Structure fire on Colony Drive

CH411, CH412, E419, E413, T417, G412 were dispatched at 8:42pm on Monday evening to Colony Drive in the Village of Fredericktown on the report of a single family residential structure fire.

The initial arriving unit on scene found smoke showing from the house trailer. CH412 was met by the homeowner who said it was a stove fire and he had put it out. E419 began ventilation of the house trailer. Additional arriving units assisted with searching for any fire extension beyond the affected area, finding none.

The FCFD had a total of 17 firefighters and two cadets respond to this call. All FCFD units were back in quarters by 10:23pm.

Fredericktown Police Department and Fredericktown EMS also assisted with this call.

FCFD warns of potentially hazardous antiques

Although it can happen anytime, summertime and nice weather brings the prime time for garage sales, auctions, and antiquing, both on the part of the buyer and the seller. Those on the hunt for antiques and things that catch their eye sometimes however get more than they bargained for with their purchase.

An alert homeowner on Green Valley Road, within the Fredericktown Community Fire District brought crews responding to a dangerous situation at their home on Saturday afternoon. The homeowner contacted the Knox County Sheriff’s Office after finding that an antique bottle his wife purchased at a sale unknowingly contained an explosive chemical. Research on the labeling of the bottled determined it contained Picric Acid, and with the age and form it was something very unstable. In the form the acid was found in, it was both shock sensitive and sensitive to metal. The explosive power we were informed was similar to nitroglycerin.

The FCFD had two chiefs along with an engine respond to the scene to be on standby during the course of the operation. The Bomb Squad from the Ashland County Sheriff’s Office responded to the incident with their team and were able to safely dispose of the bottle and contents utilizing one pound of C4.

Incidents like this are nothing new within our community, over the course of the last several years the FCFD has responded to incidents with unstable materials requiring the assistance of bomb squad units from around Central Ohio. As people are cleaning out old barns, garages, and basements are often times when old chemicals and potentially dangerous items are found.

A quick search of the Internet and fire service publications rendered numerous results for picric acid incidents from around the United States requiring assistance from bomb squads and EOD teams. In addition to the form we found it in on Saturday, a more common response has been to decades old first aid kits containing “picric acid gauze pads.”

Although its primary use is as an explosive, over the years picric acid has found other uses in medicine as an antiseptic, burn treatments, and other uses, but early on was also used as a dye.

If you find some type of hazardous, dangerous, explosive, or unknown material such as the picric acid that we dealt with in our community over the weekend we would recommend the following:

1. Call 911 and provide them with as much information as possible to what you have found. Name of material, description, and where it is located.

2. Stay away from and keep others from the area surrounding the material or device in question.

3. Leave the material where it is. Do not attempt to move it, transfer it to another location, or change the container it is in, doing so may cause a reaction. Trained professionals will respond to where the material is and determine the safest manner to dispose of the situation.

4. Do not simply pour it down the drain, not only are you putting that into the sewer system, but potentially the material is reactive to water or metal in the pipes.

5. Doing anything other than leaving this situation to the trained professionals is extremely dangerous.

Thank you to Mid-State Waste

Thank you so much to Mid-State Waste, and Mark Phillips for your help once again in making the extrication day for our cadets happen. Three vehicles were dropped off for our training today and we were able to make this such a success.

Although the cadets made a significant dent in the vehicles that were dropped off, there is still a lot more to be done. Looking forward to more training!

 

Still time to donate to the Firefighter Toy Drive

With Christmas nearing close, the members of the Fredericktown Firefighters association with your help have been working diligently on our thirteenth annualFirefighter Toy Drive.  Firefighter boots have been in businesses around the community for a few weeks already to take monetary donations to support this cause.

Our firefighters had a very successful day this past Saturday at our toy drop off at The Brickhouse Grind in Fredericktown.  The back of the rescue was filled with toys and the fire boot filled with donations to make this year’s event happen.  It is through great local relationships such as this and a very supportive community that the toy drive has flourished over the last 13-years.  If you are writing a check in support of our toy drive, please make the check out to the Fredericktown Firefighters Association, with “Toy Drive” in the memo field.

Firefighters will be at the Fredericktown Christmas Walk on Saturday, December 1 at the Masonic Lodge, selling and taking orders for poinsettias that also serve as a fundraiser.  This is another great time to meet your firefighters and drop off toy donations as well.  No amount is too big or small; the ability for this drive to be so successful is from great community support by many.

