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The objectives of this Division shall be to further enhance the education of all Fire Service Administrative Support by conducting workshops and seminars; to increase the proficiency of Fire Administrative Support by establishing a network sharing of information systems through various channels of communication; and to faciliate a statewide standardization wherever possible in all phases and aspects of the Fire Administrative Support field for the benefit of the Fire Service.

Recent Fire Administrative Support News

Posted: Mar 24, 2023
Categories: Fire Mechanics
Comments: 0

Anyone who has ever spec’d out a new apparatus knows there is more to spec’ing than just writing the specs and selecting a manufacturer. Assembling the apparatus purchasing committee and managing the myriad personalities that will exist can be as challenging as getting the specs ready. And, that’s long before a fire company has to approach it’s town council about funding the rig.

In this episode of Talking Trucks & Equipment, Editor in Chief Chris Mc Loone talks to Chief Michael Greco, Hasbrouck Heights (NJ) Fire Department about his department’s new rig (currently being spec’d), how to navigate justifying the expense of a new rig to civilians, the nuances of choosing his truck committee, and about some of the unique response considerations that went into the design of the new rescue-pumper. Mc Loone and Greco sum up the interview talking about Chief Greco’s bigger than life father, Tony Greco.


Archived Episodes

Chris Mc Loone talks fire trucks with Mark Aronberg, assistant fire commissioner, Bureau of Fleet Services with the FDNY.

Chris Mc Loone and Ricky Riley talk about low hosebeds, fleet maintenance, and recent rigs and why they were impressive.

Chris Mc Loone talks to Bob Mitchell, owner-princpal of Mitchell Associates Architects, about where to start if you’re getting ready to design and build a new station.


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Posted: Mar 24, 2023
Categories: Fire Mechanics
Comments: 0

Fire Station 10 needed for ‘vertical neighborhoods’ downtown

PRESS RELEASE

Construction of Bellevue’s first new fire station in 29 years will begin later this month or in early April. The community is invited to a groundbreaking celebration at the construction site, Northeast 12th Street and 112th Avenue Northeast, on Wednesday, March 22, at 3:30 p.m. 

Fire Station 10 will make it easier for firefighters to respond quickly to fires and medical emergencies in Bellevue’s “vertical neighborhoods” downtown and in BelRed. 

Bellevue (WA) to Buy First Electric Fire Engine with Help from $649K Grant

The Bellevue Fire Department is rated among the top 1% of fire departments in the U.S., but high-rise apartment and condominium complexes downtown and going up in BelRed make it harder for firefighters to continue to respond to calls within the department’s target of four minutes, from time of call to the arrival of the first unit. Traffic congestion, other incidents and the additional time required to move staff and equipment up 60+ stories can slow response. 

Currently, Northtowne, Wilburton and West Bellevue (including downtown) are served by fire stations in Clyde Hill, West Bellevue and BelRed. 

Cornerstone General Contractor will build Fire Station 10 on the 1200 block of 112th Avenue Northeast, just north of McCormick Park. The $32 million building will be a two-story, approximately 20,000-foot building with three drive-through bays for fire engines and other apparatus.

The project meets numerous firefighter health and wellness requirements, and has eco-friendly features including solar and groundwater heating and cooling. A wetland on the property will be restored, and many trees on the site will be preserved during construction. New trees will be planted to help screen the station from houses in the surrounding neighborhood.

Construction of Fire Station 10 has been delayed due to the pandemic and other reasons. The station is expected to be completed by the spring of 2025.

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Posted: Mar 24, 2023
Categories: Fire Mechanics
Comments: 0

Rick McCrabb
Journal-News, Hamilton, Ohio
(TNS)

Mar. 23—MIDDLETOWN — The cost of building and furnishing four fire stations in Middletown is burning out of control.

Originally thought to cost $16.9 million, the cost to construct fire stations has increased to $19.8 million in January and now the total cost, including “soft costs,” is estimated at $26.6 million, according to firms that made presentations Tuesday night during the City Council meeting.

The increases are being blamed due to inflation and cost of building materials, according to projections from App Architecture, the Englewood firm hired to perform the designs.

In May 2022, voters overwhelmingly approved a 1-mill property tax levy to fund the building of the fire stations. At the time, the levy was expected to generate enough revenue to replace the city’s aging fire stations and headquarters.

The city was always going to pay for furnishing the fire stations.

In the last 12 to 18 months, the cost of goods has continued to rise and the inflation is impacting the cost of the fire stations that are expected to last 50 to 60 years.

