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MANTECA FIRE ANSWERS A CALL EVERY 48 MINUTES
Calls rise 43% in 5 years; Manteca now second busiest fire agency in SJ County
apartment fire
The April 2018 fire that destroyed part of an apartment complex under construction at Van Ryn Avenue and Atherton Drive.

Manteca is now the second busiest fire agency in San Joaquin County.

The city’s fire department handled 10,852 calls in 2022.

That means every 48.4 minutes last year a City of Manteca fire engine was dispatched to an emergency.

While that is way behind the City of Stockton with a population of 320,000 people, it surpasses the South County Regional Fire Authority (SSJCFA) that serves the City of Tracy and surrounding areas.

The SSJCFA — with almost 50,000 more people it serves at 120,000 versus Manteca’s 85,000 and a significantly larger geographical coverage area — had 10,713 calls in 2022.

That information is part of the data covered in the 2022 annual City of Manteca Fire Department report released this month.

Other data shows:

*Manteca ‘s fire calls in the past five years have increased by 43 percent while the city’s population has risen by 17 percent.

*During the same time period between 2017 and 2022 minimum daily staffing levels have increased from 14 to 15 firefighters and the fifth fire station was added at Woodward Avenue and Atherton Drive.

*Medical emergencies — including most vehicle accidents —  accounted for almost 63 percent of all calls in 2022.

*Nearly 10 percent of the department’s calls can be attributed to situations involving the homeless population.

*The $17.3 million fire department budget reflects an annual cost of $181 for every man, woman, and child in Manteca.

*The voter approved Measure M half cent public safety sales tax approved by voters in 2008 funds 18 of the 48 front-line suppression personnel of the department. That reflects 37 percent of the staffing.

*Fire prevention investigated 304 cases of weed abatement issues in 2022. There was a 92 percent compliance rate on the first notice. There were 27 properties cited for lack of compliance with appropriate steps being taken.

*There were 76 nuisance complaints such as junk and debris that in some cases literally covered an entire backyard that the department handled.
*The age of the city’s front-line apparatus is reflected in the years they were built and put in service — 2007, 2008, 2015, 2021, and 2021.

*The reserve apparatus used when a frontline engine is down for repairs or maintenance or else additional units are needed in a major fire have been in service since 1997, 2003, and 2007.

Manteca, with 18,000 more residents and 3,022 more calls than the City of Lodi has the same number of manned frontline apparatus — four engine companies and a truck (aerial ladder) company although they operate out of four stations as opposed to Manteca’s five.

Tracy (SSJCFA) runs seven engines and one truck out of seven stations.

 

To contact Dennis Wyatt, email, dwyatt@mantecabulletin.com