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Press Release 2

 

Commercial News

March 28, 2008

Firefighters sharpen skills

Lessons learned in drill put into action

BY BRIAN L. HUCHEL
 

DANVILLE — Firefighter drills this week focused on more than just saving the lives of fire victims.

With smoke filling the department’s training tower, Danville firefighters were prepped Tuesday on how to find and rescue one of their own who is trapped in a fire.

The training almost became a reality a day later when calls of “mayday” rang out from the scene of Wednesday’s large downtown fire.

No one was trapped, and the mayday came as a result of a quick flare-up in the fire, which drove firefighters outside.

But the mayday call is usually the first sign that the department’s Rapid Intervention Team should prepare to go in.

“Their job is risk management,” said Capt. Larry Jaggers, who was conducting the training this week. “If a mayday would happen to go out, it’s their job to go in and rescue that firefighter.”

Jaggers said the Danville Fire Department has used the team for almost a year and a half. Many area volunteer and paid departments are using the same setup.

A firefighter will resort to calling out mayday for a number of reasons, ranging from becoming disoriented, trapped or running low on air, Jaggers said.

It was a situation on the second floor of the downtown building that prompted the mayday. Firefighters, feeling the heat and encountering difficult situation, sent out the call to make sure they could get out.

Jaggers said the intervention team was ready to go in.

“You get into a fire of that magnitude, you don’t know what can happen,” he said.

During training this week, members of the intervention team were forced to check two floors of smoke-filled training tower in order to locate the stranded firefighter. The team listens for alarms the firefighters wear and uses a thermal imaging camera to search areas for the firefighter.

The team members training on Tuesday said they take the drills seriously.

“It’s always good to do this kind of training,” firefighter Billy Ryan said. “We’re ready for the real thing.”

Team members moved quickly through the tower on Tuesday, finding their stranded firefighter huddled in a corner on the third floor of the training structure. A breathing system was hooked up to the firefighter and he was led out.

With the number of new responsibilities the fire department now has, Jaggers said it’s important to remember the basics of their work.

“It’s out there now that we’ve got the haz mat tech teams, the techno rescue teams, but you know what? Where’s our basic firefighting skills?” Jaggers said. “We do all these extra things since 9/11, now we’ve got to go back and work on our basics as firefighters.

“You need to stay sharp as firefighters.”

Photos


Danville firefighters exit the top of the training tower at Fire Station No. 3. Their goal was to find a fellow firefighter in distress inside the smoke-filled building. Matt Huber/Commercial-News