Well, the Photo Team
pleasantly shocked the crowd with their debut of the custom t- shirts for
the Department. The concept was put together by the Photo Team with
the vast majority of the work being done by Firefighter and Photographer
Dan Wilcox
. If I could tell you how many hours of design and consultation with
Danny went into the shirt, you wouldn’t believe me! We tried to
create a shirt that would represent each Sation, hence Truck 29, Engine 3
and Resue 1, a little of Carver Pride and a touch of our heritage.
Judging by the reaction and sales, they hit it right on the mark. The
shirts are on sale at the Chiefs Office (Sales Division).
$20
for M, L and XL and $22 for 2XL and 3XL – sorry but the smalls were
missing in the order and the company has refunded us the money rather than
printing 10 small shirts. The quicker we can sell the initial 300
shirts, the quicker we can place an order with some different sizes in it.
Once the initial
purchase costs are met, all the additional proceeds will be going to the
Association.
2008
Annual Truck Competition
The 6th annual truck inspection competition was held on August 4, 2008. Organized by FF Bob Middendorf, the event challenges the 3 Firefighting Company's to have the cleanest piece of apparatus. This year each Company could choose which truck they wanted to do. Co. 1 chose the Tanker, Co. 3 chose Brushbreaker 28 and Marine 1, and Co. 2 chose Deputy Weston's personal pickup, which has quite a reputation for being bog dust challenged, for lack of a better term. All the vehicles looked GREAT and needless to say their were a lot of laughs when Co. 2 showed up with C2. In the end, Company 1 won the trophy by unanimous decision of the judges. The trophy was donated by our sister department, the Syosset New York Fire Department, in memory of 4 of their Firefighters who had answered their last alarm. One of those was Robert "Trot" Middendorf, our Bob Middendorf's dad.
Recipe for a Spring Forest Fire Drill - For stock, start with a jumbo
thirst for knowledge, toss in a zesty team of Fire Officers led by a well
ripened Deputy. Stir in a stimulating Power Point program presented to around
200 firefighters from 9 departments. Let that marinate for 3 days. Then on a
cool April morning in a very large pot (Myles Standish State Forest) stage and
slowly blend in all those Firefighters, combined with 14 Brushbreakers, 4
Engines and 5 Tankers. Season and coordinate with a County Mobile Command Post,
a State Incident Support Unit, a couple of Fire Towers & a County Fire Patrol
Plane. Add just a pinch of real smoke. Shuttle and pour in around 30,000 gallons
of water pumped from several static sources, protect some exposures and spend a
lot of time driving unfamiliar sandy roads while utilizing several County radio
frequencies. Simmer for 3 hours and then sprinkle on 200 hamburgers, 200 hot
dogs (almost some venison) and more smiles that we had time to count.
Front - Chief Craig
Weston, New Firefighter Lance Moore, New Firefighter Joel Day, New Firefighter
Christine Amaral, New Hanover Firefighter Dana Allen, New Hanover Firefighter
Benjamin Montilio, New Firefighter Chris McCarthy, Deputy Eric Germaine
Back - Chief Ken Blanchard, Captain Carl
Santos, Lieutenant Vinny Nocera, Captain Mike Harriman, Firefighter Rick
Leopardi, Deputy Mark Weston, Lieutenant Mark Moran, Lieutenant Alan Dunham,
Lieutenant Chris Vincent and Firefighter John Fein
Carver's
New "Water Rescue/Dive Boat" has
arrived!
Carver's
recently delivered 2008 Water Rescue / Dive Boat was manufactured
by RIBCRAFT USA . The boat features a 90 HP Honda, 4 stroke, EFI
motor, which is harnessed to a 19 foot ridged inflatable hull. The
boat is equipped with a Garmin under water Sonar and GPS, Whelen
Siren and Light Bar, remote controlled 180,000 candle power search
light, 2 handheld spot lights, UHF radio, under deck compartment
storage, a dive ladder rack and a life rope along each side. The
boat is designed for shallow water and can carry a 1,250 pound
load.
The
motor for this boat was donated by Clark Griffith, a local
cranberry grower whose home overlooks Sampsons Pond, Carver's
largest body of water, and no doubt has witnessed many times over
the years when this unit would have been of great benefit.
