Trending Topics

‘More than just a building': Ill. FD unveils long-awaited training center

The new facility gives Effingham firefighters a place to practice real-world rescue and fire scenarios locally, rather than traveling to other cities for training

By Marie Adamick
Effingham Daily News

EFFINGHAM, Ill. — Effingham Fire Chief Brant Yochum introduced the city’s new fire training center on Friday afternoon with a ribbon cutting and open house.

Yochum thanked the community, elected officials and mutual-aid partners.

“This training center is more than just a building. It’s a commitment from this department to keep getting better every, single day,” said Yochum. “At the end of the day, that means safer firefighters and better service to this community.”

Before Friday’s grand opening, firefighters were sent to Marion, Swansea or Champaign for their training.

“Training is everything we do, and now we’ve got a place where we can train more realistically, more consistently and right here at home,” said Yochum.

The new facility allows firefighters to train in various scenarios, including a fire in an attic and balcony rescues.

Designs and plans for the new facility date back to before Yochum was with the Effingham Fire Department. However, there wasn’t enough funding until recently to build the new training center.

“It took about a whole year for us to get this completed, by the time we moved to the bid spec, figuring out exactly what we wanted included, going through it, getting the funding,” said Yochum. “Once they actually started building, it was about three-and-a-half weeks, and then they were done.”

Yochum also thanked Public Works Director Jeremy Heuerman, City Administrator Steve Miller, U.S. Rep. Mike Bost and more for their support.

“It’s about the community we’re here to protect. We are proud of what we’ve built here, and we’re excited about what it means going forward,” said Yochum. “This facility is a prize to our firefighters and to this community. And we’re going to keep training harder, sharpening our skills, and always be ready when you need us the most.”

Would a local — in your city or community — training center help with recruitment? What other facility features impact recruitment and retention for your department?



Trending
Rochester firefighters faced heavy fire and reports of a trapped occupant, working through dangerous conditions and a partial roof collapse
Salt Creek Emergency Services, a volunteer department, relies on donated vehicles and a small budget as repair bills, fuel costs and equipment needs continue to climb
A Medina firefighter was briefly trapped when part of a second-floor ceiling collapsed, prompting a Mayday call and rapid rescue
Carpentry students built custom training props to simulate collapsed ceilings, entanglement hazards and hose deployment scenarios for Springfield firefighters

© 2026 the Effingham Daily News (Effingham, Ill.).
Visit www.effinghamdailynews.com.
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Company News
Each year, the NFFF carries out a responsibility entrusted to it by Congress: honoring America’s fallen firefighters and standing alongside the families they leave behind. In 2026, that mission is at risk.