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Laura King Alberta bound . . . and back
Written by Laura King   

Friday, June 25, 2010

Played catch up yesterday after arriving home late Wednesday night from the Alberta Fire Chiefs Association conference in Edmonton. Congrats to past AFCA president Brian McEvoy and working group members, along with Volunteer Alberta, which has put together a fabulous recruitment and retention tool kit for volunteer departments that, hopefully, will be used a model right across the country. We’ll do a full story on the document shortly in Fire Fighting in Canada.

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While several fire chiefs from southwestern Ontario are in beautiful Hunstvile, Ont., today for the G8 summit – more on that in a minute – Midland Fire Chief Kevin Foster has his hands full with the aftermath of a tornado that ripped through his town Wednesday afternoon. You can see some remarkable photos here. We’ll follow up with Chief Foster for a story when the dust settles.

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Back to the G8 – you may remember that Huntsville Fire Chief Steve Hernen was unceremoniously demoted after an alleged security breach in May. Hernen has nearly unanimous support from fire chiefs across Ontario who are bending my ear on this and it’s clear that there’s way more to this story. We’ll take a close look at the events in Huntsville when the security is lifted and report back.

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And, back to Edmonton . . . I was in an airplane Sunday when an explosion tore apart a north Edmonton neighbourhood but I went to the site Monday afternoon with Edmonton District Chief Stan Symes (Guess where he’s from originally – uh huh, Amherst, N.S. – never fails!)

Station 25 Capt. John Bowers was first on scene Sunday and told me Monday it was eerily reminiscent of the 1987 tornado that cut a swath through the city.

Two of the guys from Station 1 who I did a ride along with on Monday had been brought in to the explosion scene Sunday afternoon. They found the second body.

By the time I got to the scene it was cordoned off for a homicide investigation so we weren’t allowed in but we managed to get some photos from a field behind the devastated homes.

As CBC News reported yesterday, multiple sources saw a woman's bound and wrapped body carried out of the wreckage of the home that exploded. I heard similar rumblings on Monday. You can read the CBC story here and here are some photos taken Monday afternoon.

explosion1-smaller
 
Demolition began Monday on several garages and homes. Note the debris on the rooftops. Photo by Laura King.
 
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Note the tree on the right - on the lawn of the house across the street from the explosion - that was sheared off and is full of debris. Photo by Laura King.
 

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And now, finally, a word of caution. If I ever phone or e-mail you asking to do a ridealong in your region, be prepared. Two years ago I went to Lethbridge, Alta., to learn more about combined fire/EMS and rode with firefighter/paramedics Scott Lane and Randy Crow. We did some routine medical calls and then I ducked out with a deupty chief to look at an aerial truck when a call came in for a fire in a highrise. I got great photos, some of which have been used in Canadian Firefighter and EMS Quarterly, and witnessed Lethbridge’s longtime fire/EMS system at work.

In March, I had some work to do in Hastings County, Ont., and went to Kingston the next day to shoot some photos. I had just met Capt. Shawn Babcock and his crew when the tone sounded for . . . a fire in a highrise. Interesting scenario – pot on a stove, unit crammed with stuff. Hoarder.

Monday, in Edmonton, I went on the rescue truck with driver Courtney Polson, Rescue Capt. Terry Henirich and firefighters Luke Dusza and Todd Molineaux. We did an alarm call at a community centre (smoke in the kitchen) then snuck out for a Starbucks (thanks captain!) before heading back to make lunch. A call came in for the unglamorous task of unclogging a needle deposit box at a community centre – a task probably not unique to Edmonton Fire but not common to many Canadian departments - so I went with the crew – Capt. Gerrit Meulenkamp (a Maritimer who's long overdue for a trip home!), driver Lee Juhaszi and firefighters Troy Treit and Dave Schenk. On the way back we got a call for . . . a fire in a highrise. Twelfth floor. Smoke showing. Interesting scenario. Mattress burning. Unit crammed with stuff. Hoarder.

Here are some photos of our day.

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Morning health and safety/Fit for Duty briefing at Station 1 in Edmonton Monday with (left) Luke Dusza, Troy Treit, Todd Molineaux, Capt. Gerrit Meulenkamp, Lee Josahzi, rescue Capt. Terry Heinrich, Courtney Polson and Dave Schenk. Photo by Laura King.
 

 

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Troy Treit and Dave Schenk after getting the call for the highrise fire.  Photo by Laura King.
 

 

mattress
 
Firefighters toss the smouldering mattress out the 12th storey window. Photo by Laura King.
 

COMMENTS

Guest
Written by Guest on 2010-07-02 02:12:01
Thanks for the kind words Laura. From Volunteer Alberta's perspective, the AFCA and its Retention and Recruitment Committee headed by Brian McEvoy were very supportive in developing a turn key toolkit for rural departments to tackle the issue of finding and keeping volunteer firefighters. Now the next step is to get it started and track what works...
Tim
Written by Tim on 2010-06-29 11:39:45
Did the Wandering River issue come up when you were in Alberta? I am interested to hear if there was a resolution to that story. 
 
If you ever come to Upsala, you won't have to worry about jinxing us with a highrise fire . . .

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