The
hand held underwater sonar device was donated by Augusta Waters, a
local resident who wanted to purchase a piece of rescue equipment
for the department.
(Full
Story and More Pictures soon to come..)
Police/Fire Station Study
Committee
formed on August 22nd, 2006
Committee Members:
Chairman:
Buz
Artiano
Police Chief: Art Parker Fire Chief: Craig
Weston
Capital Outlay Rep: Jack Angley Paul
McDonald
Jack Franey
Scott Sampson
Committee Goals:
Design facilities with today’s needs
in mind but with ability to expand as needed for the next 100
years.
Design attractive, functional
buildings that compliment the Town Hall & Library.
Get maximum value for our money
without being short-sighted.
Front - Kristen DeOliveira,
Brain Rodick, Paul Frost, James Kennedy, and Scott Sawler
Back - Richard Pierson, Alex
Falconer, Mark Lagerquist, Matthew Nye, Andrew Johnson, Andrew Cole,
Timothy Dunham and Jeremy Farquharson
What it takes to
become a call firefighter
As most of you are aware, local reporter Kristen DeOliveira, of CNC
Newspapers, is taking the Carver Fire Department Recruit Training
Course as a public interest project. She is writing a 7 part
bi-weekly story on “What it takes to become a Call Firefighter.”
Below are the links to the articles she has posted so far. They will
also be running in the Carver Reporter, Wareham Courier, The
Sentinel, and the Halifax-Plympton Reporter.
1.
February 14, 2007 | Wareham Courier - "From buckets to brush
breakers"
2.
March 2, 2007 | Wareham Courier - "From
trial by fire to recruit writer"
3.
March 22, 2007 | Wareham Courier - "What it takes: dressing the
part"
4.
April 6, 2007 | Wareham Courier - "What it takes: Brains and
brawn"
5.
April 20, 2007 | Wareham Courier - "What it takes: Lessons
learned"
Carver's
New "Heavy Rescue"
Carver
Rescue 1 is the product of hundreds of hours of hard work by an
extremely dedicated committee with representation from all 3
firefighting company’s within the department. All were residents and
taxpayers of the Town of Carver. Collectively they represented over 175
years of emergency service to the people of Carver. The charge given to
the committee was to prepare a specification for a replacement Rescue
Truck that would not only serve the community for the next quarter of a
century, but also do it with enhanced efficiency and safety. Carver has
a history of developing apparatus with common sense practical
innovation that performs with simplicity and allows the firefighter to
do their jobs quickly and safely. The pictures clearly show that the
committee did a great job!
On
April 9, 2006 the Class of '06 graduated from Recruit Training. This is
an extremely important day in the evolution of the Carver Fire
Department. The enthusiasm and excitement that the new firefighters
feel, reverberates through the Department and we all look forward to
the load being lighter now that they are here. They have worked
extremely hard and earned the respect of the trainers. They now will
have the opportunity to truly serve the people of Carver. This is an
honor that we in the Carver Fire Department hold reverent.
Santa
comes to Town
Front Row - Mark Brown, Bob Vestute,
Eric Weston, Craig Weston, "Santa", Mark Whittemore, Rick
Leopardi, Tom Fitzgerald
Back Row - Jesse Boyle, John Fein,
Steven Weston, Jerry Vaughn, Bob Middendorf, Eric Germaine, Bob Thibodeau,
Carl Santos, Matt Sears, Mark Weston, Chris Mahoney, Kristen Durling and
Mark Durling
Twas 2 weeks before before
Christmas, at Central Firehouse,
Everyone was stirring, even
the Macintosh mouse.
Decorations of snowflakes,
lights and a tree,
Made the Station look festive,
even the floor was grease free.
Captain Santos was smiling,
Lieut. Weston was too,
If the whistle blew now, they
had a great crew.
French toast and some sausage,
a breakfast they had,
They all had their fill, their
belly’s were glad.
Next the children did crafts,
decorations they made,
They really enjoyed it, and
after they played.
