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Golden Eagles Handcrew, Sequoia National Forest, 2000

ABOUT GOLDEN EAGLES HOTSHOTS

The Sycuan Fire Department / BIA GOLDEN EAGLES HOTSHOTS are one of nine Native American BIA-NIFC funded crews in the United States. There are some 90 federal inter-agency hotshot crews in the USA.

The Golden Eagles Hotshots is the only Native American BIA Native American crew in the state of California, and it is assigned to the Pacific Regional Office out of Sacramento, California.

The GOLDEN EAGLES HOTSHOTS are based on the Sycuan Indian Reservation. The Sycuan wildland crew is dispatched by the Cleveland National Forest and is on rotation with the other three Forest Service IHC crews.

WILDLAND 2008 FIRE SEASON PHOTOS

WILDLAND HOTSHOTS complete successful 2008 fire season (click for hi-rez poster blowup).

HISTORY - FUTURE - CAMPAIGNS

HISTORY:

The BIA Golden Eagles Hotshots started as a request from the USDI Bureau of Indian Affairs Pacific Region. The region had sent out a letter to all reservation tribes expressing an interest in starting three Native American crews in the state of California. These crews were to be located regionally in California, one in the south, one central and one in the north.

The Sycuan Fire Department of the Kumeyaay Nation took this challenge and opportunity to bring together a diverse group of people, from many nations and many walks of life and proceeded to develop, shape and mold these individuals into an elite team of wildland firefighters. These courageous young men and women are destined to become our future leaders, role models and heroes in Indian Country and our communities across our great nation.

The Sycuan Fire Department / BIA GOLDEN EAGLES HOTSHOTS organization was established in June 15, 2000, under the Golden Eagles Handcrew name. The crew was to be a Type II organized crew working towards IHC certification. The crew was funded through a cooperative effort between The Sycuan Band of the Kumeyaay Nation and USDI Bureau of Indian Affairs, Southern California Agency. During this initial period the crew was assigned and dispatch by the San Bernardino National Forest.

In August 2001, the GOLDEN EAGLES HANDCREW received recognition and status as a Type II “IA” Initial Attack Crew by the San Bernardino National Forest. This certification allowed the crew the opportunity to take on Type I assignments, these assignments helped in the shaping, molding and preparation of the crew for Type I certification.

In January of 2003 the crew was recognized by BIA NIFC as a Type I IHC crew in training status, this status also provided the crew with partial funding from BIA NIFC hotshot program for fiscal year 2003. The BIA and the Sycuan Tribe meet in February 2003 to discuss how the program would be operated. The main discussion point was whether the crew would be directly supervised by the BIA or the Sycuan Tribe would contract the BIA’s program under Public Law 93-638 contract guidelines. Based on this meeting, the Tribe elected to have the crew be hired by the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Crew carriers were ordered utilizing additional funding provided by the national office. After many months of work within the federal hiring process, selections were made for the GOLDEN EAGLES HOTSHOTS “T” in August and September.

In February 2004, the Sycuan Tribe and the BIA meet to review the progress of the crew. The advantages and disadvantages of the crew being operated by the BIA or contracted by the Tribe. At that time, the Sycuan Tribe decided that the benefits of being able to hire and fire employees utilizing the Tribal personnel system in a short time period was critical to the GOLDEN EAGLES IHC “T”, especially during the fire season. The BIA initiated the 638 contracting process and the BIA funds were transferred to the Tribe to manage the federal fire program.  Within a month, the Tribe was able to hire the crew.  The Crew is funded utilizing BIA federal funds, and are required to meet all federal IHC requirements and are considered a Federal Fire Crew.

The 2004 fire season resulted in a few dispatches, however, the crew worked diligently on meeting all of the required training and qualification standards established for Interagency Hotshot Crews.

In June 2005, an Interregional review team traveled to the Sycuan Reservation and spent several days observing the crew, reviewing all of their training and experience listed under the Incident Qualifications and Certification System. Overall the Crew received a very favorable review.  However, a few of the required factors for certification as a Interagency Hotshot Crew needed to be strengthened and documented. The Crew was dispatched to numerous fires in California and out of Region during the fire season.  In September 2005, a follow up review was made to determine if the crew had been successful in completing the last few items that had been identified in the earlier review. The review team found that all requirements had been met by the GOLDEN EAGLES IHC “T” to be certified. In October 2005, the BIA Pacific Regional Office certified the GOLDEN EAGLES as a fully qualified Interagency Hotshot Crew. The BIA, National Interagency Fire Center concurred with the certification that same month.

CREW SUPERVISION

SUPERINTENDENT:

JUAN "HUGE" MENDEZ (June 2008 to Present)
RAY RUIZ SR (June 2000 to 2008)

CAPTAINS:

JUAN "HUGE" MENDEZ (June 2000 to 2008)
RICK "MAD" MADRIGAL (June 2000 to present)
BYRON "EGGCHAN" ALCANTARA (2008-present)

SQUAD BOSSES:

REY CASTRO (June 2000 to present)
GEORGE VIOLANTE (June 2000 to present)
MARCO "MINI-ME" GARCIA (June 2000 to present)
JAMES "P" DENVER (June 2001 to present)
BRIAN "KIKI" LAUGHTER (June 2002 to present)
ROBERT SERRATO (June 2002 to present)
FRED "SAWBOSS" Saqbas (June 2003 to present)
JOSE "DSAW" DEZA (June 2004 to present)
CHARLES "KEP" KEPLINGER (January 2006 to present)
BYRON "EGGCHAN" ALCANTARA
STEVEN "SINK" KITCHEN

FUTURE:

The Sycuan Fire Department and the Golden Eagles Hotshots have many visions for the future development of our Southern California Indian reservations firefighting community, but our four main visions are:

1) To provide Native American, non-Native, and inter-city youths an opportunity to stay away from drugs, alcohol and gangs through positive leadership, education, and challenges — to impact positively on their lives and their communities.

2) Through discipline and ownership, the crew develops into strong, skilled, educated and well-groomed followers that will be able to compete and eventually lead tomorrow's fire-fighting organizations.

3) The Sycuan Fire Department, and the Sycuan Band of the Kumeyaay Nation continue to make substantial investments in "Training the Leaders of Tomorrow Today."  It is the vision of the Sycuan Fire Department and the Golden Eagles Hotshots that these future leaders return back to their nations and communities to assist, organize, train and develop their own firefighting organizations.

4) To become a National Training Crew for the Bureau of Indian Affairs, providing all of the advance training in wildland firefighting on a hotshot crew, type 3 engines and or the San Diego County Regional flycrew for the future development of squad and crew bosses within all nations.

FIRE CAMPAIGNS:

Major firefighting Campaigns Golden Eagles HANDCREW:

Manter Incident, Sequoia National Forest, July-August, 2000
Hyampom Incident, Shasta Trinity National Forest, September, 2001
MA, B, C, Misc.,San Bernardino National Forest, 2001
Mile Post 16 Incident, Hoopa Reservation, May 2002
Bullock Incident, Coronado National Forest, May 2002
Stanza Incident, Klammath National Forest, July-August, 2002

Major firefighting Campaigns Golden Eagles HOTSHOTS:

Cedar Fire, San Diego County, 2003.

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