The Linton bushfire was a wildfire that burned through private land and state forest near the township of Linton, Victoria, Australia on 2 December 1998. Firefighters from the Victorian state government's Department of Natural Resources and Country Fire Authority were deployed to fight the fire. At approximately 8.45pm two firefighting appliances and their crews were entrapped and engulfed in fire following an unexpected wind change.
AccidentThe crew of one of those appliances, five men from Geelong, all volunteers from the Geelong West CFA Station were killed. The coronial inquest examining the fire and the deaths was one of the longest-running inquests in the history of the state. The Coroner held that the two fire authorities involved (Department of Natural Resources and Country Fire Authority) and the actions of two career firefighters contributed to the deaths. It was this inquest that led to changes in safety operating procedures in the SA Country Fire Service and Victorian Country Fire Authority, relating to the Dead Man Zone. FirefightersThe five Geelong West volunteer firefighters that died in the Linton fire were:
A memorial for the firefighters was placed in West Park, Geelong West and also one in Linton, Victoria. References
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