Make this page my home page

  1. Drag the home icon in this panel and drop it onto the "house icon" in the tool bar for the browser

  2. Select "Yes" from the popup window and you're done!

Lion Apparel Introduces Flame-Resistant, ...

Fire grant is a shot in the arm for Utah district

Fire Grants Tips
Writing your SAFER Grants application Top 5 Reasons Why Applications Do Not Make it to Panel Review Remember the role of grants in firefighter safety Use online grants applications when possible Get another set of eyes on your grant narrative
More tips
Videos
Masimo at EMS Today 2008
More Videos
Featured Product
RAD-57

RAD-57™
Pulse CO-Oximeter™


Request Information

Fire Grants Article

Print Talk BackRegisterBookmarkRSSWhat's This


Fire grant is a shot in the arm for Utah district

By Amy Choate-Nielsen
Deseret Morning News
Copyright 2006 The Deseret News Publishing Co. 

ALPINE, Utah - The Lone Peak Safety District's holiday gifts came early this year, in the form of a $931,500 grant from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

The grant will pay for nine new full-time firefighters over the next five years, which is good tidings to the district's small — and mostly part-time — staff.

"It's almost a million-dollar shot in the arm to help this area, which is great," said Deputy Chief Brad Freeman of the Lone Peak Safety District. "We're going through some growing pains, big time."

The district, which currently employs three full-time and 25 part-time firefighters, provides police and fire protection to Alpine, Highland and Cedar Hills. The paid staff is supplemented with volunteers, but Freeman says at this point, they're scraping by to meet the needs of the some 30,000 residents of the area.

"At night we just have two firefighters available, part-time," Freeman said. "Then we can count on some volunteers, but it's been kind of sparse lately. Typically, an average house fire takes a minimum of six guys, according to (National Fire Protection Agency) standards."

According to Freeman, each fire truck should carry a captain, fire engineer and four firefighters. The captain and fire engineer stay with the truck, pumping water and advising the firefighters from the outside.

Two firefighters will go inside to battle the blaze, and two are supposed to wait on the outside, fully dressed, with oxygen tanks, to assist the firefighters inside in case of a backdraft or the building collapses.

Freeman says the district can usually handle fires or medical emergencies when they arise, but when multiple calls come in at the same time, the team is stretched. The district can ask for mutual aid from surrounding fire departments. It usually takes about 15 to 20 minutes for the aid to arrive, Freeman says, "but that's usually too long."

"There's not one of our guys who wouldn't go in and try to save somebody even if we didn't have enough people," Freeman said. "They're still going to do that, they always have. But this (grant) is going to be a major step."

With the grant, the district will now have six full-time firefighters and paramedics on around the clock. Freeman says the district hopes to hire from within, and hiring should be completed within 90 days.

Alpine, Cedar Hills and Highland will help supplement the grant with $99,000, which will be divided up between the three cities and paid by percentage of how big each city is, over a period of four years.

"We're all in it together," said Cedar Hills City Councilman Jim Perry. "The service for one is a service for all. We're three musketeers in that respect."

Perry and Alpine Mayor Hunt Willoughby said the district's fire coverage is superb, but because of the growth of the area, the cities are trending away from a part-time department. The trick is, they said, is finding a balance between the needs of the district and the taxes residents are willing to pay.

In the meantime, the district is continuing to look for more government funds to help ease the transition into an entirely full-time department.

"I think we've gotten all the grants we've applied for," Lone Peak Safety District Fire Chief Craig Carlisle said. "We're always looking and we're always working on grants. We will be working on them to try to get as much grant money as we can get." 



LexisNexis Copyright © 2008 LexisNexis, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.   Terms and Conditions Privacy Policy


Print Talk BackRegisterBookmarkRSSWhat's This

Member Comments: Submit Your Comment
FireRescue1 encourages its members to comment on this article in the comments section below. You must be a registered member of FireRescue1 to post a comment. The comments below are member-generated and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of FireRescue1 or its staff.

Most Commented Articles
 1.  The Things I Carried
 2.  Federal high-visibility vest rule takes effect
 3.  Interior Use of Positive Pressure – Part 1
 4.  Vacant buildings boarded up after vagrants blamed in Va. fire
 5.  What's Going On Out There?
 6.  Fla. city settles suit with volunteer firefighters
 7.  Safety of Ohio firefighters put to test by area company
 8.  Ohio fire chief under investigation over alleged shoving
 9.  Mo. chief says FD conflict still about race
 10.  Heads bow in memory of 9/11 victims



Back to previous page


Fire Grants Resources
Grants Basics
Writing A Good Narrative
What is a grant?
Grants Reference
The Path to Grants Success
AGF 2008 Tutorial
Grants Research
The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance (CFDA)
Grants.gov
Grants Tools
Fire Prevention and Safety Grants Online Tutorial
Fire Prevention and Safety Grants Program Guidance (PDF)
 More Fire Grants Resources
Fire Grants Articles
Pa. fire, ambulance companies get $1M grant - 11/25/2008 ND ambulance service receives federal grant - 11/21/2008 Fire truck financing: Surviving the credit crunch - 11/14/2008 AFG Awards: Show Me the Money! - 11/07/2008 DHS announces grant guidance for $3 billion in preparedness grant programs - 11/05/2008
More articles
Fire Grants Official Announcements
DHS announces round 12 of Assistance to Firefighters Grant awards DHS announces round 11 of Assistance to Firefighters Grant awards DHS announces round 3 of SAFER Grants DHS announces round 46 of 2007 Assistance to Firefighters Grant awards Department of Homeland Security Awards $14 Million Responder Knowledge Base Services Contract to SAIC