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An inmate crew from San Diego prepares to
clear brush in Calistoga on Oct. 11, 2017. Photo by Ben Margot, AP Photo
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Dear CalMatters reader,
As the Los Angeles fires raged in January, about 1,000 inmate firefighters labored on hand crews alongside professional firefighters battling the blazes.
In payment for that dangerous work, participants in the California Conservation Camp program earned $5.80 to $10.24 a day, plus $1 an hour, and they'll get a chance to clear their record and seek work as a professional firefighter upon release.
But inmate firefighters say it's hard to advance from a prison crew to a civil service firefighting job, because their criminal records make it tough to obtain the necessary certifications.
State Sen. Eloise Goméz Reyes wants to make it easier. In January the San Bernardino Democrat introduced Senate Bill 245, which would require the Department of Justice to help incarcerated firefighters get their criminal records expunged and prevent their convictions from being used against them.
The bill expands on a 2020 law that Reyes authored which enables former prisoners who worked on fire crews to pursue careers in firefighting.
“This bill is specifically to remove the barriers to the expungement that the former inmates have been dealing with,” Reyes told CalMatters. “We want to ensure access to opportunities that are afforded to those who have put their lives on the line to protect Californians.”
Inmate firefighters have fought alongside local and state fire crews and other emergency responders since 1915. Today more than 1,800 live year round in minimum-security conservation camps, known as fire camps, in 25 California counties.
That experience can prepare them for jobs with agencies such as Cal Fire, where entry level firefighters earn a $4,296 to $5,432 base salary per month. But legal obstacles often get in the way.
“During the LA Fires, incarcerated fire crew members emerged as true heroes, bravely protecting homes and communities from destruction,” said Sam Lewis, executive director of the Anti-Recidivism Coalition, a sponsor of SB 245. “But upon reentry, many formerly incarcerated fire camp participants still have difficulty obtaining an expungement.”
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Former inmates on fire crews often lack legal support to clear their records, Reyes said.
“They also get stuck in the bureaucratic process for licensing and certification, even after they meet the eligibility,” Reyes said. “Our public defenders have said they’re ready and able to help with these expungements, but if our inmates aren’t aware that’s an option, connecting with the right agency becomes a problem.”
The bill would require the Department of Justice to contact people who are entitled to relief and initiate requests to expunge their criminal records. And it would ensure that convictions can’t be used against them when they seek emergency medical technician certification or other credentials needed to work in fire departments.
The bill would not open the door for violent offenders to serve as civilian firefighters; it excludes people convicted of rape, murder, kidnapping, arson and other serious felonies.
The measure also would track data on former inmates who gain expungements and pursue careers in firefighting, which Reyes said is currently missing for most California counties.
“Making sure we have the data to make sure the courts are doing what they need to do and people are getting the help they need is a big part of this bill,” said Reyes’ Chief of Staff Matthew Hamlett.
The bill passed the state Senate Public Safety Committee in a 5-1 vote, with Sen. Kelly Seyarto, a Murrieta Republican, voting no. The ACLU, the California Public Defenders’ Association and other justice organizations supported the proposal, and none were listed opposing it.
Robert Wynne served seven and a half years in prison and spent two and a half years at the Chuckwalla Valley State Prison Fire Department. He told the committee he’s now a captain at a Cal Fire training center and has worked for the agency since 2019, but the journey “has been everything but easy.”
“The process is daunting and time consuming for someone trying to rebuild their entire life from the ground,” he said. “I started the process and quickly found out that I had to commit a significant amount of time and navigate complex law procedures. I still do not have my record expunged.”
By expediting that process, the bill would allow him to compete for jobs with city and county fire departments, Wynne said, and it would elevate opportunities for those who complete their institution’s fire camp program.
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Yucaipa mom urges legislature to pass addiction treatment measures
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Christine Dougherty, right, testified about
addiction treatment in Sacramento on April 9, 2025. Photo by Fred Greaves for CalMatters
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Four years after her son died of a fentanyl overdose at age 23, Christine Matlock Dougherty, a Yucaipa mom and elementary school teacher, testified before the California Assembly Health Committee about a bill that might have saved his life, CalMatters reported.
Matt Haney, a Democratic state assembly member from San Francisco, has said Dougherty’s ’s account inspired him to author the measure. It would prevent health plans from prematurely pushing patients out of substance use treatment facilities.
“Four years later, I still miss him every day,” Dougherty said of her son, Ryan.
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Advertisement
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A pregnant San Bernardino woman died in jail. A judge rules deputies weren't at fault
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An aerial view of West Valley Detention
Center San Bernardino County jail in Rancho Cucamonga on Oct. 21, 2022.. Photo by Kirby Lee, Getty Images
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A federal judge ruled that two San Bernardino County sheriff’s deputies were not culpable in the death of a woman who suffocated at West Valley Detention Center in Rancho Cucamonga, the San Bernardino Sun reported.
In a ruling disclosed last week by the Sheriff’s Department, U.S. District Court Judge Jesus G. Bernal dismissed a wrongful death lawsuit filed by the father of 24-year-old Chino Hills resident Casandra Pastora.
Pastora, who had schizophrenia and was pregnant, was jailed after threatening her father during a psychotic episode in 2021. Her father, Saeed “Sam” Toghraie, later filed a wrongful death lawsuit. Bernal concluded that Pastora died by blocking her airway with her hand and that deputies followed correct procedures.
Riverside and San Bernardino Counties have disproportionate rates of jail deaths, CalMatters has reported.
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Farmworker justice center opens in Coachella
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Farmworkers working in a field in the
morning heat near Coachella on July 3, 2024. Photo by Mario Tama, Getty
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TODEC Legal Center opened a new program to help Coachella Valley farmworkers with legal, financial and immigration matters, the Desert Sun reported.
The nonprofit launched its farmworker justice center last week, describing it as a first in the Inland Empire. The organization hired eight staff members to run the program at its office in Coachella.
The center will offer support for unemployment benefits, food assistance, health care, labor rights, housing, immigration, naturalization, internet access, entrepreneurship training and other services.
Thanks for reading. While you are here, please sign up for the Inland Empire newsletter and let me know what kinds of stories you’d love to read.
And please add my email to your contacts: inlandempire@calmatters.org
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Deborah Sullivan Brennan
Inland Empire Reporter
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