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The
New Year has arrived and Homeland Security still remains
an active topic on the television, in the newspapers,
and on Capitol Hill in Washington DC. While one firefighting
periodical proclaims the success of the current Congress
in awarding grants to individual fire departments across
the nation in the name of Homeland Security, another
blasts the administration for proposed budgetary cutbacks
in areas of leadership training.
One
thing is certain: When the call comes in for emergency
response, our firefighters will be the ones to respond,
not the politicians. What are firefighters to do when
they respond to a call that could be one of national
security? Whether it is a structure fire, a call for
EMS services, a hazardous materials situation or a plane
crash, it is up to the individual fire department to
take charge and make the scene safe. In order to do
this, training is critical.
Education
and training in all areas of our mission must continue.
We must take every advantage of local academy training,
training offered by our own fire departments and training
from the federal government. Without the commitment
from our local firefighters to constantly improve, our
mission will fail.
As far as the political situation goes, we must constantly
be in touch with our elected representatives in government.
That means everyone from our President, Congress, Governor
and State Legislators, down to our local mayors and
commissioners, must hear from us. Protecting our nation
on a daily basis is our desire and our mission.
There
is nobody more sensitive to this issue than The Michigan
Association of Fire Fighters. MAFF will always seek
to keep the safety of the fire fighters who respond
and the citizens we serve on a daily basis, at heart.
On
a final note, the Department of Homeland Security, U.S.
Fire Administration, and the Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA) have just published the firefighter fatality
figures for 2004. Despite continued advances in fire
fighting equipment, Incident Command System training,
operations and safety training and improved communications,
a total of 107 on-duty deaths occurred. Half of the
firefighters died as a result of traumatic injuries,
and the balance were attributed to non-traumatic injuries
such as heart attack or stroke. The average age of a
firefighter that died of a heart attack or stroke was
52; and the average age of firefighters who died of
traumatic injuries was 42. A large number of fatalities
were related to vehicles, either firefighters being
struck by passing motorists, falling from department
apparatus, vehicle collisions, or being run over by
their own apparatus while being backed up.
Firefighters
make sacrifices daily, for the security and safety of
their communities. For additional information on firefighter
fatalities, including the annual fatality reports, please
visit www.usfa.fema.gov/fatalities/statistics.
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