There seems to be some confusion over what parcels are in the LMRFD, and who pays taxes to the LMRFD. Everyone pays a tax to the Fire District Assistance Fund, usually between $2.00 and $10 a year. Many people think because it says "Fire District" Assistance Fund, in means they're in the fire district, many are not.
Use the Mohave County Assessor's Office web page, on the left you'll see a link to your Current Tax Bill. Look for Lake Mohave Ranchos FD on your tax bill. If it doesn't say "Lake Mohave Ranchos FD" you're not in the fire district.
I pay $178.78 or 22.65% of my property taxes to the LMRFD. I only pay $108.35 or 13.73% of my property taxes to Mohave County.
Please check and see if you are in the LMRFD. I talk to people every week who think they're in the LMRFD, only to find they're not. This includes some parcels only blocks from the Meadview fire station.
Don't wait until the election in May, only to find you don't receive a ballot because you're not in the fire district.
The purpose of this blog is to educate people in Dolan Springs, Meadview, White Hills about how to reduce response times for emergency medical services that can range from minutes to hours
Monday, December 28, 2015
Tuesday, December 22, 2015
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year
I hope everyone has a Merry Christmas and Happy New Year and that the new year is prosperous for you and yours.
We vote in a new fire board this next May. I hope we can come together as a community and support the new fire board in whatever course they choose.
We still need people to take the CERT Training coming up in January. SEE Confusion About CERT Training for how to contact Mike Browning to sign up, or for more information on CERT.
CERT Training is something everyone should take. It doesn't matter if you're a prepper or not, it's basic training in first aid, search and rescue, and other skills everyone who lives in a rural area should know. In case of a major emergency you can provide support for your family, friends and neighbors until emergency services can get there.
Let's Be Careful Out There
Merry Christmas
Jay & Jean Fleming
Dolan Springs Arizona
We vote in a new fire board this next May. I hope we can come together as a community and support the new fire board in whatever course they choose.
We still need people to take the CERT Training coming up in January. SEE Confusion About CERT Training for how to contact Mike Browning to sign up, or for more information on CERT.
CERT Training is something everyone should take. It doesn't matter if you're a prepper or not, it's basic training in first aid, search and rescue, and other skills everyone who lives in a rural area should know. In case of a major emergency you can provide support for your family, friends and neighbors until emergency services can get there.
Let's Be Careful Out There
Merry Christmas
Jay & Jean Fleming
Dolan Springs Arizona
Friday, December 11, 2015
Amateur Radio Volunteers Respond to Flood Emergency in Southern India:
Amateur Radio Volunteers Respond to Flood Emergency in Southern India:
from The ARRL Letter on December 10, 2015Website: http://www.arrl.org/
Add a comment about this article!
In the wake of severe flooding in Southern India resulting from several days of torrential downpours earlier this month, volunteer radio amateurs jumped in to provide emergency communication and other disaster assistance. Amateur Radio Society of India (ARSIhttp://www.arsi.info/) President Gopal Madhavan, VU2GMN, said hams swung into action soon after flood waters -- 3 to 4 meters deep in some places -- overwhelmed India's fourth-largest city, Chennai, and the surrounding region. Power outages in many parts of the affected area hampered Amateur Radio relief operations, and some radio amateurs were caught in the flooding. Hams with emergency power were able to pitch in, however, via two local repeaters. An HF network remained on standby.
Local hams, several belonging to the South India Amateur Radio Society (SIARS http://www.siars.org.in/) in Chennai, contributed to relief and rescue operations, working in part with ALERT, a non-governmental relief organization "Once it became possible to move, hams started going out assisting with delivery of food and water to stranded individuals and assisting with rescue from tall buildings, where people were trapped," Madhavan said. ARSI National Coordinator for Disaster Communication Jayu Bhide, VU2JAU, said the flooding was one of the city's worst disasters and was unexpected in a metropolitan area.
Most of the cell phone network, Internet, and other communication systems were knocked out due to power failure and flooding.
The emergency network supported communication for distributing food, tracing missing people, and providing other assistance as needed. With the conventional communication infrastructure disrupted, ham radio was a mainstay. The flooding also cut off access to several bridges, dividing the city.
Bhide said this week that Chennai is slowly recovering as the flood waters recede, but recovery is expected to take a long time. More than 300 people were reported to have died as a result of the disaster. -- Thanks to Jayu Bhide, VU2JAU, Jim Linton, VK3PC, and Gopal Madhavan, VU2GMN
Source:
The ARRL Letter
Thursday, December 10, 2015
Some Confusion About CERT Training -- Don't Forget the CERT Training in January
There Seems to Be Some Confusion About CERT Training
CERT Training is for the average citizen who wants to learn emergency
preparedness and basic emergency response skills. There’s some confusion about
the need to join a CERT Team to take the training, or be part of a CERT team
after the training.
The CERT web page says, "Completing CERT’s Basic Training Course prepares the public to safely assist family, friends, neighbors, co-workers or fellow students before professional first responders arrive, whether or not the trainee joins a CERT team".
This CERT TRAINING page explains that when disasters occur, professional first responders
are not the first on the scene. It’s going to be friends and neighbors who are
the first responders.
If roads
are impassable or the local agency’s manpower is overloaded, it may be hours — or
days — before professional help arrives. In this
environment, nonprofessional members of the public spontaneously reach out to
help those affected.
When we had the church fires, a lot of good people jumped in to help that night. Thankfully all went well and no one was injured. But if we're going to jump in and help when a disaster hits our small community, then let's get some basic training.
That way we are part of the plan, and assist local emergency services, rather than have someone get injured, and require valuable EMS resources needed elsewhere.
Taking
CERT Training will help give Dolan Springs the preparedness skills we need so
individuals and neighborhoods can reduce their dependence on emergency services
and manage on existing resources until professional assistance becomes
available.
CERT’s
Basic Training Course provides a baseline of emergency preparedness and
educates the public in basic emergency response skills. This is something everyone who lives in the country needs to learn.
