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The purpose of the Fire Mechanics Section is to promote standardization of fire apparatus and equipment preventative maintenance, improve safety standards and practices, promote workshops, conferences, and seminars related to the purposes of this Section, and to promote cost savings through standardization of building and equipment purchasing and maintenance.

RECENT FIRE MECHANIC NEWS

Posted: Sep 27, 2016

Ambulance Collides with Road Divider in Middletown (NJ)

An ambulance ran head-on into a divider in the Leonardo section of the township on Sunday, injuring five people and crumbling parts of the cement road structure, police said.
The vehicle from Leonardo First Aid collided into the divider, located at Thompson Avenue and Route 36 around 2:10 p.m., said Detective Lt. Paul Bailey of the Middletown Township Police Department. Bailey said the ambulance was one of the involved vehicles but did not provide further details on other cars that might have been involved in the incident.

The five injured people were taken to Riverview Medical Center in Red Bank, Bailey said. The incident remains under investigation.

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Posted: Sep 27, 2016

Burlington (WI) Hope to Purchase New Training Facility

The Town of Burlington Fire Department and City of Burlington Fire Department are raising money to invest in a proposed emergency training facility for the west end of the county. A new training facility would allow the department to train in various fire scenarios, EMS situations, hazmat training, and specialized training such as high-angle rope scenarios.
Currently, the two departments rent spaces or train in buildings scheduled to be razed. The nearest training facility with some of what the Burlington departments are considering is located at the Kansasville fire station.

Though the blueprints for the facility have not been finalized, the hope is to get a three-story facility with a tower portion to use for training exercises.

The City of Burlington Fire Department’s two assistant chiefs, Erich Kurth and Eric Jones, are leading the project for the department.

Fundraising is another issue yet to be determined. The City of Burlington Volunteer Firefighters Association voted to allow the funds raised at a pancake breakfast hosted at the City of Burlington Fire Department Sunday to go toward the facility. The cost of the facility is not yet known.

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Posted: Sep 27, 2016

Boston FD Hosts Demo for Radiation Equipment

The Boston Fire Department's special operations unit held a demonstration event Tuesday at their Brighton warehouse, showing a group of area police and firefighters how to use the latest equipment in radiation detection, officials said.
First responders from several nearby communities -- like Chelsea, Everett, Somerville, and Brookline -- went to the demonstration and spoke with the equipment vendor, Thermo Fisher Scientific, Dennis Costin, the chief of the Boston fire department's special operations unit, said.

Representatives from Thermo Fisher Scientific were on hand to answer questions from the officials, Costin said.

The equipment addresses radiation detection, Costin said, and the event didn't include other technology that helps identify bombs or other dangerous items.

"The biggest concern with radiation is you can't see it, so if the bad guys" mix it with something like an ordinary explosive, Costin said, it augments the danger posed to citizens and is hard to detect without equipment.

The equipment featured at the event included items the Boston fire department already has, like "PRDs," or personal radiation detectors. The firefighters on Costin's special operations unit wear the detectors on their hips at all times. The devices let the firefighter know when there's noticeable radiation present.

"In any city, you're always going to get a certain amount of hits [of radiation]," Costin said. "So it's about learning what's natural, or what's already there, and what shouldn't be there."

There were also backpacks that the department uses to scan venues before large events.

Costin said the unit would use the backpacks a few days before an event like the Esplanade fireworks, so when a firefighter reports a hit in a certain location, Costin can tell him or her it's natural and was detected before the event started.

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Posted: Sep 27, 2016

Palm Coast (FL) Prepares to Buy Third Fire Apparatus in Two Years

The Palm Coast Fire Department is getting three new fire engines—two of them to be delivered in the next few weeks, and one, all but approved for purchase today, to be delivered next spring. The total cost: $774,034.
The Palm Coast City Council approved two of the three pumper trucks last spring, for $513,356. Palm Coast Fire Chief Mike Beadle was at the manufacturer's plant in South Dakota earlier this month for a week, inspecting the two new trucks, one of which has already made it to Ocala before it enters service at the main fire station (Station 25) on Belle Terre Parkway near Town Center. The other truck will enter service at the Palm Harbor fire station, and the third will be stationed at Indian Trails (Station 23). "We're very happy with the two trucks we just went up and saw," Beadle said, "We should have them in the station within three to four weeks."

The council knew last spring that it would be approving the purchase of a third truck about this time. It all but did so at a workshop this morning. It'll formalize the purchase at a meeting next week. The price is a bit steeper: $259,678. But it's well below the cost of custom-made trucks, which would have cost $424,000 to $472,000. The reason for the difference: The commercial trucks don't last as long as custom-made trucks. But for budgetary reason, they're what the city could buy and keep its fleet at a full complement of front-line trucks and back-up trucks, without going short on either for a period of years. (Buying used equipment was an option, but the city ruled it out, not wanting to inherit another department's potential mechanical problems.)

The cost is not expected to be an added burden on the city budget, which for years has included a fire-truck replacement fund that gets an allotted sum of money each year. The city has had such a fund since 2005, Palm Coast Finance Director Chris Quinn said, with $423,803 going into that fund in the coming fiscal year. The annual amount is calibrated to the city’s needs.

Beadle is intent on maintaining front-line and back-up engines, or "apparatus," at each of the city's five fire station. Front-line trucks operate on a day to day basis. Back-up trucks operate as replacement when front-line trucks need to be serviced, or as complements when front-line trucks are on calls and need additional back-up, with volunteers manning the back-up trucks. (See a more detailed outline of the city's fire fleet and history here, or below.)

When the city incorporated in 1999 it had no back-up trucks. It bought used fire trucks to fill that role. They actually lasted longer than expected. But today two of those trucks are "mechanically unfit," in the department's terms, with 29 and 39 years of service, a third has 31 years of service, and will be the third replacement.

Typically a front-line truck should last 20 years, with routine maintenance. But not in Palm Coast. "We have found out that our trucks last 12 to 15 years, and that's hard years, we ran over 8,000 calls this year," Beadle said. When they reach the 12 to 15 year mark, the department turns them into back-up units, with hopes that the truck will last an additional 10 years in that role.

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Fire Mechanics Section Board

Chair

Posted: Oct 21, 2015

Chair

Elliot Courage
North Whatcom Fire & Rescue
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Vice Chair

Posted: Oct 21, 2015

Vice Chair

Mike Smith 
Pierce County Fire District #5
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Secretary

Posted: Oct 21, 2015

Secretary

Greg Bach
South Snohomish County Fire & Rescue
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Director #1

Posted: Oct 21, 2015

Director #1

Doug Jones
South Kitsap Fire & Rescue
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Director #2

Posted: Oct 21, 2015

Director #2

Paul Spencer 
Fire Fleet Maintenance LLC
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Director #3

Posted: Oct 21, 2015

Director #3

Jim Morris
Mountain View Fire Department
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Director #4

Posted: Oct 21, 2015

Director #4

Arnie Kuchta

Clark County Fire District 6

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Director #6

Posted: Oct 21, 2015

Director #6

Brett Annear
Kitsap County Fire District 18
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Director #5

Posted: Oct 21, 2015

Director #5

Jay Jacks
Camano Island Fire & Rescue
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Legislative Representative

Posted: Oct 21, 2015

Legislative Representative

TBD
TBD
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Immediate Past Chair

Posted: Oct 20, 2015

Immediate Past Chair

Brian Fortner
Graham Fire & Rescue

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