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Yes! That little silhouette is me! I am getting ready to enter a training fire. If there is one thing I love to do (other than fight fire, of course) it is to take training. I love to learn. And we all know that Experience is nothing without the solid foundation provided by Training. Here's just some of the courses I've taken through the University of Maryland's Maryland Fire and Rescue Institute.
I've also had training from other organizations in the following fields:
I currently hold the following certifications:
But we also know that Training requires experience. I've had some of that too. I'm beginning my eighteenth year as a volunteer with the Community Fire Company. In that time I've been fairly active, but recently the time I have to devote to the company has been increasingly harder to come by. In 2006, I found myself in the position of not being able to ride the equipment for the first time since becoming a member. With the election of a new Chief I returned briefly as a Captain in 2007, but I never quite got back into the swing of things and returned to my hiatus at the end of the year. I am proud of my volunteer service however, having served six years as a Lieutenant in 1997, 1999-2003 and three years as a Captain from 2004-2005, 2007. I was on the Rescue Committee, which was responsible for the specifications for a new unit to replace 871. I was one of four members on the Apparatus Committee responsible for replacing our aerial ladder and also served on the Engine Committee that spec'd our sub-station pumper, which is being used as the model for future apparatus replacements occurring in 2007 & 2008. I served as chairman of the Grant Committee, which was responsible for locating and applying for alternate funding means. On February 6, 2004 our department was awarded a FY2003 Assistance to Firefighters grant for $335,700.00 from the Federal Emergency Management Agency. This grant allowed our department to outfit all of our response capable members with new structural firefighting gear, permitted the department to begin OSHA compliant respirator fit-testing for the first time, and provided for the purchase of Kidde's mobile live-fire training trailer. Then, on August 14, 2004 we were awarded a FY2004 grant in the amount of $231,030.00 which was used to completely replace our self contained breathing apparatus with MSA’s NFPA 1981 (2002 edition) compliant FireHawk air mask. The new units are equipped with a lightweight Airframe harness, RIC/UAC connection, Quick-Fill system, CBRN protection, wireless HUD, ClearCommand voice amplification, and the ICM Tx Integrated PASS device which is capable of being upgraded for use with MSA's telemetric accountability system once it is released to market. I have served on the following committees at one time or another:
I was a founding member of the fire department's Slope and Vertical Emergency Rescue (SAVER) Team, and one of the original members of the Cecil County Department of Emergency Services' Biohazard Team, a precursor of the current DES Haz-Mat Team. I continue to work at the Annapolis (Maryland) Fire Department having begun my career there by accepting the position on Monday, June 26, 2000. I started the Anne Arundel County Fire Academy on August 3, 2000 and graduated February 2, 2001 at the top of my class with a 97.11% grade point average. For doing so, I received the Chief of the Department's Scholastic Achievement Award. I spent most of my first couple years assigned to Engine 35 located on Forest Drive. Engine 35 is the busiest Engine in the city and was ranked 150th in Firehouse magazine's 2002 National Run Survey. While there, I participated in an auto extrication incident on September 29, 2002 for which I received the AFD Exemplary Performance Award and an Anne Arundel county fire department Unit Citation. In addition to those awards, I have received the following commendations during my years as a volunteer & career firefighter:
Currently, I am assigned to Engine 38, at the Taylor Avenue Station (TAS), which is responsible to staff the Rescue Squad and Haz-Mat unit. TAS is located just outside the gates of the beautiful United States Naval Academy, and includes the Navy-Marine Corp Stadium, Maryland's State House, Saint John's College, downtown Annapolis, and historic Main Street within it's first due area. I obtained my Class B Non-Commercial driver's license and, having completed the department's qualification procedures, served my first shift as Driver/Operator on June 19, 2006. On Thursday, December 12, 2007 I was promoted to Firefighter First Class. Since then I have served several shifts as an Acting Lieutenant at both Engine 35 & Engine 36 in Eastport. I have been qualified on Tower 39, the 95' aerial platform stationed at TAS, and with the promotion of the infamous Joe Crane, I have now taken over as the First Class assigned to Engine 38 on the Second Platoon. This past spring, the department sent me to MFRI's Instructor Skills course, which is the fourth of six steps to becoming a MICRB certified fire service instructor. Once I complete 66 hours of Practice & Interim Student Teaching I will be eligible to be a Maryland State Emergency Services Instructor. I have also been selected to be one of the support instructors for the upcoming Annapolis Fire Academy Class #01 starting in July. It should be an exciting time! I'll be sure to keep you up to date on how things go... See me in action!
Oh Well, enough about me. I'll let you get back to my Web Page....
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