No question: volunteer firefighters a dying breed

National Volunteer Fire Council — An Open Letter From NVFC Chairman Philip C. Stittleburg Regarding The State of The Volunteer Fire Service

An Open Letter From NVFC Chairman Philip C. Stittleburg Regarding The State of The Volunteer Fire Service

Newsday, a New York City-based newspaper, recently ran a series of articles that portray the volunteer fire service on Long Island in a negative light. The articles claim that volunteer departments there have an overabundance of resources and spend taxpayer dollars frivolously. The Firemen’s Association of the State of New York (FASNY) is responding vigorously to these charges. The National Volunteer Fire Council (NVFC) has been in contact with FASNY and will continue to monitor this situation.

In light of the recent articles, the NVFC would like to clarify that the description of the volunteer fire service in Newsday does not reflect the state of the volunteer fire service nationally. According to a study conducted by the Public Safety and Environmental Protection Institute at St. Joseph’s University, it would cost American taxpayers $37.2 billion more annually if all volunteer firefighters nationwide were replaced with career staffing. Most of this cost savings comes in smaller, rural communities that don’t have a large enough tax base to support a career department.

The reality is that very few volunteer fire departments receive adequate funding from government sources. According to A Needs Assessment of the U.S. Fire Service, a 2002 study by the US Fire Administration and the National Fire Protection Association, a majority of mostly- and all-volunteer fire departments have to raise private funds beyond what they are provided in tax dollars in order to function. Between 10 and 20 percent of the revenue for mostly- and all-volunteer departments comes from fundraising. In addition, fire departments serving smaller communities, which tend to be mostly- or all-volunteer, are overwhelmingly less likely to have the costs of apparatus replacement covered by their normal budget.
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Bad news in threes

LancasterFire.com & WithTheCommand.com InfoBoard : Accident 11-28-05 Providence Twp.
Lititz man thrown from vehicle in crash, killed

Accident occurs at railroad tunnels on Route 272 in Providence Township.
By JOHN M. HOOBER III, New Era Staff Writer

A Lititz man died Monday night when his sport utility vehicle crashed along Route 272 at the Smithville railroad tunnels in Providence Township, Lancaster state police said.

Howard Anthony Tshudy, 27, of 8 Silver Creek Road, Lititz, was thrown from his 1995 Jeep Grand Cherokee and became pinned underneath the vehicle, Trooper Joseph Harper said.

The accident happened at 8:10 p.m. along the southbound lanes of the divided highway, just south of Penny Road.

Heading south, Tshudy lost control as he rounded a left curve at the approach to the tunnels, Harper said.

The Jeep drifted onto the west berm, came back onto the highway and traveled across both southbound lanes before striking a guide rail along the east side of the highway, Harper said.

After striking the rail, the Jeep rotated counterclockwise, rolled over, but came back onto its wheels and ended in an upright position, Harper said.

Tshudy, who was not wearing a seat belt, was thrown when the vehicle rolled over. He suffered massive head injuries, said Lancaster County Deputy Coroner Janice Ballenger, who pronounced him dead at the scene at 10 p.m.

Tshudy was alone in the vehicle. Willow Street firefighters and ambulance crew members responded along with a state police accident-reconstruction team.

Tshudy was he son of Craig and Mary Ann Tshudy. He was single and lived at the family’s home located in Warwick Township just north of the Lititz boundary, his father said.

Tshudy was a Manheim Central High School graduate and worked for a small Lancaster-based construction firm, his father said. He was a fun-loving person who enjoyed playing cards and golf, the father noted.

Tshudy was probably traveling to a friend’s home in southern Lancaster County when the accident happened, the father said.

His death was the 57th traffic fatality in Lancaster County this year, compared to 51 traffic deaths at this time in 2004.

Lititz Cop & Firefighter Released from Hopsital: Pics too

OFficer Jevon Miller Released from Hospital. :: LititzPA.com :: News, Information and Forums

Pics of his return are here.

As a resident of Lititz Borough and a fellow firefighter with Jevon at Lititz Fire Company, I’m very pleased to see him out fo the hospital.

On December 6th you can support Jevon by donating blood at the Lititz Fire Company. The drive is from 3-7 pm.

Call 717-475-7555 to make an appointment.

FEMA Fires Firefighter Volunteers Over T-Shirts!

TRIBUNE COLUMN

Another firefighter lashes out at FEMA’s inability to do the job

By TONY MESSENGER
Published Thursday, October 13, 2005

Jay Adams was fired for wearing a gray shirt.

His bosses wanted to see him in blue.

He said no, and their faces turned red.

He laughs about it now, but it’s really not funny.

Adams was among the 1,000 firefighters hired by the Federal Emergency Management Agency to go to the Gulf Coast and help victims of Hurricane Katrina. What could have been – and should have been – an attempt to use America’s finest to bring aid to people who really needed it has instead been shown for what it was – a not-so-veiled attempt to use firefighters to build up FEMA’s flagging reputation.