City Council agreed to spend about $5 million out of its capital reserve budget at its January work session, but it’s unclear how the city will fund the additional $5 million to construct and equip the four stations.

These estimates include construction costs ($23.4 million), construction contingencies ($617,000) and “soft costs” ($2.6 million), according to the presenters.

City Manager Paul Lolli said once the city has received “more concrete, exact numbers” on total construction costs, City Council will hold a work session to discuss possible solutions.

“We will make this work,” said Lolli, the city’s former fire chief.

He promised residents the city would make “good, informed decisions.”

City leaders, including Fire Chief Tom Snively, said they’re considering ways to offset the funding gap. Snively said the department has applied for a Staffing for Adequate Fire and Emergency Response (SAFER) grant, but those funds are only eligible for personnel.

The Middletown Division of Fire, which is responding to more calls for service with fewer firefighters, hopes to receive a to fund the hiring of eight firefighters and one lieutenant.

Council member Rodney Muterspaw, the city’s former police chief, said he wanted to assure residents who supported the fire levy that “extravagant” fire stations aren’t being built.

Mayor Nicole Condrey said it makes her “sick to my stomach” when she thinks about the rising costs of everything, not just the fire stations, at a time when employees are receiving small percentage raises.

Tim Bement from App Architecture said his firm also is working on building four stations in Springfield. Like Middletown, that city is dealing with rising construction costs, he said.

Handling construction costs is “a real challenge,” he said.

In January, City Council approved an agreement with Pepper Construction Co. of Ohio to serve as construction manager at-risk. The company will be paid no more than $2,984,000 out of the fire levy fund, according to the staff report.

——

ESTIMATED COSTS OF MIDDLETOWN’S FOUR FIRE STATIONS — New fire headquarters location replacing the 1.38-acre site on Roosevelt Boulevard: A 3.6-acre site at Yankee Road and Cherry Street owned by the city as acquired from the Middletown City Schools and former site of Garfield school. Size: 24,300 square feet. Total cost: $10.5 million. — Station No. 81 loc

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Posted: Mar 24, 2023
Categories: Fire Mechanics
Comments: 0

Apparatus Ideas

The Medford (NY) Volunteer Fire Department, located in Suffolk County, is like most fire departments on Long Island.

Its response district is made up of numerous strip shopping centers, a few big box stores, lots of schools, light industrial complexes, condos, apartments, and single-family dwellings. It covers 10.8 square miles with a population of approximately 25,000.

To cover the needs of the community, the department responds out of three strategically located stations.

“The department decided to go with a second ladder truck, a quint, to catch up with other departments in the area,” says First Assistant Chief Kevin Hoffman. “ We felt that ordering a quint gave us the best of both worlds. This ladder responds out of a centrally located headquarters station and can operate as an engine if needed since it will respond first due on all structural fires and miscellaneous alarms, especially during daytime hours.” Hoffman adds his department, like most others, is experiencing reduced staffing, and he’s hoping the new quint will help relieve that dilemma.

Medford started planning for the new apparatus before the COVID-19 pandemic, and the specifications were drafted in January 2021 with bids following, according to Hoffman.

“Spartan met all of our specs and we decided to go with them again for this build,” he says. “We had dealt with Spartan and its local dealer, Hendrickson Fire Rescue Equipment, with several past apparatus purchases, so we were familiar with their operations.” He adds it was the sixth Spartan/Smeal purchase the department has made.

In July 2021, Hoffman and the district mechanic traveled to Spartan’s plant in Michigan for the cab and chassis inspection and traveled to the Smeal plant in Snyder, NE, for a midway inspection in December 2021 followed by a final inspection in April 2022, Hoffman says. “We were really impressed with both plants and the overall outcome of the vehicle,” Hoffman says.

 

1 The Spartan/Smeal 105-foot quint with a 2,000-gpm pump and 500-gallon tank. (Photos by author.)

 

 

2 The officer’s side compartments with saws, extrication tools, and fans.

 

Posted: Mar 24, 2023
Categories: Fire Mechanics
Comments: 0

Pierce—New Athens (IL) Fire Protection District pumper. Enforcer cab and chassis; Cummins L9 450-hp engine; Hale Qmax 1,500-gpm pump; UPF Poly 1,000-gallon water tank; 20-gallon foam cell; Hale 2.1A single-agent foam system; Harrison 6-kW generator. Dealer: Larry Graves, MacQueen Emergency, Aurora, IL. (Photo by author)


PREVIOUS PHOTO OF THE DAY >>

MORE FIRE APPARATUS ARTICLES >>

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Posted: Mar 24, 2023
Categories: Fire Mechanics
Comments: 0

On Thursday, a Fairfax County Fire and Rescue truck was involved in a collision with three other vehicles that sent eight people to the hospital, fox5dc.com reported.

