Mountain Democrat, Wednesday, August 3, 2022

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Volume 171 • Issue 90 | $1.00

Wednesday, August 3, 2022

There’s a new chief in town Jana Rossi Staff writer The Cameron Park Fire Department recently welcomed a new fire chief, Dustin “Dusty” Martin. He replaces Chief Sherry Morantz who left at the end of May. Chief Martin is no stranger to Cameron Park or El Dorado County, having worked for the Cal Fire Amador-El Dorado Unit in 2006 and becoming a fire captain at Cal Fire’s El Dorado Station 43 in 2010. The “ever-changing environment” is what drew Martin to a career in firefighting, he shared with the Mountain Democrat. Originally from Vacaville, he joined the Shasta Range Unit as a firefighter intern at Burney Station in 1999. His most recent assignment was at the McClellan Air Tanker Base, where he had worked on and off since the inception of the program in 2008; he took a permanent position there in 2018. Martin said he enjoys “the variety of the job, the critical thinking, solving and mitigating emergencies” but most important to the new fire

Courtesy photo

See chief, page A3

The Cameron Park Fire Department welcomes Dustin Martin as the new fire chief.

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Photo courtesy of the EDH Fire Department

Fire crews pour water on the property surrounding a fully engulfed home on Ryan Ranch Road.

Latrobe home destroyed Noel Stack Managing editor

A very early morning fire destroyed a home and scorched vegetation on Ryan Ranch Road in Latrobe Monday. Crews from the El Dorado Hills Fire Department, Cal Fire and the Rescue Fire Protection District responded to the 1:30 a.m. structure fire that spread into nearby vegetation. “Firefighters arrived on scene to find a fully involved, two-story residential structure (and the flames) had spread to over an acre of grass and brush,” EDH Fire Deputy Chief Mike Lilienthal shared. “The fire was spreading and threatening adjacent homes. Firefighters successfully stopped the fire before it damaged any additional homes.” The cause of the blaze is under investigation. Damages are estimated at $1,000,000 to property and contents. No injuries were reported.

Mountain Democrat photo by Eric Jaramishian

Upper Room Dining Hall staff and volunteers prepare dinner to feed their guests July 11. The nonprofit organization approved its five-year strategic plan to expand infrastructure and services.

Aiming to serve more Upper Room leadership lays out 5-year vision Eric Jaramishian Staff writer The Upper Room Dining Hall is looking PLACE ADDRESS LABEL HERE

to expand its dining hall and kitchen services and add a traveling food truck and shuttle service as part of its five-year strategic plan. The nonprofit served around 76,000 meals in 2021 and is expected to eclipse that number this year. An increase in homelessness in the county and the Caldor Fire forcing evacuations that left many residents with nowhere to go prompted Upper Room to increase services to the community. COVID-19 doubled Upper Room’s volumes, according to Executive Director Ron Marlette. Data from the U.S. Census Bureau shows

that in July 2021, 8.4% of the 193,221 El Dorado County residents were recorded living below the poverty line. “We realized we need to provide more food to those on the very edge of homelessness, those that can’t come to us here,” Marlette said. “We’ve talked about having an avenue, a food truck or something, that goes out to some of these areas and provides food because the need is definitely great. “Our whole idea with that is we want people to pay their rent. If they can’t eat, we want to help them there.” The Upper Room, located on upper Broadway where a

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bulk of the unsheltered population resides, is the only local resource that provides case management for the California COVID-19 rent relief program. In addition, the nonprofit also provides a “pop up” program, heavily utilized during the Caldor Fire evacuations, offering navigation services for county and state programs, free laundry ammenities and personal care services, including showers coordinated with Housing El Dorado. The food truck would operate in impoverished areas of the county. The n

See upper room, page A3

Courtesy photo

A firefighter keeps a lookout for hotspots on the Grace Fire that scorched 7 acres in the Pilot Hill area July 31.

7-acres burn in north county Eric Jaramishian Staff writer Fire crews surrounded an approximately 7-acre vegetation fire in the Pilot Hill area off Rattlesnake Bar Road Sunday. A vehicle fire caused the blaze, according to Cal Fire Public Information Officer Marjorie Minor. The fire broke out at about 4:40 p.m. between Alpha Circle and Graceland Place with flames threatening Graceland Place homes upslope, reported fire officials. Air and ground crews were able to halt the fire’s progress before any homes were lost. The Cal Fire Amador-El Dorado Unit, El Dorado County Fire Protection District, Rescue Fire Department, Garden Valley Fire Protection District, Georgetown Fire Department, El Dorado County Sheriff ’s Office, U.S. Forest Service and State Parks responded to the incident, which was dubbed the Grace Fire.

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