San Mateo Fire Department
The City of San Mateo citizens service academy spent an evening at the Fire Department. These are some of my notes and pictures...
The evening began a little bit late. They had forgotten to schedule no fires
that afternoon ... so, they were just returning from a two-alarm fire.
A nine-year veteran fire-fighter (that's him in the picture -- with
all of the "reflectors" on their coats in the background) gave
us a tour of the station except that we couldn't slide down the pole.
I doubt that photos of their sleeping quarters, exercise area, kitchen,
or even their unisex toilet facilities would be of much interest. However,
what would a tour of a fire station be without photos of a fire engine...
(these two are photos of a fire truck -- trucks are what we used to call
"hook and ladders", and engines are what we used to call "fire
trucks"). This truck can reach up to eight floors, but the tallest
buildings in San Mateo are fifteen stories tall. It's amazing that
if they had to fight a fire in a tall building that they'd have to run
up from the ground floor (leaving the ladder to shoot water).
My wife jokes that male fire fighters are usually handsome and in great
condition. Well, this is a picture for her --- yes, he's very handsome
and in great condition. Just wearing that coat and helmet is tough since
they weigh a ton... and then they have to be able to run up fifteen flights
of stairs carrying 75 pounds of gear and hoses. San Mateo currently has
two female fire fighters, but none were on duty this night. The fire fighters
work a 24 hour shift, one day on, one off, one on, one off, one on, then
four days off.
We spent some time chatting with Fire Chief William McDonald. He gave us
a short introduction to the fire department, their plans for the future,
and where we stand compared to other departments in the area. Last year
they responded to about 7,400 "incidents" of which about 60% were
medical and not fire related. This is a tough and challenging job. I'm
just amazed that San Mateo fire fighters are below the mean for pay in this
area!
Other fire fighters spoke on fire prevention and fire inspections. We were flabbergasted that the the builders of the condos going in at Bay Meadows were balking at installing sprinklers (seems that sprinklers are not needed for all new multi-family residences!). Another presentation was a slide show presenting photos ranging back about a hundred years.
San Mateo is in the process of upgrading many of the fire fighters from
EMTs to be Paramedics. The plan is to have at least one Paramedic fire
fighter on each engine. Since fire engines respond in about 4-7 minutes
(or less if they can) and the ambulances can take up to 8-15 minutes, this
would mean that medical emergencies could be responded to much faster.
The fire fighter in the yellow jacket is in charge of the Paramedic training.
As Paramedics, they are able to intubate and use the defibrillator (just
below the intubation dummy in the picture).
Go back to the Citizens' Service Academy page