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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: Mar 7, 2016

Rapid City (SD) Gets New Fire Equipment

New equipment will help make it less treacherous for Rapid City firefighters. The Rapid City Fire Department got 56 new self-contained breathing units last week.

These protect firefighters in life threatening smoky environments. Key new features in the $350,000 upgrade are better design for comfort and an important "buddy breathing" system that quickly allows firefighters to share their air supply if someone's pack gets damaged. The new units also have an important communication feature.


"With our new microphones we can hear each other a lot better in the field we've got an amplifier system built into the air module on the face piece so it just automatically amplifies what you're saying," Says Oliver White of the Rapid City Fire Department.
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Posted: Mar 7, 2016

Weslaco (TX) Fire Chief Upgrades Fleet with New Ambulances

Fire Chief Antonio Lopez anticipates local emergency medical services increasing in efficiency thanks to the purchase of two new ambulances.
The Weslaco Fire Department on Thursday received 2016 Ford F-450 twin units equipped with 174-inch module boxes and mobile intensive care unit capabilities, including an on-board wireless router allowing EMS technicians to send critical information to the hospital where patients will be transported -- all while being treated on scene.


"They will get to the scene, get off the ambulance and actually walk into a residence with a heart monitor, start treatment in the house and transmit a telemetry reading. That's sent to the hospital where they'll be taking the patient," Lopez said Monday, using a hypothetical call as a for instance. 

"Before they would do that in the ambulance, but with this router we'll have a 300 feet bubble that'll allow them to send information from greater distances. That'll shave two or three minutes off the treatment plan."

The $340,000 lease purchase was made through the WFD's Apparatus Replacement Program, which dedicates 25 percent of the city's annual in-house EMS revenue -- about $1.6 million during the last fiscal year -- toward replacing department equipment.

Also purchased through the program was a new $525,000 fire truck, a 2016 Ferrara rescue pumper customized for WFD needs, including a 1,700 gallon-per-minute pump capable of carrying up to 1,000 gallons of water. The department's fire engines, with the exception of one, are currently equipped for 500 gallons, Lopez said.

"This is state of the art," the chief further noted about the new fire truck, which is due to arrive sometime in October.

Through the program, the city is leasing the ambulances for $68,000 a year over five years, and the fire truck at $52,000 for over 10 years.

At $170,000 apiece, Lopez said the new ambulances are among the first purchases made through the program and credited city leaders for their support in launching it.

The department averages about 8,500 calls per year with more than 6,000 coming in as requests for ambulance services. Each firefighter in Weslaco is cross-trained as a paramedic in order to maintain the department's dual function as an in-house EMS operation.

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Posted: Mar 7, 2016

Putnam County (TN) Fire Department Honors 30-Year Employee

Being with the same department for 30 years is quite an accomplishment, especially when that department existed solely on a volunteer basis for a number of years. "This is a true brotherhood," Jim Knight, who retired in December from the Putnam County Fire Department, said about being a part of that team.

Technology has also changed the way firemen attack fires, including the apparel firemen wear when going into a burning structure.


"I really enjoyed the accomplishments of getting in, putting the fire out and saving what I could," he said.

"It's certainly a team effort. You have to trust each other and feel comfortable to go into a fire with these guys."

During his retirement reception, a number of fellow firemen sang his praises, saying he raised the bar for future firefighters, which brought tears to Knight's eyes.

"I'm going to miss you all," he said. "But I'll still be around at least another year."

He felt like it was time to find something else.

"I'm not as young as I used to be," he said. "This is God-driven. He's given me that step to retire."

He also works with Putnam County Emergency Medical Services, which he'll be staying with over the next year before moving to Ohio. His wife is in the process of moving up there.

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Posted: Mar 7, 2016

Eagle Fire Co. (IN) Fire Apparatus has Arrived

The $268,000 truck is "100 percent paid for," says the chief. The purchase was made possible thanks to donations from the community.
After nearly five years of fundraising efforts, Eagle Fire Co., Oldenburg, members raised enough money to purchase a new tanker.

The 2015 Rosenbauer model is a 2,000-gallon tanker pumper with a three-man cab and 1,250-gpm (gallons per minute) pump. It was manufactured in South Dakota, report Chief Kevin Froehling, Assistant Chief Tom Nobbe and Secretary Willie Ronnebaum.

It will join the department’s fleet of vehicles, which include a 2004 engine, 1999 tanker, 1996 rescue truck, 2005 and 1973 brush trucks and early 2000’s Ford Explorer first responder vehicle.


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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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