If you’re
interested in taking the CERT Basic Training Course, you may want to look over
an Introduction to Citizens Response Teams IS-317,
is an independent study course that serves as an introduction to CERT for those
interested in completing the basic CERT training or as a refresher for current
team members.
The
course includes six modules: CERT Basics, Fire Safety, Hazardous Material and
Terrorist Incidents, Disaster Medical Operations, and Search and Rescue, and
Course Summary.
Hopefully
in May when a new fire board is elected, they will choose to provide the
necessary insurance for a CERT Team. We can provide additional training for
people who completed the CERT training to tailor the team to what the community
needs are.
To sign up for the CERT Training contact Mike Browning Assistant Coordinator
for Mohave County Emergency Management at 928) 757-0930 or email him at
mike.browning@mohavecounty.us
Saturday, December 5, 2015
FCC wants to stop allowing cell phones with no service to call 911
In an article in Urgent Communications the FCC wants to stop allowing cell phones with no service to call 911. Today many people have pre-paid cell phones and run out of minutes, or can miss paying a bill and not have cell service. This was part of the governments deal with the cell phone companies in return for the use of the airways we all own.
Abuse of the 911 system comes from many sources, landlines, pay phones, cell phones, and NSI cell phones. If someone is abusing the 911 system, have the nice policeman who shows up explain things to them. If they continue, have a judge explain it.
Everyone needs to have the ability to call for help. That was the deal the cell companies made in return for using our airways.
Jay
FCC’s Rosenworcel says non-service-initialized (NSI) phone policy for calling 911 should be changed
Non Service Initialized Cell Phones
Non-service-initialized (NSI) cell phones—devices that that are not subscribed to a wireless carrier—no longer should be able to call 911 as they are today, because circumstances have changed substantially since the policy was established almost 20 years ago, FCC Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel said during the recent APCO Emerging Technology Forum in Atlanta.
Non-service-initialized (NSI) cell phones—devices that that are not subscribed to a wireless carrier—no longer should be able to call 911 as they are today, because circumstances have changed substantially since the policy was established almost 20 years ago, FCCCommissioner Jessica Rosenworcel said during the recent APCO Emerging Technology Forum in Atlanta.
In recent years, representatives of the 911 community have called for the FCC to review rules regarding the ability for NSI phones to call 911. When the NSI rules were created in 1996, programs were established to collect NSI phones and distribute them to people in need—domestic-violence victims being a prime example—so they could dial 911 in case of emergency.
But the NSI functionality increasingly is being used to call public-safety answering points(PSAPs) with thousands of non-emergency calls—some relatively innocent, many blatantly deceitful—that absorb considerable time and resources within 911 centers. At the same time, mobile devices have become almost ubiquitous, so the need for NSI phones to call 911 has decreased dramatically.
“So, the technology and times have changed, but our rules stay the same. And, in the interim, this has become a source of harassment,” Rosenworcel said during a question-and-answer session at the APCO event. “People now use these non-service-initialized phones to waste the time, energy and expertise of our 911 call centers.
“When I look at all of that, I think it’s time for us to get rid of this policy.”
Rosenworcel noted that the NSI issue is the focus of an ongoing proceeding at the FCC, which also wants to ensure that reasonable alternatives are provided to those that still rely on NSI devices.
“I think the challenge is just figuring out precisely how to get rid of it, so that we don’t leave anyone who might be relying on a non-service-initialized phone stuck. But it’s very clear to me that it’s time for that policy to go—it’s not 1996 anymore.
Wednesday, December 2, 2015
Kingman Miner - Chloride may have to provide its own firefighters
In a recent article in the Kingman Daily Miner about Chloride's consolidation with NACFD, Chief Moore said "After they consolidated, we were
subsidizing a firefighter out there. "With
the downturn, we couldn't do that anymore."
Does that mean the Chloride fire truck will stay in Kingman? I haven't seen anything where it was returned to Chloride.
Chief Moore went on to say, "At some level, the rural communities, these small communities, the solution out there is that people are going to have to go to school to become firefighters. We'll help provide you the training. You just need to provide the individuals willing and able to do it," said Moore.
Brings home the point small rural fire districts need volunteers. Hopefully the new fire board will find money for volunteers. As I understand the NACFD is only 70 square miles. The LMRFD is 144 sm's, and the LMRFD ambulance covers 2200 sm's.
This meeting comes just after the NACFD board of directors voted not to consolidate with another rural fire district, Lake Mohave Ranchos, based in Dolan Springs.
That district is now looking to re-establish a fire chief and board of directors. The election is in May, so make sure you're registered to vote, and live in the LMRFD.
Jay
Does that mean the Chloride fire truck will stay in Kingman? I haven't seen anything where it was returned to Chloride.
Chief Moore went on to say, "At some level, the rural communities, these small communities, the solution out there is that people are going to have to go to school to become firefighters. We'll help provide you the training. You just need to provide the individuals willing and able to do it," said Moore.
Brings home the point small rural fire districts need volunteers. Hopefully the new fire board will find money for volunteers. As I understand the NACFD is only 70 square miles. The LMRFD is 144 sm's, and the LMRFD ambulance covers 2200 sm's.
This meeting comes just after the NACFD board of directors voted not to consolidate with another rural fire district, Lake Mohave Ranchos, based in Dolan Springs.
That district is now looking to re-establish a fire chief and board of directors. The election is in May, so make sure you're registered to vote, and live in the LMRFD.
Jay
Monday, November 30, 2015
LAKE MOHAVE RANCHOS FIRE DISTRICT is HIRING
HIRING
The LAKE MOHAVE RANCHOS FIRE DISTRICT IS ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR IMMEDIATE CONSIDERATION for Firefighter/Paramedic and Firefighter/EMT.
Applications are being accepted for Fire Chief, Administrative Assistant, and volunteers, to be considered after the Fire Board Election May 17, 2016. Please access the application at the bottom of this page, and after completing, email to LMRFD@CITLINK.NET.