Fairfax County police believe one of those victims has life-threatening injuries, while the other seven wounded are expected to live, the report said. Fairfax County police on Twitter said later, “The critical patient’s condition at the hospital has improved and is no longer life threatening.”

Car parts could be seen on the roadway late into the evening after the crash. Around 5:19 p.m., the Fairfax County Police Department said its officers were called to the intersection of Richmond Highway and Memorial Street in Groveton for the report of a crash involving a fire truck and three vehicles, according to the report.

FCPD’s Crash Reconstruction Unit detectives are looking into the incident and closed off Richmond Highway at Memorial Street while they investigate, the report said. 

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Posted: Mar 24, 2023
Categories: Fire Mechanics
Comments: 0

Mar. 23—Hoses, helmets and vintage pumper trucks dating from as early as the 1800s bear witness to the legacy of volunteer firefighting in Greensburg.

The equipment can be seen in the Greensburg Volunteer Fire Department Museum, behind City Hall on South Main Street.

Select items from that collection will temporarily have a new home at the Westmoreland Historical Society Education Center at Historic Hanna’s Town in Hempfield. The firefighting artifacts are being loaned as part of the celebration of Westmoreland County’s 250th anniversary.

The Greensburg museum is providing an 1875 hand-drawn hose cart for inclusion in the historical society’s exhibit, “Westmoreland 250! Celebrating our Story with 25 Objects,” slated for April 14 through the end of the year.

“It will be in the ‘service and sacrifice’ section, to honor volunteer fire departments throughout the county,” said Lisa Hays, executive director of the historical society. The local Adam Eidemiller company provided transportation of the cart in a box truck Wednesday.

The hose cart originally was deployed in an industrial setting and was donated to the museum by fire equipment collector Dave Shafran, a Cook Township resident and former Unity firefighter.

The Greensburg museum also is sending the historical society a leather helmet worn by a West Newton firefighter in the late 19th century and, from the same period, a megaphonelike bugle.

“It was used at the fire scene by whoever was in command,” said Michael Hartung, the museum curator. “If there was a lot of noise, his voice could get amplified.”

The museum has two early pumper trucks dating from the mid-1800s, but Hartung said lighter hand-drawn hose carts took advantage of an innovation that occurred later in the century: installation of the first municipal water lines in Greensburg.

“The hand carts were more easily pulled,” he said. “You could hit the hydrants as opposed to bringing in a pumper.”

The museum features two restored 20th century pumper trucks: a 1932 Mack truck and a 1949 Seagrave model. There also are displays of firefighter and fire department band uniforms through the years.

More than 1,100 model emergency vehicles were donated by North Belle Vernon firefighter Charles Horan and his wife.

The Greensburg Fire Department dive team was among emergency units that assisted at the scene of the 2002 Quecreek Mine rescue in Somerset County, and the museum has retained a camera that was used in dropping a cage down a shaft to reach the nine miners trapped underground, according to Hartung.

“They used that camera to determine the stability of the shaft,” he said.

Jeff Himler is a Tribune-Review staff writer. You can contact Jeff by email at jhimler@triblive.com or via Twitter .

___

(c)2023 Tribune-Review (Greensburg, Pa.)

Visit Tribune-Review (Greensburg, Pa.) at www.triblive.com

Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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Posted: Mar 24, 2023
Categories: Fire Mechanics
Comments: 0

The relocation and rebuilding of Wheeling Fire Station 42 was officially approved and fully funded by trustees with a maximum price tag of $7,699,244, journal-topics.com reported.

At their Monday, March 20 meeting, Wheeling trustees unanimously approved construction for Fire Station 42 to be rebuilt at 135 McHenry Road.

A village official said the $7.7 million is the worst case scenario, the report said. The project was introduced with a budget goal of $5 million, but flood detention fix costs exceeded the $5 million, prompting a higher than expected cost, according to the report. 

This is not a new fire station, but rather new construction of a relocated fire station, the village official said. 

According to the village, construction on the 10,700 square-foot building is hoping to break ground this spring and take a year to complete.

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Posted: Mar 24, 2023
Categories: Fire Mechanics
Comments: 0

Fire crews at Fire Station 14 will see $84,000 worth of upgrades to their facility very soon, kristv.com reported. Recently, the City of Corpus Christi approved a renovation project to the fire station facility.

Firefighters have been in the building off South Staples for more than 45 years, the report said.