Eating cookies and enjoying
cranberry juice drink,
Then C1 looked at C2, and gave
him a wink.
27 was dispatched to a detail
they said,
Something about a broken down
sled.
Then the radio it crackled and
Bob Vestute did say,
Sleigh 27 has Santa, and is
now on the way.
When out in the street they
heard a siren,
Kids ran to the door and
started to scream.
Air horns were blaring,
clearing the way,
For Brushbreaker 27, being
used as a sleigh.
Sleigh 27 pulled up all shiny
and red,
On the back was a white haired
guy, a red hat on his head.
The hose bed was full of
presents with bows,
For the children of Carver’s
volunteer heroes.
Santa was
in red, from his head to his foot,
He kinda looked like Lt.
Telless all covered with soot.
He had a round face and a
little round belly,
That shook when he laughed,
like a bowl full of jelly.
He
proceeded to give out the presents to the all,
No one was forgotten, they all
had a ball.
The children were smiling,
parents as well,
They enjoyed the festivities,
to all this we tell.
And then
he was off in 27 sleigh he did go,
To prepare for this Christmas
and possible snow.
We owe our
thanks to 137, for he is the one,
Who along with his helpers,
made this so much fun.
On April 24,
2005 the Class of '05 graduated from Recruit Training. This is an extremely
important day in the evolution of the Carver Fire Department. The enthusiasm and
excitement that the new firefighters feel reverberates through the Department
and we all look forward to the load being lighter now that they are here. They
have worked extremely hard and earned the respect of the trainers. They now will
have the opportunity to truly serve the people of Carver. This is an honor that
we in the Carver Fire Department hold reverent.
Front -
Craig Weston, Ausitn White, Michael Dern, Chris Azizian, Bill Kelly, Chris
Allsopp Back - Instructors - Eric Germaine, Mark Weston, Matt Sears, Chris
Vincent, Bob Telless, Carl Santos, Alan Dunham, Mark Moran, Eric Weston, Mike
Harriman and Mark Durling (missing from picture)
Dispatch
Center Rehab
A
big THANK YOU to FF/Dispatcher Bill Piper. Bill (with carpentry support
from DC Craig Weston) spent a solid week fabricating, re-arranging and
upgrading our Fire Station Dispatch Center. Keeping all the necessary
equipment organized in a 9' x 12' room is a big challenge! (More
Pictures..)
Benefit
for call firefighters approved
By Christine Wallgren, Globe Correspondent |
June 17, 2004
CARVER -- Annual Town Meeting voters on Monday unanimously endorsed a
program that will award veteran call firefighters monthly benefit
payments at age 65. Carver Fire Chief Dana Harriman called the vote ''a
very solid step toward perpetuating a call firefighting system long into
the future in Carver."
Under the service award program, firefighters with 20 years of
service will receive $200 each month and those with 30 years will
receive $300. Harriman said the benefits will ''encourage our senior
members to stay with the department and preserve that institutional
memory." He said the program also serves as a management tool,
since firefighters will be required to attend drills and respond to a
set number of emergencies during a year to count toward the service
total. Harriman said he expects those minimum standards to be set by
early next month.
The department, with an annual budget of about $350,000, has 65 call
firefighters to cover 40 square miles from three fire stations. Harriman
and Deputy Chief Craig Weston are the only full-time employees. Call
members are paid $11 per hour, but only when they respond to
emergencies.
Harriman says the cost for a staff of full-timers to serve the town
of about 11,000 would easily exceed $1 million. Last year, the
department answered 278 emergency calls with an average response time of
6 minutes.
The length-of-service award program, developed by a committee of
local firefighters that studied ways to maintain a call system, will be
underwritten by Volunteer Firemen's Insurance of Pennsylvania. Harriman
said no one will collect any service payments for at least eight years,
since the oldest call firefighter is now 57. The town's annual payment
into the program will begin at $71,931, but will eventually decrease.
Based on the 65 firefighters currently with the department, the
payment could be as low as $26,000 in 10 years, he said.
Harriman asked for $36,500 -- covering a half year -- at Monday's
meeting, to begin paying into the program in January.
According to the town clerk, 258 of the town's 7,879
registered voters attended Town Meeting.