Monday, November 23, 2015
People in Meadview Don't Understand How Many Parcels Were NOT in the Old Grapevine FD, and are NOT in the LMRFD
Everyone needs to look at the map of Meadview to see how many people there don't pay banything to the LMRFD, yet get the same services as those of us who do.
Map of the LMRFD
Link http://mcgis.mohavecounty.us/Silverlight_1_9/?Viewer=moh&Project=0803e1c8-e9a8-40ae-aef4-f121fecba7ab
You will need MS Explorer and Silverlight to view the map.
Please zoom in on Meadview and see for your self.
Jay
Map of the LMRFD
Link http://mcgis.mohavecounty.us/Silverlight_1_9/?Viewer=moh&Project=0803e1c8-e9a8-40ae-aef4-f121fecba7ab
You will need MS Explorer and Silverlight to view the map.
Please zoom in on Meadview and see for your self.
Jay
Sunday, November 22, 2015
Who Went to the Fire Station, Who Were the Firefighters they Talked To?
We need to know where these rumors are coming from about cutting firefighter pay.
Who was it that went to the fire station?
Who are the firefighters spreading this rumor?
Does anyone know the truth?
Jay
Who was it that went to the fire station?
Who are the firefighters spreading this rumor?
Does anyone know the truth?
Jay
Sunday, November 15, 2015
Reply to Vince Salmu and His Secret Email List
Reply to Vince Salmu
Vince
You're a bully, you try and force people to your will. I try to educate people. You are the most unprofessional so called businessman I've ever seen, even belittling your employees in front of customers.
You resort to name calling like a small child, and should not represent anyone.
This is the last time I will reply to your rants because of you're unprofessional conduct and name calling.
NOTE: The Black and Blue text below is from Vince.
The Red text is my reply.
Are you the one who spoke to the firefighters causing two to quit? It was someone...
NOTE: The Black and Blue text below is from Vince.
The Red text is my reply.
From: Vince Salmu <vincesalmu@gmail.com>
Date: November 15, 2015 at 4:10:11 AM MST
To: undisclosed-recipients:;
Subject: Fwd: Fleming
Date: November 15, 2015 at 4:10:11 AM MST
To: undisclosed-recipients:;
Subject: Fwd: Fleming
What gives this moron
the right to speak for the community? He has a big mouth with foolish stupid ideas, I do not want
him representing me at all.
Name calling, really professional.
Why would anyone with
mention their location to other country's? These are actions of a person who is concerned about
fame, self status and just a brain dead zombie on a mission of no good. He has
had little to stir up since the fire Dept issue is coming to an end soon.
More name calling.... I thought the point was to get visitors from other countries, they're called tourists.
I believe he should
put is his own address on there also, It would be best if they tried the gas
can idea there first,better then our homes. What better place to start then from where the foolish
information started. Maybe his Russians friends can get the word out.
Learn to read... I didn't say someone tried anything, now did I? A gas can was on the side of the road and no one noticed. For you to even suggest that someone burn down our home after the church fires is reckless and irresponsible.
He has only lived here
now for about 2 years,he claims to have all this training. Why would a highly
trained, educated ,terrorists expert move to a place that sat in the middle of
three as he claims potential targets? why? why? It is very obvious that
the training did not stick in his head. He should have chose to
live in a place far away from potential targets, I think the smart
guy would have done that. he has some very deep issues as his actions are not
on the norm of what most would do.He is the one we should keep an eye on.
Let's sit down and compare training, anytime. WOW
Why with a sucessful business in Las Vegas move to Dolan Springs? So he can charge local low income people $1 a gallon more for gas?
Why with a sucessful business in Las Vegas move to Dolan Springs? So he can charge local low income people $1 a gallon more for gas?
This Jay is one of the
people who wants to run our fire Department services, I believe he is in the
group that is attempting to put a plan together to run the department as stand
alone. Why would you people who are in the group or the rest of us want this
moron doing any more damage?
I think they have picked the wrong guy to support them. We as a community need
to have this observed and his actions detailed and documented. He is a radical
who can do no good for the future of our community. I will not support the
group he he is involved in, Maybe they also should be looked at.He could be
speaking or them also as he has attempted to speak for us in his blogs.
More name calling... you're not the professional I want to represent me? Vince pay attention, consolidation failed, it is a stand alone fire district. You are all about money and could care less how many people die due to poor EMS services. What if you have a heart attack VInce? The current manpower couldn't load you in the ambulance, let alone do CPR.
I am attaching a screenshot of Fleming's latest blog post, along
with some responses. It appears that now that he has succeeded in
derailing the consolidation and run off our Fire Fighters and EMS personnel
with his blog, he is now exposing our location and weaknesses to the terrorists
of the world...along with "how-to's" !
Yes Vince the terrorists didn't know where we had hidden Las Vegas, Hoover Dam, and the Grand Canyon, sorry. As far as how to, it seems by the looks of Paris they have that covered. We need to pray for the people of Paris.
Yes Vince the terrorists didn't know where we had hidden Las Vegas, Hoover Dam, and the Grand Canyon, sorry. As far as how to, it seems by the looks of Paris they have that covered. We need to pray for the people of Paris.
He has misappropriated the LMRFD logo as well, giving him the
appearance of having some authority to speak on our community's behalf. I
hope someone with the ability to talk sense into him will be able to do so
before he causes us any more damage
Wednesday, November 11, 2015
Small Sleepy Towns Can Be A Dangerous Place
The world changed on September 11th, America became a lot less secure when almost 3000 people died at the hands of terrorist, That's what terrorist do, create fear in peoples minds.
Much of my training in law enforcement had to do with drugs, intelligence, and covert operations, Because of this I was trained in both intelligence gathering, and counter-intelligence. So I look at the world different than most people.