Adams is a proud firefighter from Charlotte, N.C. He speaks with a slow, Southern drawl that smacks of integrity and common sense. Like a college football coach from the region, when Adams talks, you can’t help but listen. That’s what I did as Adams talked about FEMA’s ridiculous attempt to use firefighters as public relations dummies. I listened to a man with pride talk about feeling used. Adams had come across my column from a week ago detailing a Missouri firefighter’s frustration with FEMA’s bureaucratic waste of important resources during our nation’s real time of need. He had a story that was even more compelling.

Adams and his fellow Charlotte firefighters were fired, not because they didn’t want to work, not because they couldn’t handle the job and not because they complained. They were fired for refusing to wear blue shirts flying FEMA’s flag.

“I am 33 years old,” Adams says. “I have been a career firefighter 14 years. I was a volunteer firefighter 15 years in addition to that. Without a doubt, this FEMA experience is the biggest disappointment in my life.”

Adams volunteered for the FEMA call-up before his department was even sent notice requesting firefighters. Two of his best friends in the world are New Orleans firefighters. After the hurricane hit, he couldn’t get them on the phone. “I was dying to do something,” he says.

Adams knew the job FEMA wanted the firefighters for was some sort of community relations. Still, he figured, firefighters in the field could do some good. He and several members of his department loaded up on the kind of gear they might need. They flew to Atlanta, and then, for a couple of days, they sat around waiting for somebody to tell them what to do. They had been called up for a week before they did anything.

For firefighters, men and women of action, it was anathema. The woman in charge of deployment, they said, quit one night. Their information wasn’t logged into the computer. Finally, they begged somebody to send them into the field. Eight members of the Charlotte team were sent to Mississippi. Their destination changed three times on the drive down. Finally, they ended up at Camp Barron Point, a center set up by the U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service in Forrest County.

The next morning, the overwhelmed FEMA employee sent to lead them gathered the seven eight-person teams together for another meeting in which he explained he was having a tough time figuring out a deployment strategy.

“Let’s see, seven teams, seven counties,” Adams says. “How in the world do we figure this one out? Get MIT on the phone.”

Needless to say, Adams and his team of experienced professional firefighters eventually got to work. Their first stop was the emergency management operations center in Forrest County. The director of the center, a veteran of many hurricanes, had a suggestion. Ditch the FEMA shirts. “I think his direct quote was, ‘I don’t have the security personnel available for eight people walking around in this county in FEMA shirts,’ ” Adams recalls. “He was serious. We took him at his word.”

The people of the county were dying for FEMA support, Adams says, and there was much animosity toward the federal department. Making it worse was the fact that the firefighters sent out on behalf of FEMA had no information to offer about disaster relief. They were given fliers with phone numbers to call in a county in which working phones were scarce.

“We were there purely for show,” he says.

After a second day of not accomplishing much – they checked in at a shelter as requested and passed out a few fliers – the firefighters from Charlotte decided to speak up. They had been separated from two of their fellow firefighters, who ended up going out on their own, and with other emergency workers helped set up a makeshift disaster relief center in Pearlington, Miss. They sent their team leader to talk to the FEMA folks at the camp.

She came back with the news they had been fired.

“We were relieved of duty for refusing to wear our blue FEMA shirts,” Adams says.

Frustrated, they packed up and left. They turned in their FEMA gear and went to Pearlington to check on their colleagues. And then they made the long trek back to Charlotte, chagrined they didn’t feel like they had helped one bit.

“I consider us to be ‘do-ers,’ ” Adams says, “and we didn’t even get a chance. The whole prevailing FEMA attitude was, ‘Don’t worry about it, you’re getting paid.’ That’s just not right.

“Firefighters in this nation have an unspoken bond with the people that need us,” Adams says.

“If you call, we will come as fast as we can to help make your problem better. FEMA needs to adopt this doctrine.”

Capital Punishment Is Too Good for these Criminals

Death is too good for these bastards… ‘parents’ my ass!

OK, I can understand some people can’t afford electricity, and I can even understand a need for an emergency trip to WalMart but to leave your sleeping kids home alone with lighted candles is an atrocity. Leaving a 2 year old in the care of a 6 year old is close to the edge of insanity in my book. 3 kids paid the price for their parents’ stupidity.

When those three kids went to sleep they didn’t expect for the last thought of the night to be the last thought of their lives. This makes me sick. No one deserves to die this way, especially children. All I can hope for is that these parents suffer every day as a result of their gross disregard, and even that doesn’t come close to paying for a triple dose of infanticide. Reckless endangerment just doesn’t come close, try these people for murder.

How can you not know that mixing children and unattended candles is a recipe for death?

3 children left home alone found dead after fire
By S.K. BARDWELL and MIKE GLENN – Copyright 2005 Houston Chronicle

The parents of three small children who died in a fire at the northwest Harris County apartment where they were left alone Monday night have been charged with endangering their children.
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A candle left burning in the apartment — where the electricity had been cut off — is believed to have caused the fire that killed Ashlyn Page, 2, Alliaha Page, 4, and Alexis Page, 6, investigators said this morning.

Their parents, Kelvin Rucker, 30, and Royshunda Love, 24, left the children sleeping in upstairs rooms of the apartment to visit a nearby Wal-Mart, said Harris County Sheriff’s Department investigators.

HoustonChronicle.com – 3 children left home alone found dead after fire