Carver
firefighters devise mobile home fire prevention program
By Mary Julius, Enterprise staff writer
As Carver Fire Chief Dana E. Harriman walked through the
charred timbers at a fatal mobile-home fire last week, it reminded him of the
importance of talking about fire safety to all mobile-home residents.
"Mobile homes tend to be more energy efficient than
conventionally built homes and, while that saves money and energy, unfortunately
when a fire occurs it also keeps that heat and smoke inside," Harriman
said.
On Monday, Antonio J. DeSiata, 78, died in a fire in his
mobile home in Carver's South Meadow Village. It was the fourth fatal
mobile-home fire in the area since November. The fire was ruled accidental, but
the exact cause has not been determined.
"There was a plumber's torch near the body and a drop
light," Harriman said. "They certainly were two potential ignition
sources." It is believed DeSiata had been repairing a pipe under the
kitchen sink, Harriman said.
Because of the number of residents who live in Carver's five
mobile-home parks, firefighters decided last year to develop a fire-safety
program specifically for them. There are about 3,000 mobile home residents in
Carver, Harriman said.
"It was an area of fire prevention we hadn't
targeted," Deputy Fire Chief Craig Weston said. "We tend to be
proactive in the schools, but we seldom went into mobile-home parks. We wanted
to go to them instead of having them coming to us."
Weston asked the state Department of Fire Services if they
offered a fire-safety program specifically for mobile-home owners. "They
did not," Weston said.
So call firefighter Bill Piper created the town's own program.
"We brainstormed until we came up with the ideas we
wanted, then Bill put it into a power-point production," Weston. "Then
we put together a fire-prevention team that would specialize in helping to
develop and teach this mobile-home program."
Firefighters worked on the plan from September to January and
gave the first presentation in January. The firefighters are hoping to reach as
many mobile-home park residents with their message as possible.
"It could save a life," Piper said. "It's one
less call we might have to go on some day."
So far the firefighters have given the hour-long presentation
at South Meadow Village and Meadow Woods.
"The next program will be March 31 at Waterview
Village," Piper said. "We plan to do it at all the mobile-home
parks."
In February, when an 81-year-old woman died in a mobile home
fire in Halifax, Harriman told Halifax Fire Chief Lance M. Benjamino about
Carver's program and offered to share it with them.
"They've put together a very good program,"
Benjamino said. "We would like to utilize it and combine it with a program
of our own. We're planning to give our own presentation by the summer."
Halifax has about 500 residents in Halifax Mobile Home Estates
and other scattered mobile homes, Benjamino said.
"Mobile homes often have smaller rooms where heat can
build up fast and fire can grow more quickly," Benjamino said.
In Carver, firefighters use the program to touch on safety
issues for mobile-home owners. They include:
Inspect regularly the heat tape often wrapped around water
pipes under mobile homes. "It wears out and can create an arc and ignite
fire under a home," Piper said.
Keep hallways and door areas clear of potential obstacles,
such as hampers, washers and dryers.
Never pinch extension cords and minimize the number of
electrical items plugged into them at one time.
Know how to escape quickly and safely in the event of a fire
or other emergency.
Smokers should use a deep-dish ashtray with a center rest so a
falling cigarette lands inside the ashtray.
Change batteries in smoke detectors regularly, and have a
battery backup to hard-wired detectors.
Know how to use a fire extinguisher and the proper way to call
911 on a cell phone.
Use oxygen devices with extreme care. An oxygen tank recently
blew up a mobile home in Carver.
Be very careful with space heaters. Never put anything over
them to warm, always unplug the heaters before going to bed and use one with a
switch that shuts the unit off if it tips over.
Put screens or doors on fireplace openings.
Make sure the mobile home has a clearly visible house number.
Clear debris from under decks and brush from around the mobile
home. "We recommend putting quarter-inch mesh screening under a deck to
keep it clear," Piper said.
Other firefighters who volunteer their time to
present the program include David Buker, Robert Vestute, Jared LeBarnes, William
Gilbert, Alan Dunham Jr., Josh McDermott, Thomas Fitzgerald, Michael Loughran
and Frank Nye.