We sit near three major terrorist targets, Las Vegas playground to the world, Hoover Dam a symbol of our nations power, and the Grand Canyon one of the seven natural wonders of the world,
We think of Dolan Springs and Meadview as sleepy little towns on the way to the Grand Canyon. But we sit between two primary terrorist targets, Hoover Dam and the Grand Canyon. Tourists from all over the world come to both of these attractions, Bombing a bus load of tourists would make people afraid to cross the dam, or visit the Grand Canyon. Terrorists use buses as targets all the time in other countries.
We need to be much more observant than we are. We need to learn what to look for as far as suspicious activity, and suspicious items. In Mohave Valley I watched a 5 gallon gas can sit 5' off the side of US-95 for a month before the highway department picked it up.
During my police academy training during bomb investigations, they put a gallon of gas with an electric blasting cap inside a two bedroom home. When the blasting cap was set off, there was fire out every window in that home. Imagine what five gallons of gas would do? Improvised Explosive Devices, IED's, are made from anything the terrorist can find, even a simple gas can.
Hopefully nothing like this will ever come to our community, but if it does, we need to prepare for the worst, and pray for the best.
Please be observant, if you see something suspicious, tell someone.
Jay
Sunday, November 8, 2015
What We Can Do While Waiting for a New Fire Board
As we move forward waiting for the election of a new board of directors for the LMRFD, there are things we can do.
Dolan Springs, Meadview, and White Hills all need volunteers to assist in emergencies. The LMRFD is responsible for fire service inside the 144sm LMRFD, and the 2200sm ambulance area.
With the limited manpower in the LMRFD for both fire service and EMS, a Citizens Emergency Response Team, or CERT could provide various support services to the the sheriff's office, DPS, LMRFD firefighters, as well as other services that would benifit the entire community especially in emergencies.
Mike Browning at Mohave County Emergency Management tells me there will be a training course for a local CERT Team, or Citizens Emergency Response Team coming up in January 2016.
He needs around 20 people. So now is the time for people in Dolan Springs, Meadview, White Hills, and West of US93 to give Mike a call and support their community.
The fire district needs to support a CERT team. I hope the new fire board will be interested in volunteers and support things like a CERT Team.
Mohave County CERT Team Information
Contact Mike Browning
He needs around 20 people. So now is the time for people in Dolan Springs, Meadview, White Hills, and West of US93 to give Mike a call and support their community.
The fire district needs to support a CERT team. I hope the new fire board will be interested in volunteers and support things like a CERT Team.
Mohave County CERT Team Information
Contact Mike Browning
- Emergency Mgmt. Assistant Coordinator, Mike Browning
- 928) 757-0930
- mike.browning@mohavecounty.us
Thanks
Jay
Thursday, November 5, 2015
Need to Wait Until Election in May.... Until Then Leave the Firefighters Alone
Apparently some people have been speaking to firefighters about the future of the LMRFD, creating some problems.
It's been decided the LMRFD won't consolidate with the NACFD. Now we need to wait until May 17th and the election of a new board of directors for the LMRFD.
Please let the firefighters do their jobs until people with the authority to speak for the community, the new fire board who takes control after the May election.
Jay Fleming
Friday, October 30, 2015
Sign Up for CERT Training Now
We need everyone interested in volunteering as a firefighter, EMT, ambulance attendant driver, or what ever for the LMRFD, to take the upcoming CERT training.
Mike Browning at Mohave County Emergency Management tells me there will be a training course for a local CERT Team, or Citizens Emergency Response Team coming up in January 2016.
At this time the training will be in Chloride or Kingman. If we get enough people, we may be able to talk them into having some classes in our area.
He needs around 20 people. So now is the time to show everyone there are good people in Dolan Springs, Meadview, and White Hills who will volunteer.
The fire district needs to support a CERT team. I think the new fire board will be interested in volunteers.
Mohave County CERT Team Information
Contact Mike Browning
At this time the training will be in Chloride or Kingman. If we get enough people, we may be able to talk them into having some classes in our area.
He needs around 20 people. So now is the time to show everyone there are good people in Dolan Springs, Meadview, and White Hills who will volunteer.
The fire district needs to support a CERT team. I think the new fire board will be interested in volunteers.
Mohave County CERT Team Information
Contact Mike Browning
- Emergency Mgmt. Assistant Coordinator, Mike Browning
- 928) 757-0930
- mike.browning@mohavecounty.us
Thanks
Jay
Mohave County Supervisors Meeting Monday Nov 2nd
Don't forget the Mohave County Supervisors meeting. It's Monday November 2nd at 9:30AM Mohave County Administration Building Offices at 700 W. Beale Street.
It's not over, we're just starting....
Jay
It's not over, we're just starting....
Jay
Tuesday, October 27, 2015
Check Voter registration and if You're in the LMRFD
You can check your voter registration and districts here Arizona Voters
make sure you're registered to vote, and that you're in LMRFD before the fire board election.
Jay
make sure you're registered to vote, and that you're in LMRFD before the fire board election.
Jay
Monday, October 26, 2015
How to Run for the LMRFD Fire Board
I spoke to Allen at the Mohave County Elections Department about how to run for the fire board. He wasn't sure if the election would be in March or May. It should be decided at the next supervisors meeting next Monday.
If you're interested in running goto the Candidate Filing Information page. Under Non-Partisan Candidate Packet (Fire, Water, & MCC School Board): Download the checklist. Do your homework....
If you're going to run for the fire board you should talk to someone at the elections department to make sure you get things right.
Good luck
Jay
If you're interested in running goto the Candidate Filing Information page. Under Non-Partisan Candidate Packet (Fire, Water, & MCC School Board): Download the checklist. Do your homework....
If you're going to run for the fire board you should talk to someone at the elections department to make sure you get things right.
Good luck
Jay
Monday, October 19, 2015
LMRFD Fire Board Meeting Today
LMRFD Fire Board Meeting Today @ 1:30 PM
Come be part of the process of building our fire district and EMS system. Don't sit just sit home, it's your community, lets stay involved in what's going on.
Come be part of the process of building our fire district and EMS system. Don't sit just sit home, it's your community, lets stay involved in what's going on.
