californians are reminded to:
Governor Newsom is committed to tackling the wildfire crisis from every angle - prevention, response, and recovery. Since 2021, the state has invested billions of dollars in wildfire prevention and forest resilience, expanding cutting-edge technologies that help firefighters respond faster and more safely, and forged unprecedented partnerships with federal, tribal, and local governments, as well as private and non-profit landowners.
Streamlined approval of forest management projects has allowed the State to address emergency conditions expeditiously. By using a transparent, time-limited framework with clear environmental sideboards, the Newsom Administration is:
Reducing near-term wildfire danger in high-risk communities.
Protecting lives, homes, and critical infrastructure.
Improving forest health and watershed resilience in the face of a hotter, drier climate.
Creating a bridge to a durable, long-term regulatory framework for forest health and fuels reduction that will outlast any single emergency order.
As part of the state's ongoing investment in wildfire resilience and emergency response, CAL FIRE has significantly expanded its workforce over the past five years by adding an average of 1,800 full-time and 600 seasonal positions annually - nearly double that of the previous administration. Over the next four years and beyond, CAL FIRE will be hiring thousands of additional firefighters, natural resource professionals, and support personnel to meet the state's growing demands.
Governor Newsom has invested millions of dollars to protect communities from wildfire - with $135 million available for new and ongoing prevention projects and $72 million going out the door to projects across the state. This is part of over $5 billion the Newsom administration, in collaboration with the legislature, has invested in wildfire and forest resilience since 2019.
This builds on consecutive years of intensive and focused work by California to confront the severe ongoing risk of catastrophic wildfires. New, bold moves to streamline state-level regulatory processes builds long-term efforts already underway in California to increase wildfire response and forest management in the face of a hotter, drier climate.
The state's efforts are in stark contrast to the Trump administration's dangerous cuts to the U.S. Forest Service, which also threatens the safety of communities across the state. The U.S. Forest Service has lost 10% of all positions and 25% of positions outside of direct wildfire response - both of which are likely to impact wildfire response this year. In recent weeks, the Trump administration proposed a massive reorganization that would shutter the Pacific Regional Forest Service office and other regional Forest Service offices across the West, compounding staff cuts and voluntary resignations across the agency.
As the conditions that fueled 2020 become more common, CAL FIRE urges residents to prepare: make an evacuation plan, pack a go bag, and sign up for local emergency alerts.
To learn more about preparedness, visit ReadyforWildfire.org.
California has dramatically expanded its firefighting capacity and deployed cutting-edge technology, adding new equipment to Los Angeles, thousands of firefighters, and billions in funding, the world's largest aerial firefighting fleet, and first-of-their-kind mapping and monitoring systems.