Shasta County Board of Supervisors

Chairman Kevin W. Crye
1450 Court St # 308B
Redding, CA 96001
(530) 225-5550
Fax: (530) 225-5189

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Calfornia State Homepage

Redding Chamber of Commerce

Executive Director Jake Mangus
1321 Butte St STE 100,
Redding, CA 96001
(530) 225-4433

City of Redding
Shasta County

County Demographics
State Wide Emergency Resources
Updated 7/02/2024

I Primary Emergency Providers


Shasta County Sheriff Office

Sheriff Michael L. Johnson
300 Park Marina Cir
Redding, CA 96001
Phone: (530) 245-6000
Fax: (530) 245-6054

Shasta County Administration

Mangement Director Sheriff Michael L. Johnson
Lt Rob Sandbloom
Deputy Director: Deputy Chief Sean O'Hara, Cal Fire Shasta-Trinity Unit
1450 Court St Suite 308A
Redding, CA 96001
Phone: (530) 225-5561
Fax: (530) 229-8238

ShasCom 911 Dispatch

Lieutenant Chris Smyrnos SHASCOM Director
Shawana Curtiss PSAP
300 Park Marina Cir
Redding, CA 96001
Phone: (530) 245-6000

II Hospitals & Fire Departments


Mercy Medical Center Redding

2175 Rosaline Ave
Redding, CA 96001
(530) 225-6000

Shasta Regional Medical Center Redding

1100 Butte St
Redding, CA 96001
(530) 244-5400

Shasta County Fire Department

Chief Sean O'Hara
875 Cypress Ave
Redding, CA 96001
530-225-2418
Directory of All California Fire Departments
1. Directory Access 2023 Published By California State

2. Directory 1 Fire Departments and Directory 2 Fire DepartmentsIn Shasta County


Burney Fire Protection District

Interim Chief Robert May
37072 Main St,
Burney CA 96013
530) 335-2212


Falls River Mills Fire Department

Fire Administration
43155 CA-299,
Fall River Mills, CA 96028
Phone: (530) 336-5026

Anderson Fire Protection District

Patricia Clark – Chairperson of the Board
1925 Howard St
Anderson, CA 96007
Phone: (530) 378-6699
F: (530) 378-6697


Cottonwood Fire Protection Disrict

Bill Morgan Fire Chief
Gabe Shaw Batallion Chief
20875 4th St
Cottonwood, CA 96022
(530) 347-4737


Castella Fire Protection District

Board Member Scott King
29372 Main Street
Castella, CA 96017
(530) 235-0456
Fax Line: (530) 235-0456


Redding Fire Department

Jerrod Vanlandingham Fire Chief
Jay Sumerlin Deputy Fire Chief
Eric McMurtrey Deputy Fire Chief
777 W Cypress Ave
Redding, CA 96001
(530) 225-4141


Shasta Lakes Fire Protection District

Roger Moses Fire Chief
4126 Ashy Court
Lake Shasta, CA 96016
(530) 275-7474

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Radio References Com

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Bill, AI6D
530-246-2227

Mt Shast Amateur Radio Club

Club Contact
440.275+ (118.8) 146.880- (100), 28.400,
14.340, 7.275, and 3.940
329 North Washington Drive
Mount Shasta, CA 96067

III Social Service Providers In Shasta County


Amerian Red Cross

3609 Bechelli Ln I,
Redding, CA 96002
Phone: (530) 244-8000

United Way Of Northern California

Larry Olmstead President & CEO
2280 Benton Dr Bldg. B,
Redding, CA 96003
(530) 241-7521

Good News Rescue Mission

Jonathan Anderson – Executive Director
2842 S. Market Street
Redding, CA 96001
P. 530-242-5920
F. 530-242-5924

Shasta County Community Action

Mary Williams Deputy County Executive Officer
1450 Court Street, Suite 108
Redding, CA 96001-1661
(530) 225-5550

Shasta County Department of Health and Human Services

Laura Burch Director
2615 Breslauer Way
Redding, CA 96001
(530) 229-8400

Salvation Army Redding Corps

Commanding Officer
2691 Larkspur Ln
Redding, CA 96002

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Sage Stage Website
108 S Main Street
Alturas, CA 96101
(530) 233-6410

IV Shasta County City of Redding


Shasta County Board of Supervisors

1450 Court St # 308B
Redding, CA 96001
(530) 225-5550
Fax: (530) 225-5189

City of Redding

Michael Dacquisto
777 Cypress Avenue Third Floor
Redding, CA 96001
phone: (530) 225-4447
fax: (530) 225-4463