Friday, October 16, 2015
No Consolidation for LMRFD
The NACFD board voted 3 to 2 not to consolidate with the LMRFD last night at the NACFD board meeting. As I understand there will be a ballot by mail in some time in March.
Now it's time to establish a new fire board and get to work building an effective fire EMS system for the Dolan Springs, Meadview, and White Hills areas.
I want to thank Mr Flynn and Chief Moore for getting the LMRFD back on it'd feet, and the NACFD for allowing the people to choose a new fire board so we can continue to serve our community.
Jay
Now it's time to establish a new fire board and get to work building an effective fire EMS system for the Dolan Springs, Meadview, and White Hills areas.
I want to thank Mr Flynn and Chief Moore for getting the LMRFD back on it'd feet, and the NACFD for allowing the people to choose a new fire board so we can continue to serve our community.
Jay
Wednesday, October 14, 2015
Reply to All
Reply
Sept 29 post on “DolanEMSProblems” by Jay Fleming
“So by requiring the ambulance EMT's to be firefighters we severely limit our volunteer pool. We may have a wealth of experienced women with a medical backgrounds out there who have no interest in being a firefighter. We'll never know unless we ask.” FALSE Claim
We currently have 1 Female EMT volunteer in Meadview on the roster with NO fire. We had 1 volunteer Paramedic in Meadview, recruited, checked out, certs brought up to date by Chief Moore’s efforts. NO fire.
The only job description ever given to me or anyone I know is for a firefighter EMT. Show me one document from LMRFD that says volunteers don't need to be firefighters.
At the October 6 Focus Group presentation, Donna Wickerd indicated that $70,000 would be paid by the LMRFD to NACFD after consolidation as our % of operational costs. She was not sure what that was for. It would cover our cost of a Fire Chief, Battalion Chiefs, IT & Radio personnel, grant writer, Administration personnel services IE: payroll, payables, receivables, records management, an EMS Coordinator, and supplies purchasing.
Donna’s conclusion, however, indicated that the determination by the focus group is that “there would be NO benefit to either the LMRFD or NACFD by consolidating.”
$70,000, in my opinion, is considerable benefit to NACFD. Chief Moore at one point stated it would buy NACFD a fire fighter. All of the operational and management services that the $70,000 would purchase for the LMRFD is also considerable, easily costing the LMRFD $200,000/year to replicate. The additional UNPAID benefit of a proven, stable structure already in place from which we can continue to grow our fire & EMS services, and a GOOD reputation with vendors and lending institutions is incalculable.
Donna Wickerd’s statement in her presentation that “there would be no hope of any volunteer program going forward after consolidation” because of NACFD’s “policy against a volunteer program”, is disingenuous. Donna and other members of her group have been told repeatedly in several public meetings by Chief Moore that he is open to a volunteer program; he just needs people to show up to volunteer. He has proven his sincerity in pursuing qualified volunteers. The Paramedic volunteer he spent months putting through the background tests, updating of certs, etc. in 2014 showed up for a couple of calls before leaving the area in a hurry. We currently have a female volunteer EMT on the roster in Meadview.
That's because when people call to volunteer, no one called them back over the past few years. Show me one web page that says NACFD is looking for volunteers. I'm sorry they made a bad choice in paramedics. It proves my point we need local volunteers, Dolan and Meadview is culture shock to outsiders. In the middle of nowhere, what do you mean they haul water?
The issue is NOT any imagined “NACFD policy against volunteers”. It is (1) the lack of volunteers in our area stepping up, and (2) a lack of commitment by volunteers who do step up. This is the reality of the area in which we live. We do not have the quality or quantity of volunteers that some other areas of the country have. To survive, we must work within that reality. To COUNT on volunteers for any plan going forward is suicide! To survive we must maintain a stable base of paid personnel and management which NACFD has already established and which consolidation would continue to provide. From that stable base we can then train and utilize volunteers as they step up, and as their qualifications allow, for such things as recruiting more volunteers, pursuing annexation of Meadview’s $265,000 potential tax base into the District, organizing regular trainings for firefighters & EMS personnel, and community outreach projects, etc.
Not COUNTING on volunteers could mean your death if no one shows up, or an ambulance or fire truck with one person. If you want the calls where one person shows up, left me know.
The ongoing disinformation being propagated by the focus group to undermine the consolidation effort brings into question their sincerity in their claim to be “neutral, with no agenda”. Obviously not true!
Don't listen to me, do your homework, look up fire department staffing lawsuits. Look up your chance of survival with an ambulance 45 minutes to who knows when.
Without volunteers we're in trouble.. When people know we have one ambulance sometimes, how many will visit or move here?
Sept 29 post on “DolanEMSProblems” by Jay Fleming
“So by requiring the ambulance EMT's to be firefighters we severely limit our volunteer pool. We may have a wealth of experienced women with a medical backgrounds out there who have no interest in being a firefighter. We'll never know unless we ask.” FALSE Claim
We currently have 1 Female EMT volunteer in Meadview on the roster with NO fire. We had 1 volunteer Paramedic in Meadview, recruited, checked out, certs brought up to date by Chief Moore’s efforts. NO fire.
The only job description ever given to me or anyone I know is for a firefighter EMT. Show me one document from LMRFD that says volunteers don't need to be firefighters.
At the October 6 Focus Group presentation, Donna Wickerd indicated that $70,000 would be paid by the LMRFD to NACFD after consolidation as our % of operational costs. She was not sure what that was for. It would cover our cost of a Fire Chief, Battalion Chiefs, IT & Radio personnel, grant writer, Administration personnel services IE: payroll, payables, receivables, records management, an EMS Coordinator, and supplies purchasing.
Donna’s conclusion, however, indicated that the determination by the focus group is that “there would be NO benefit to either the LMRFD or NACFD by consolidating.”
