Fire chief gets kudos for handling of mudslide
SEATTLE — Travis Hots looked like hell.
The 38-year-old stepped toward the cameras Tuesday night in muddy boots and a rumpled firefighter’s uniform, his jet-black hair matted down and eyes so bloodshot that a reporter later felt compelled to ask how he was feeling.
Hots opened the briefing with a statement obvious to everybody packed into the small city of Arlington administrative building: “We had a very challenging day today.”
After describing the conditions on the mudpile and the pace of rescue and recovery operations, he delivered the news: Workers believed they had located 10 more bodies in the muck.
There is no shortage of gruesome jobs in the aftermath of one of the deadliest disasters in state history. But Hots, the local fire chief leading the response to the massive mudslide, may have the most unenviable: Twice a day, he has faced the cameras to tell the community — his community — how many lives have been lost.
The chief has other duties, too — coordinating operations, supporting his firefighters, even pleading for donations for residents.
Although higher-ups have since arrived, local fire officials say it was Hots who last Saturday made decisions such as where to deploy the first search-and-rescue teams and when to pull back crews because of the instability of the ground.
Some of those calls have already been questioned, including by a state representative and the county council member representing the area.
As the initial incident commander, Hots is technically still in charge of an effort that has now swelled to more than 200 responders.
“You just can’t fathom what we’re up against out there until you get out there and see the lay of the land,” he said at a news conference. “You can’t look at a photograph and understand it. You can’t even fully understand what we’re up against out there and what has happened even if you watch on TV. It’s unreal.”
It is a demanding assignment for someone who only three months ago became chief of the rural fire district tapped to lead the response.
Arlington Rural Fire & Rescue, which serves 8,200 residents, has a $1 million budget and 30 volunteer firefighters. They respond to an average of one fire a month.
But Hots has some unusual assets: He is a fifth-generation Snohomish County resident and second-generation firefighter. His father served for 34 years. He volunteers as a helicopter-rescue pilot and has led a smaller nearby district for several years.
Hots declined to be interviewed, saying through a spokeswoman he wanted reporters to focus on the slide instead of him.He also asked his closest confidant, his father, not to comment.
Other family members, friends and colleagues described Hots as a soft-spoken and dedicated leader who inspires others in part by letting them see his emotions.
Merlin Halverson, chairman of the Snohomish County Fire Chiefs Association, said Hots is a vice chairman and well-respected member of the association, which lobbies in Olympia and works on issues common to all firefighters.
Halverson said Hots is doing a fine job.
“The thing that people don’t realize about those of us who are fire chiefs in these rural areas is that we live here. You’re talking about people that Chief Hots may know,” he said. “It’s a huge emotional burden. It’s a huge emotional burden when you don’t know the people, and when you do, it just adds to it.”
On Wednesday, the day after Hots seemed at his most exhausted, he did not appear before reporters. Snohomish County Executive John Lovick said the chief was taking a “very well-deserved day off.”
But at the next morning’s briefing, Hots revealed that despite being urged to go home, he hadn’t.
“I just couldn’t bring myself to do that,” he said. “So I spent the day yesterday up at the site. I wanted to be out there in the trenches with my people.”
That move did not surprise Hots’ grandfather. Roger Hots Sr., 82, said his grandson has always epitomized empathy and loyalty — and always wanted to be a firefighter.
The grandfather said the family emigrated from Germany and came to Snohomish County in the 1920s.
He said he was a store manager, but his brother-in-law served in the Everett Fire Department and inspired his son — Travis’ father — to pursue the profession.
Distributed by MCT Information Services