Los Angeles County fire chief backs training for residents to stay behind and defend homes from wildfires

VIDEO: When wildfires threaten neighborhoods, the official directive is always the same: evacuate immediately. But now, fire officials in Los Angeles County are starting to break from that long-standing message, saying some residents may be able to stay back and fight to protect their homes amid a growing threat. “We’ve always told people that when the evacuation order comes, you must leave,” L.A. County Fire Chief Anthony Marrone told CBS News. “We’ve departed from that narrative. With the proper training, with the proper equipment, and with the proper home hardening and defensible space, you can stay behind and prevent your house from burning down.”

Marrone’s stance may signal a shift in how officials talk about wildfire response. After the flames ripped through the Pacific Palisades, clusters of homes still stood because residents stayed behind to save them. Some had professional equipment, while others used buckets. Cort Wagner evacuated his family and grabbed a garden hose. “If I hadn’t seen it with my own eyes, I would say I couldn’t have saved anything. But the truth is, you can save stuff. I mean, I saved multiple homes with garden hoses,” Wagner said.

CBS News’ Los Angeles-based correspondent Carter Evans was covering the Palisades Fire on Jan. 7, when it became clear that his family’s own home was under threat and firefighters were overwhelmed. Evans and his wife, Lauren, also a reporter, defended their home, drawing on decades of experience covering wildfires. The couple chased every ember with garden hoses for 14 hours and helped put out spot fires at nearby homes. For Marrone, these stories point to a hard reality: “There are not enough firefighters or fire engines to adequately defend every structure.”

CBS News

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