$70,000, in my opinion, is considerable benefit to NACFD. Chief Moore at one point stated it would buy NACFD a fire fighter. All of the operational and management services that the $70,000 would purchase for the LMRFD is also considerable, easily costing the LMRFD $200,000/year to replicate. The additional UNPAID benefit of a proven, stable structure already in place from which we can continue to grow our fire & EMS services, and a GOOD reputation with vendors and lending institutions is incalculable.
Donna Wickerd’s statement in her presentation that “there would be no hope of any volunteer program going forward after consolidation” because of NACFD’s “policy against a volunteer program”, is disingenuous. Donna and other members of her group have been told repeatedly in several public meetings by Chief Moore that he is open to a volunteer program; he just needs people to show up to volunteer. He has proven his sincerity in pursuing qualified volunteers. The Paramedic volunteer he spent months putting through the background tests, updating of certs, etc. in 2014 showed up for a couple of calls before leaving the area in a hurry. We currently have a female volunteer EMT on the roster in Meadview.
That's because when people call to volunteer, no one called them back over the past few years. Show me one web page that says NACFD is looking for volunteers. I'm sorry they made a bad choice in paramedics. It proves my point we need local volunteers, Dolan and Meadview is culture shock to outsiders. In the middle of nowhere, what do you mean they haul water?
The issue is NOT any imagined “NACFD policy against volunteers”. It is (1) the lack of volunteers in our area stepping up, and (2) a lack of commitment by volunteers who do step up. This is the reality of the area in which we live. We do not have the quality or quantity of volunteers that some other areas of the country have. To survive, we must work within that reality. To COUNT on volunteers for any plan going forward is suicide! To survive we must maintain a stable base of paid personnel and management which NACFD has already established and which consolidation would continue to provide. From that stable base we can then train and utilize volunteers as they step up, and as their qualifications allow, for such things as recruiting more volunteers, pursuing annexation of Meadview’s $265,000 potential tax base into the District, organizing regular trainings for firefighters & EMS personnel, and community outreach projects, etc.
Not COUNTING on volunteers could mean your death if no one shows up, or an ambulance or fire truck with one person. If you want the calls where one person shows up, left me know.
The ongoing disinformation being propagated by the focus group to undermine the consolidation effort brings into question their sincerity in their claim to be “neutral, with no agenda”. Obviously not true!
Don't listen to me, do your homework, look up fire department staffing lawsuits. Look up your chance of survival with an ambulance 45 minutes to who knows when.
Without volunteers we're in trouble.. When people know we have one ambulance sometimes, how many will visit or move here?
Sunday, October 11, 2015
NACFD Board Meeting October 15th
The NACFD board meeting is October 15th at 6pm at 2486 Northern Ave in Kingman.
This is our last chance to tell the NACFD board we don't want consolidation.
The LMRFD can't provide fire and EMS services without volunteers, and I don't trust we will ever have volunteers if we consolidate.
How could it possibly be worse than having one firefighter show up on the ambulance, or the fire truck.
Look at NACFD history of dropping volunteers.
This is our last chance to tell the NACFD board we don't want consolidation.
The LMRFD can't provide fire and EMS services without volunteers, and I don't trust we will ever have volunteers if we consolidate.
How could it possibly be worse than having one firefighter show up on the ambulance, or the fire truck.
Look at NACFD history of dropping volunteers.
Friday, October 9, 2015
Two EMT'S Can't Manage A Heart Attack and Do CPR
To manage a heart attack, or run a code while doing CPR you need at least 4 people. One to drive, one to watch the monitor, and two to do CPR.
The only way for two EMT's to run a code, is using a machine called a thumper, or mechanical CPR device.
At the Town Hall meeting I asked if the LMRFD had a thumper or mechanical CPR device. We were told they don't have a thumper. We were also told the thumper was old technology.
It's not only NOT old technology, according to the Journal of Emergency Medicine, mechanical CPR devices provide far better CPR than manual CPR.
Mechanical CPR Article
Mechanical CPR delivers more effective CPR because it doesn't get tired, and always delivers the correct rate, depth, and placement.
This is something LMRFD needs. I doubt anyone who left Dolan Springs or Meadview with CPR in progress ever left the hospital. In Seattle 57% of sudden cardiac arrest patient survive, the national average is 8-10%.
We need to teach everyone CPR.
The only way for two EMT's to run a code, is using a machine called a thumper, or mechanical CPR device.
At the Town Hall meeting I asked if the LMRFD had a thumper or mechanical CPR device. We were told they don't have a thumper. We were also told the thumper was old technology.
It's not only NOT old technology, according to the Journal of Emergency Medicine, mechanical CPR devices provide far better CPR than manual CPR.
Mechanical CPR Article
Mechanical CPR delivers more effective CPR because it doesn't get tired, and always delivers the correct rate, depth, and placement.
This is something LMRFD needs. I doubt anyone who left Dolan Springs or Meadview with CPR in progress ever left the hospital. In Seattle 57% of sudden cardiac arrest patient survive, the national average is 8-10%.
We need to teach everyone CPR.
Sunday, October 4, 2015
Town Hall Meeting October 6th Don't Miss
Please Don't Miss the Town Hall Meeting October 6th at the Dolan Springs Community Center at 6 pm.
It our fire district, and without volunteers I think we're in trouble. We need to start recruiting volunteers from all the area çoveresd by the ambulance CON, not just the fire district.
We have good people in Dolan Springs, over West of the highway, in Meadview, and White Hills, we need those folks to come give us a hand. It's not their fire district, but it is their ambulance.
Building an effective EMS system will be a challenge, but saving lives in the street, or in or in the hospital it's always a challenge.
In the near future we hope to have enough volunteers to allow our EMT's to respond from their home, directly to the patient's home, allowing them to assess the patient, and package them for transport, reducing response times and patient survivability.
Eventually starting a Community-Paramedicine program. Something new in Arizona where paramedics do more primary care as opposed to only emergency response.
Our paramedics would be allowed to be more proactive, than reactivate to chronic medical conditions.
Please come to the meeting October 6th at the Community Center, learn about our options.