California State Association of Counties
President Chuck Washington
1100 K Street, Suite 101
Sacramento, CA 95814
(916) 327-7500
Smaller Cities In Santa Cruz County
1. City of Anderson

2. Shasta Lake

V Public Utilities & Vital Resources


PG&E, Pacific Gas and Electric

Press On Image State Power Grid
P.O. Box 997300
Sacramento, CA 95899-7300
24-hour Power Outage Information Center
1-800-743-5002

California Department of Education

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1430 N Street
Sacramento, CA 95814-5901
General: 916-319-0800

California Department of Health

Press On Image Directory Public Hospitals
PO Box 997377, MS 0500
Sacramento, CA 95899-7377
(916) 558-1784

California Department of Transportation

Press On Image Raillines
1120 N Street
Sacramento, CA 95814
General Information:
(916) 654-2852

California Highway Patrol

Commissioner Sean Duryee
601 N 7th St,
Sacramento, CA 95811
916) 843-3000

VI Radio and Television Stations & Airports


KOBI Channel 5 NBC

Robert Wise News
125 South Fir Street
Medford, OR 97501
541.779.5555

KCRC TV Channel 7

Email
755 Auditorium Drive
Redding, CA 96001

Action Now News

news@actionnewsnow.com
3460 Silverbell Rd.
Chico, CA 95973 USA
(530) 342-0141

KHRD
Red 103.1 FM Classic Rock
Beth Tappan, Market Manager
Phone 530-244-9700
Results Radio, LLC
1355 N. Dutton Ave Suite 225
Santa Rosa, CA 95401
Ph: 707-546-9185

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Radio Locator

Redding Municipal Airport
James WadleighAirport Manager
6751 Woodrum Circle #200
Redding, CA 96002
530-224-4321

Shasta Regional Transit Authority
Tiedgen, Sean Executive Director, AICP
1255 East Street, Suite 202
Redding, CA 96001
Phone: 530-262-6190
Fax: 530-262-6189

VI Shasta CascadeEarthquake Hazards

Mount Shasta Volcano
The record of eruptions over the last 10,000 years suggests that, on average, at least one eruption occurs every 800 to 600 years at Mt Shasta. Future eruptions like those of the last 10,000 years will probably produce deposits of ash, lava flows, domes, and pyroclastic flows, and could endanger infrastructure that lie within several tens of kilometers of the volcano.

Lava flows and pyroclastic flows may affect low areas within about 15-20 km (9 to 13 mi) of the summit of Mount Shasta or any satellite vent that might become active. Lahars could affect valley floors and other low areas as much as several tens of kilometers from Mount Shasta.Owing to great relief and steep slopes, a portion of the volcano could also fail catastrophically and generate a very large debris avalanche and lahar. Such events could affect any sector around the volcano and could reach more than 50 km (30 mi) from the summit. Explosive lateral blasts, like the May 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens, could also occur as a result of renewed eruptive activity, or they could be associated with a large debris avalanche; such events could affect broad sectors to a distance of more than 30 km (20 mi) from the volcano.

On the basis of its behavior in the past 10,000 years, Mount Shasta is not likely to erupt large volumes of pumiceous ash in the near future. The distribution of tephra and prevailing wind directions suggest that areas most likely to be affected by tephra are mainly east and within about 50 km (30 mi) of the summit of the volcano.It has been suggested that because it is a long-lived volcanic center and has erupted only relatively small volumes of magma for several thousand years, Mount Shasta is the most likely Cascade Range volcano to produce an explosive eruption of very large volume. Such an event could produce tephra deposits as extensive and as thick as the Mazama ash and pyroclastic flows that could reach more than 50 km (30 mi) from the vent. The annual probability for such a large event may be no greater than 10-5, but it is finite.
SHASTA CASCADE EARTHQUAKE HAZARDS
Lassen Volcanic National Park
All four types of volcanoes found in the entire world are represented in Lassen Volcanic National Park— shield (Prospect Peak), plug dome (Lassen Peak), Cinder Cone (Cinder Cone), and Composite (Brokeoff Volcano) volcanoes.In August of 1916, Lassen Volcanic National Park was established. The park and Lassen Peak take their name from Peter Lassen, one of the first white settlers in the northern Sacramento Valley, who discovered of a route through the mountains called the Lassen Trail.

To see these volcanic sites, Lassen Volcanic National Park offers both summer and winter weather activities. With over 150 miles of hiking trails, both day hiking and backpacking are popular summer activities. Winter conditions often begin as early as October and persist through June or July making snow play, snowshoeing, and backcountry skiing great options for cold months.

IX Maps of Shasta County


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City Redding Map

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Shasta County Map

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Shasta Clara County Map