We are very proud of our local philanthropy that our association has been part of over many decades here in Fredericktown, but this one in particular is a favorite of our members. Working in partnership with the Fredericktown Interchurch, our organization receives de-identifed information to enable us to purchase and group toys for the appropriate age groups. Our firefighters and fire families are a part of this project from the beginning clear through the toy distribution day.

Our toy drive is 100-percent locally operated, volunteer, and a standalone toy drive that our firefighter’s association launched 13-years ago.  This project, sponsored by the association has no ties to a national program and is completely a volunteer effort of hard work and giving.  Thanks to volunteer labor and donations of design and advertising material we are fortunate to operate with no overhead. We operate solely through monetary donations through our boot drive, and new toy/monetary donations that we receive either at the firehouse or at local drop off events.  All funds given toward this project are earmarked and set aside for this specific use only.

For more information on the toy drive or how to help, please contact Bernadette Smith at 740-507-8605. Updates will be posted on the website at www.fredericktownfire.net

Thank you to our community for your SUPPORT!

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

November 6, 2018

Contact:  Jason Bostic – FFII/PIO/CFSI
Tel:  (740) 485-6790

jbostic@fredericktownfire.net

Thank you to our community

We would like to thank the residents of the Fredericktown Community Fire District for their support on our renewal levy that was on the ballot today.

“The FCFD sincerely appreciates the support and trust of our community in voting to renew our levy,” said FCFD Chief Scott Mast.  “We thank our supporters, and through their generosity we are able to provide everyone in our fire district with the highest level of fire service.”

This levy directly funds the operations of the FCFD on a yearly basis.  Although grants and other opportunities are sought out, this is a primary source of funding to provide protection to those living in, and traveling through our beautiful fire district.

Your yes vote in passing this levy ensures that quality services will continue, and that we can attain new goals in our journey to provide the best protection.

Ultimately, beyond all the accomplishments that the fire district has attained over the years, it is the community support that drives our mission.  Our residents who graciously support and trust us at the voting booth and beyond are a significant driving force to our members. Our service to community is something we don’t take lightly.

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FCFD asks for renewal to existing levy

The Fredericktown Community Fire District will ask voters this November 6, to approve and support the renewal to an existing 1-mil levy fire protection levy for a period of five years.  The levy would commence in 2019, be due in 2020 and generate $147,000 per year according to fire district clerk Sandy Casto.

This levy directly funds the operations of the FCFD on a yearly basis, and we want to put an emphasis that this is a renewal, not new taxes being assessed.  Roughly 18-years ago was the last time that the district went to taxpayers with any changes, and the reasoning of it was the Village of Chesterville dropping from the coverage area of the FCFD.

“Our primary source of funding the fire district comes directly from the levies that we operate off of,” said FCFD Chief Scott Mast.  “Those levies determine what resources we can purchase and what services we can offer our community, these are very key to our operation here.”

In addition to the levy funding, yearly the department seeks grant opportunities at the Local, State, and Federal levels that allows them to fund equipment purchases and pay for the cost of training.  Over the course of the last 13 years, the FCFD has been awarded at least one, sometimes as many as three grants a year to handle the costs of projects that further the mission of the district.  Major upgrades to hydraulic rescue tools, lifting bags, stabilization struts, radio equipment, laptops, training props, SCBA equipment, protective gear, and hand tools are just some of the physical items that grants have made possible.

Those grant funds, careful management, and relationships have been an integral part of expanding services that further the fire district mission.  The construction of a second station several years ago made significant changes to reducing response times.  Investments in our dive team led us to being one of only two in Knox County that has the training, personnel, and equipment.  We have made significant upgrades in recent years to our firehouse to reduce costs and keep it functional for years to come.  More recently we were able to initiate daytime staffing to improve our response times, level of service, safety, and accomplish more of our mission.

“We have had great relationships between Chiefs and the board members over the years and both of those parties have been very fiscally responsible with the expenditure of money. They have been very frugal in what they attempted to do over the years while still increasing the level of services,” said FCFD Chief Mast.

Beyond the income, it is the hard work of many hands that oversee the use of funding and ensuring that the mission of the fire district is met.  Over the course of the 10-15 years, the FCFD has underwent so many positive changes to improve the level of service we provide to our citizens.  That hard work doesn’t just exist at a table or with a handful of people, but rather a collaborative effort of many.

Careful expenditures combined with solid planning from the Chief down has been a key over the course of time.  Within the FCFD we have firefighters with a wide variety of background and expertise that come to the table when we look at purchases and improvements.