The kitchen has already been renovated, according to the report. Other changes include replacing ceiling tiles, additions to the bathroom, new LED lighting fixtures, and flooring.

City council approved an $84,772 budget for the project. Many of them are hoping this will make the fire station more comfortable.

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Posted: Mar 23, 2023
Categories: Fire Mechanics
Comments: 0

Market pressures have driven up the price of a new fire truck for Nanaimo Fire Rescue, nanaimobulletin.com reported.

The new apparatus, a Pierce fire truck being ordered for Fire Station 2, is the same basic vehicle as other Pierce trucks already in service with the fire department, but the cost of this vehicle has jumped to nearly $1.6 million from the previously budgeted $1.2 million, the report said.

A Nanaimo fire official said, in his report to the city’s finance and audit committee March 15, that market pressures are skewing prices. Factors he cited include supply chain issues, new emissions standards and global industrialization that has triggered a boom in demand for fire trucks internationally, according to the report.

Of the total $341,000 extra cost for the new fire truck, $141,000 will be needed in 2023 to cover the deposit required to place the order for the vehicle and the remaining $200,000 will be needed in 2024 before the vehicle is delivered in January 2025, the report said. The extra costs will be drawn from the strategic infrastructure reserve fund.

The fire official mentioned that two other trucks already on order, also to be delivered in January 2025, are within their original budgets, the report said.

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FIRE ADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT SECTION UPCOMING EVENTS

Upcoming Events

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FIRE ADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT BOARD & COMMITTEES

Chair

Posted: Sep 19, 2020

Chair

Caity Karapostoles

Clallam County Fire District 3

caityk@ccfd3.org

360-683-4242


Term: 2019 - 2021

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Past Chair

Posted: Sep 21, 2019

Past Chair

Mykel Montgomery

Franklin County 3
Administrative Assistant

mmontgomery@fcfd3.org

509-547-9306 

 

Term; 2019 - 2020

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Secretary

Posted: Sep 21, 2015

Secretary

VACANT

 

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Treasurer

Posted: Sep 21, 2015

Treasurer

Emily Lewis

Eastside Fire & Rescue

elewis@esf-r.org

Office (425) 313 – 3278

Work Cell (425) 439 – 4000


Term: 2019 - 2021

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Communications

Posted: Sep 21, 2015

Communications

Lisette Kelly

Mountain View Fire & Rescue
Administrative Assistant

253-735-0284 


Term: 2019 - 2021

 

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Regional Representative

Posted: Sep 21, 2015

Regional Representative

Cathy Blakeway

City of Tumwater Fire Department
Administrative Assistant

cblakeway@ci.tumwater.wa.us

360-754-4170

 

Term: 2019 - 2021

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Regional Representative

Posted: Sep 21, 2015

Regional Representative

Kristen Cole

Walla Walla County Fire District 5

kcole@wwcfd5.org 

509-547-8341


Term: 2018 - 2020

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Regional Representative

Posted: Sep 21, 2015

Regional Representative

Julie Patterson

Vancouver Fire Department

 julie.patterson@cityofvancouver.us

360-487-7224


Term: 2019 - 2021

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Regional Representative

Posted: Sep 21, 2015

Regional Representative

Kim Baldwin

Clark County Fire District 10

kim.baldwin@clark.wa.gov

360-247-5233


Term: 2019 - 2021


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Committee Member

Posted: Sep 21, 2015

Committee Member

Katie Rassmussen

Washington State Fire Training Academy

Division Public Information Officer & Event Coordinator 2

Katie.Rasmussen@wsp.wa.gov

425-453-3000 x 110 


 

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Committee Member

Posted: Sep 21, 2015

Committee Member

Lori Coleman

Clallam County Fire District 3

lcoleman@ccfd3.org

360-582-2054

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Regional Representative

Posted: Sep 21, 2015

Regional Representative

Slita Bradley

Benton County Fire District 4
District Secretary

SBradley@bcfd4.org

509-967-2945

 

Term; 2020 - 2021

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Committee Member

Posted: Sep 19, 2015

Committee Member

Melissa Knutson

Eastside Fire & Rescue

mknutson@esf-r.org

425-313-3232

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Committee Member

Posted: Sep 18, 2015

Committee Member

Tina Williamson

Puget Sound Regional Fire Authority

tmwilliamson@pugetsoundfire.org

253-856-4406


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Committee Member

Posted: Sep 17, 2015

Committee Member

Linda Reeff

Puget Sound Regional Fire Authority

lreeff@pugetsoundfire.org

253-856-4334 
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