Jay
It our fire district, and without volunteers I think we're in trouble. We need to start recruiting volunteers from all the area çoveresd by the ambulance CON, not just the fire district.
We have good people in Dolan Springs, over West of the highway, in Meadview, and White Hills, we need those folks to come give us a hand. It's not their fire district, but it is their ambulance.
Building an effective EMS system will be a challenge, but saving lives in the street, or in or in the hospital it's always a challenge.
In the near future we hope to have enough volunteers to allow our EMT's to respond from their home, directly to the patient's home, allowing them to assess the patient, and package them for transport, reducing response times and patient survivability.
Eventually starting a Community-Paramedicine program. Something new in Arizona where paramedics do more primary care as opposed to only emergency response.
Our paramedics would be allowed to be more proactive, than reactivate to chronic medical conditions.
Please come to the meeting October 6th at the Community Center, learn about our options.
Jay
Thursday, October 1, 2015
Many rural fire districts field a significant volunteer force, which yields a high degree of cost effectiveness for fire suppression and emergency services.
The paragraph below is from the Arizona Fire District Association.
Many rural fire districts field a significant volunteer force, which yields a high degree of cost effectiveness for fire suppression and emergency services. They fill a need that otherwise cannot be generally provided by another governmental entity.
It's obvious to most Dolan Springs and Meadview need volunteers. It's how we motivate and retain volunteers that will make or break a volunteer program.
To me training volunteers to the level they're comfortable with makes sense. Why force someone who would be great at driving the ambulance, to take hundreds of hours of training to be a firefighter or EMT, they have no interest in, and won't do well at?
We need volunteers but to keep volunteers invested, you need to use them. We need CERT people trained to handle traffic. Like at the church fires, I directed traffic until my flashlight went dead.
Someone needs to support the firefighters on any working fire. When it's 105 degrees, you can't work long in bunkers. We need CERT to do things like setup a cooling station, make sure they have cold water, and don't go down from heat stroke.
We need to come together as a community, show people Dolan Springs does care and volunteer. The other choice is the way we are, because consolation won't change that.
We need people who are willing to volunteer as an Ambulance Attendant, no EMT or paramedic, just take an emergency vehicle operations course to be able to drive the ambulance.
ARS 36-2201 #6 (b) An emergency medical responder who is employed by an ambulance service operating under section 36-2202 and whose primary responsibility is the driving of an ambulance.
We need others interested in being an EMT Basic and advancing to EMT Advanced. This would give anyone a big hand up on their way to being an RN, nurse practitioner, physicians assistant, or even a physician.
When an RN gets out of school, they know little more than book knowledge. When a paramedic gets out of RN school, they're an experienced critical care RN paramedic with a career, and service to their community.
If you want to volunteer for CERT Training, as a volunteer firefighter, or for the ambulance, let someone know.
Or stick our heads back in the desert sand.....
Many rural fire districts field a significant volunteer force, which yields a high degree of cost effectiveness for fire suppression and emergency services. They fill a need that otherwise cannot be generally provided by another governmental entity.
It's obvious to most Dolan Springs and Meadview need volunteers. It's how we motivate and retain volunteers that will make or break a volunteer program.
To me training volunteers to the level they're comfortable with makes sense. Why force someone who would be great at driving the ambulance, to take hundreds of hours of training to be a firefighter or EMT, they have no interest in, and won't do well at?
We need volunteers but to keep volunteers invested, you need to use them. We need CERT people trained to handle traffic. Like at the church fires, I directed traffic until my flashlight went dead.
Someone needs to support the firefighters on any working fire. When it's 105 degrees, you can't work long in bunkers. We need CERT to do things like setup a cooling station, make sure they have cold water, and don't go down from heat stroke.
We need to come together as a community, show people Dolan Springs does care and volunteer. The other choice is the way we are, because consolation won't change that.
We need people who are willing to volunteer as an Ambulance Attendant, no EMT or paramedic, just take an emergency vehicle operations course to be able to drive the ambulance.
ARS 36-2201 #6 (b) An emergency medical responder who is employed by an ambulance service operating under section 36-2202 and whose primary responsibility is the driving of an ambulance.
We need others interested in being an EMT Basic and advancing to EMT Advanced. This would give anyone a big hand up on their way to being an RN, nurse practitioner, physicians assistant, or even a physician.
When an RN gets out of school, they know little more than book knowledge. When a paramedic gets out of RN school, they're an experienced critical care RN paramedic with a career, and service to their community.
If you want to volunteer for CERT Training, as a volunteer firefighter, or for the ambulance, let someone know.
Or stick our heads back in the desert sand.....
Wednesday, September 30, 2015
So Important You Know the Difference between an EMT an EMT Advanced and a Paramedic
Trying to educate people,....
Please read this, it's what I've been saying from another view.
UNDERSTAND (BUT ARE USUALLY AFRAID TO TALK ABOUT)…
It's important everyone understand the difference between an EMT Basic, an EMT Advanced, and a paramedic.
There's a big difference between what a Basic EMT and an Advanced EMT can do in the field, a paramedic can do a few more procedures than an Advanced EMT, but the Advanced EMT can do most life saving procedures that can save a life right now.
According to the National EMS Scope of Practice Model.
An EMT Basic can do basic first aid and an Automatic External Defibrillator (anyone with CPR training) use an oral or nasal airway, but can't secure your airway to prevent aspiration of vomit and severe complications.
An EMT Basic can use an automatic or bag to assist ventilation. They can give you your own medicine, or over-the-counter medication with appropriate medical supervision.
An EMT Basic can give a Diabetic glucose (sugar) and someone having a heart attack an aspirin, and in case of a nerve gas attack they can give you atropine. They can also use anti-shock pants to split a lower limb.
EMT Advanced
An EMT Advanced can do all the above plus....
Advanced airway that can secure your airway.
Use suction on patients already with ET Tube
Insert IVs
Do bone marrow injections in kids
IV fluid therapy Medication Route or Trauma
Nitroglycerin for chest pain
Epinephrine for anaphylaxis Bee String Etc
Glucose for Diabetic
IV D50 for Diabetic
Administer breathing treatments asthma COPD
Narcan for opioid overdose
Nitrous oxide for pain
A Paramedic can do all the above plus.....