“I personally look out in the grand scheme about 10 years as a big overall picture, then try to reel that back to around a 5-year projection on where we might be headed,” said FCFD Chief Mast.  “At that point with the officer core here, we bring that to a 2-3 year forecasting frame as far as our next steps.”

Ultimately, beyond all the accomplishments that the fire district has attained over the years, it is the community support that drives our mission.  Our citizens, those we serve have graciously supported and trusted us at the voting booth and beyond.  That community support is something the firefighters don’t take lightly.  Although a volunteer department, they hold professionalism and customer service as a key part of their operation.

“We try to be very diligent in regards being seen in the public and interacting with the public while providing a very professional service to them,” said Chief Mast.

Firefighters for the district recognize that regardless of the situation, when people make contact with us, that we need to be the problem solvers and often fill gaps from other services.  Things such as clearing roadways from storms, pumping basements from flooding, providing answers and someone to point them in the right direction for answers.  One of the most significant accomplishments by the firefighters has been the operation of a stand-alone toy drive which has operated for over a decade to help those in the Fredericktown community.  Through partnerships in the area, each year the firefighters make sure that Christmas happens for hundreds of children.

The FCFD combination fire department utilizing daytime staffing Monday-Friday along with a dedicated group of volunteers to accomplish our mission.  We protect the residents of 118-square miles of northwest Knox County and those that pass through on a daily basis.  We operate two stations with 28 current members with over 50% of our members being certified at the 240-hour professional firefighter level.  Our department fleet consists of two engines, a rescue, tanker, two grass trucks, dive rescue boat, technical rescue trailer, fire ATV, and a chief’s vehicle.

Leadership

They are more than colored helmets, different colored insignia on their shirts, and a title. At the Fredericktown Community Fire District, leadership takes on a different role and has a different meaning. Leadership is about empowering others, encouraging others, and positively pushing others to be better.

At the FCFD we are blessed with leaders.  Beyond the titles, shirts, and helmets, here is the information that you don’t see. Some departments you might find this photo in “Class-A” uniforms, but honestly pristine uniforms with pressed creased that are clean just don’t fit.

155 years of combined experience in the fire service are at the core of our department.  Their level of training varies from the Firefighter II (240-hr training) on down to a (36-hour Ohio FF level).  They hold credentials as Certified Fire Safety Inspectors, Fire Instructors, and possess a plethora of technical fire service classes between all of them.  Bachelor’s degrees, Associates Degrees, technical school certifications, and real street experience round out what this group has. Our leadership of the FCFD is comprised members who are full-time firefighters from other cities, people that hold management positions for their career, those in skilled trades, laborers, and other areas as well.

Outside the fire service, these leaders are active participants in the community and those surrounding our district. Active in church memberships, youth sports, coaching, civic organizations, and various philanthropy, our leaders are doers and we are blessed.  Where you see these faces, you will see things getting done.

(Missing from photo – Assistant Chief Dwayne Canter)

Cadets push through training

We pushed our fire cadets mentally and physically tonight in training. Cadets broke off into two crews, swapping scenarios partway through the night.

SCBA were assembled into a pile, connected together, and cadets put their hoods on where they could not see. Cadets then worked to untangle the mess and see how well they knew their air packs in order to properly assemble them in working order.

The second station for the night was mental and physical. A five station challenge course consisted of the following for a timed event. 1. Lift a 50′ section of 1 1/2″ hose onto their shoulder and climb the training center stairs up/down five times. 2. Come down the stairs, place the hose bundle into a taped off area, move to a platform and pull a 50′ section of 2 1/2″ hose roll with a rope. 3. Leave the platform, pickup two pieces of cribbing, move through a series of cones and place them on the ground. 4. Hoist a roof ladder to their shoulder and go 50 feet around a cone and back to the starting cone. 5. Go through the firehouse and stretch 100′ of charged 1 1/2″ hoseline to a pair of cones and open/close the nozzle to end the course.

Cadets never gave up, they pushed each other, they learned a lot tonight, and they worked through a tough challenge.

Great job by ALL. The effort was amazing.

Cadet Graduation – August 28

Our cadets and recruits worked extremely hard through this academy. Some curriculum was modified this year to add even more knowledge and this group took to it! August 28 is their graduation ceremony at the firehouse.  The event with light refreshments will begin at 6:30pm.

Thank you to the parents and families for making sure that their cadet/recruit has been able to attend and train hard. We look forward to seeing you soon!

PHOTOS – Fire Cadet Academy Testing night