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California KOA Opens Up to Wildfire Victims

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Campgrounds often serve as evacuation centers for people fleeing fires and other natural disasters. But the 112-site Placerville, Calif.,  KOA recently went further than most, providing not only discounted rates for 200 evacuees who fled the Caldor Fire, but coordinating humanitarian assistance with other local businesses and nonprofit organizations, which provided evacuees with free meals, clothing and other assistance.

The evacuees started arriving at the Placerville KOA on Aug. 17 and spent close to a month at the campground while firefighters battled the Caldor Fire.

“Initially, we had evacuees in RVs and tents. Then, when the smoke started getting bad, we upgraded some of the tent campers into cabins,” campground co-owner John Simoneau said of the evacuees, who came primarily from Sierra Nevada foothill towns of Grizzly Flats, Pollock Pines and Camino.

“They were all evacuated because of the Caldor Fire. Some of them are still here,” Simoneau said.

This was the fifth time in the past decade that the Placerville KOA served as a temporary evacuation center.

“We canceled hundreds of reservations and refunded people’s money so that the evacuees could stay with us,” Simoneau said, adding that the park refunded reservations so they could offer evacuees the sites at discounted rates that were 20 percent below its mid-week rates.

“We did everything we could to help them. We worked with local restaurants and the food bank and other businesses. We set up a donation section in the campground where people could bring donated items. We had food and clothes and pallets of donated water and toiletries from members of the community. The evacuees got a free dinner almost every night.”

Simoneau said the El Dorado Community Foundation and the Old Town Grill in Placerville provided many meals along with other local chefs and organizations.

“Everybody (in the local business community) supported the evacuees. We just organized it all.”

Simoneau, who runs the campground with his son, Jay, and wife, Cindy, also provided evacuees with ice cream and homemade cookies to boost their spirits. “When we noticed the evacuees were going to be at the campground for the long haul, we began giving out free ice and scooped Gunthers ice cream to the evacuees,” Jay Simoneau said, adding, “My daughters, Abigail and Eva, also helped out by coming to the campground to bake all our evacuees cookies. They wanted to do something special for them.”

The evacuees also got to enjoy numerous movie nights, fun train rides, miniature golf, fishing and swimming.

The Simoneaus’ generosity proved to be a costly move, however. To make room for evacuees, they cancelled their previously booked reservations for Labor Day weekend, traditionally one of the busiest camping weekends of the year. By that time, however, many of the evacuees were able to return home, leaving them with a partially empty campground.

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