Union Meeting
The minutes from the two-shift Union Meeting held on July 19-20, 2010 are now posted. The door prize for this Union Meeting had reached $325. However, Mike Wilson was disqualified from the winnings after his name was drawn from the membership pool. (You must be present at one of the meetings to win.) (Union Meeting...)
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Hazmat Challenge Team
July 21, 2008 - The
Farmington Fire Department took top honors in the 2008 HAZMAT
Challenge, winning both the Technical Events and the Overall awards
categories.
Ten teams from New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Arizona competed in the
12th annual HAZMAT Challenge at the Laboratory’s Hazardous Materials
Training Facility at Technical Area 49.
Participants competed in simulated, real-life hazardous material
situations. They dealt with obstacles such as chemical hazard
identification, a complex valve tree, confined space rescue and
procedure, compressed gas leaks, a leaking rail car dome,
pressurized drum opening, a stinger operation, and a damming-and-diking
exercise from an overturned tanker.
The Challenge wrapped up last Friday with the running of an obstacle
course and awards. The following is a list of teams and the order of
finish in the challenge:
NFD Hazmat Team Take 3rd Place in Hazmat Challenge
(The
Norman Transcript)
July 29, 2006 - A regional hazmat team comprised of
firefighters from the Norman and Moore fire departments finished in
third place out of 15 hazmat teams entered in the 10th annual Hazmat
Challenge, conducted Tuesday through Friday at the Los Alamos
National Laboratory in Los Alamos, N.M.
The Challenge, conducted at the Los Alamos National Laboratory
hazardous materials training facility, is designed to test hazardous
materials response skills and simulates eight hazardous materials
incidents: Chemical identification in a clandestine drug lab,
biological identification in a sick patient, confined space rescue,
off-loading materials from an overturned tanker, complex valve and
piping leaks, a railcar crash, a radiological incident and an
overturned tanker spill.
"The newly developed regional hazmat team did exceptionally well,"
said Norman Deputy Chief Jim Bailey. "Most fire departments send the
same guys over and over and treat this as a competition. We send
different firefighters
The participating firefighters from Norman were Grant Deason, Travis King, Craig Roberts, Chad Roney and Jason Smith. The Moore firefighters were Tippy Pierce, Mark Murdock, Grainger McKinney and Jimmy Secrist.
The Los Alamos National Laboratory's Hazardous Materials Response team began the Challenge in 1996 as a way to hone the skills of its own members.
Teams participating in this year's Challenge included the 64th Civil Support Team, New Mexico National Guard; Clovis (N.M.) Fire Department; Espa?ola (N.M.) Fire Department; Farmington (N.M.) Fire Department; Gallup (N.M.) Fire Department; Intel-Tucson, Ariz.; Intel FAB 11/11X-Rio Rancho, N.M.; LANL HAZMAT; Las Cruces (N.M.) Fire Department; Los Alamos (N.M.) Fire Department; Midwest City Fire Department; Norman-Moore Combined Hazmat Unit; New Mexico State Police; Portales (N.M.) Fire Department and the Santa Fe (N.M.) Fire Department.
Bailey said the cities of Norman and Moore, alternating on a monthly basis, house a Regional Hazardous Materials Response Unit that will be specially equipped to respond to natural disasters, hazardous spills or terrorist attacks. The truck, provided through a $446,000 grant from the federal Department of Homeland Security, will carry about $300,000 in equipment, including computerized command centers, satellite communications systems, infrared substance monitors, splash suits and breathing masks.
"Talk about unusual circumstances. This is one of the few instances in the nation where two municipalities operate to-gether on one unit," Bailey said.
In all, five Regional Hazardous Materials Response Units were delivered to Moore/Norman, Tulsa, Oklahoma City, Lawton and Claremore, and are strategically placed along the Interstate 44 corridor to allow for a quick response statewide. The Regional Response System also includes 20 intermediate vehicles, 24 small decontamination trailers, two urban search and rescue trailers and two mass decontamination units.




