Camas-Washougal Fire Marshal Ron Schumacher called the recent Fourth of July weekend the quietest he’s seen in 15 years.
“We had a small — very small — grass fire in Camas, but other than that there were no injuries, no fires,” Schumacher said, adding fire officials also had few calls for illegal discharging of fireworks.
“We just appreciate what citizens did in both communities,” Schumacher added.
The quiet holiday came on the heels of a last-minute ban on the sale and discharge of fireworks in Camas and Washougal due to weather conditions — including a record-setting heat wave that sent temperatures soaring into triple digits during the last week of June — that increased the area’s fire risk.
During a normal year, Schumacher said local fire crews might respond to four or five fireworks-related calls in Camas, where city officials still allow large, aerial mortar-type fireworks on July 4 and News Year’s Eve, and field calls for the illegal discharging of fireworks in Washougal, where city leaders enacted a “safe and sane” fireworks policy a few years ago, banning everything but the most tame fireworks.
Washougal residents are starting to catch on to that city’s fireworks policy, Schumacher said, but it wasn’t an automatic adherence to the “safe and sane” rules.