A paramedic can secure your airway with an ET Tube
Perform a cricothyrotomy if your skull is crushed can open your throat
Put a needle in your chest if lung collapsed
Use nasogastric tube to let air from stomach
Insert bone marrow cannula
Access large veins for IV Deep Veins Difficult in the Field
IV medications and drips
Infusion of blood or blood products
The few things a paramedic can do that an EMT Advanced can't, are not worth the additional cost and training for the majority of our EMS needs.
A paramedics skill isn't in what equipment or drugs they carry. A paramedics skill is in their ability to do rapid patient assessment, but get it right.
Back in the day, and in this case I mean not that long after Jesus day. Physicians were teachers, that sharing of knowledge was part of being a paramedic when I was trained.
When I took my paramedic oath, it said "I shall also share my medical knowledge with those who may benefit from what I have learned. I will serve unselfishly in order to help make a better world for all mankind" I take that oath seriously.
Sadly that section was replaced with a be nice on social media section.
In my opinion anyone who has been a paid EMT for more than 2 years without advancing to EMT Advanced or paramedic, has no interest in emergency medicine, and needs to move up or move on, we need more than Basic EMT's.
Why would someone NOT want to move up to EMT Advanced or Paramedic? Because they don't want to provide better patient care, they didn't want more money? Why?
Do your homework look up Community Paramedicine its what we need to work towards.
Please read this, it's what I've been saying from another view.
UNDERSTAND (BUT ARE USUALLY AFRAID TO TALK ABOUT)…
It's important everyone understand the difference between an EMT Basic, an EMT Advanced, and a paramedic.
There's a big difference between what a Basic EMT and an Advanced EMT can do in the field, a paramedic can do a few more procedures than an Advanced EMT, but the Advanced EMT can do most life saving procedures that can save a life right now.
According to the National EMS Scope of Practice Model.
An EMT Basic can do basic first aid and an Automatic External Defibrillator (anyone with CPR training) use an oral or nasal airway, but can't secure your airway to prevent aspiration of vomit and severe complications.
An EMT Basic can use an automatic or bag to assist ventilation. They can give you your own medicine, or over-the-counter medication with appropriate medical supervision.
An EMT Basic can give a Diabetic glucose (sugar) and someone having a heart attack an aspirin, and in case of a nerve gas attack they can give you atropine. They can also use anti-shock pants to split a lower limb.
EMT Advanced
An EMT Advanced can do all the above plus....
Advanced airway that can secure your airway.
Use suction on patients already with ET Tube
Insert IVs
Do bone marrow injections in kids
IV fluid therapy Medication Route or Trauma
Nitroglycerin for chest pain
Epinephrine for anaphylaxis Bee String Etc
Glucose for Diabetic
IV D50 for Diabetic
Administer breathing treatments asthma COPD
Narcan for opioid overdose
Nitrous oxide for pain
A Paramedic can do all the above plus.....
A paramedic can secure your airway with an ET Tube
Perform a cricothyrotomy if your skull is crushed can open your throat
Put a needle in your chest if lung collapsed
Use nasogastric tube to let air from stomach
Insert bone marrow cannula
Access large veins for IV Deep Veins Difficult in the Field
IV medications and drips
Infusion of blood or blood products
The few things a paramedic can do that an EMT Advanced can't, are not worth the additional cost and training for the majority of our EMS needs.
A paramedics skill isn't in what equipment or drugs they carry. A paramedics skill is in their ability to do rapid patient assessment, but get it right.
Back in the day, and in this case I mean not that long after Jesus day. Physicians were teachers, that sharing of knowledge was part of being a paramedic when I was trained.
When I took my paramedic oath, it said "I shall also share my medical knowledge with those who may benefit from what I have learned. I will serve unselfishly in order to help make a better world for all mankind" I take that oath seriously.
Sadly that section was replaced with a be nice on social media section.
In my opinion anyone who has been a paid EMT for more than 2 years without advancing to EMT Advanced or paramedic, has no interest in emergency medicine, and needs to move up or move on, we need more than Basic EMT's.
Why would someone NOT want to move up to EMT Advanced or Paramedic? Because they don't want to provide better patient care, they didn't want more money? Why?
EMS Is a Healthcare Career, Not a Fire Department Career
In case someone forgot the “M” in EMS, it stands for medical. EMTs and paramedics are technically classified as allied health professionals, which is a whole different field of endeavor than firefighting. Our true brethren are respiratory therapists, nurses, physicians’ assistants and the like. This means we operate in conjunction with other healthcare agencies, be they doctors’ offices, clinics, hospitals or health departments.
We need to start somewhere, and CPR instructors and a CERT team would be a good start to a better EMS system.Do your homework look up Community Paramedicine its what we need to work towards.
Tuesday, September 29, 2015
Where To Go From Here
Where to go from here.... The lake Mohave Ranchos Fire District functioned pretty well for some 35 years. When the economy crashed many agencies had problems. It was a combination of factors that caused the problems.
There is some money in the budget, unused money for grants, two unfilled positions and $165,000 for another firefighter shift in Meadview that's planned.
There's the federal money for the land we cover, and half of Meadview isn't in the fire district, that need to be addressed.
You can't wear two hats, we need to separate fire service from EMS. The vast majority of calls to the LMRFD, 70% are medical calls.
We need volunteer EMT paramedics on the ambulance, and our paid firefighters EMTs or EMT Advanced as support.
Forcing a firefighter to become a paramedic, is like forcing a construction worker to become nurses aid. Even if you manage to get it accomplished, it won't work well, or be very pretty.
Please Read the Article but also the comments, see what paramedics think about being cross trained.
Thoughts on Forced Fire EMS Cross Training
Okay it's hard to find firefighters here, but we don't need firefighters, we need EMT's. By requiring the EMT's on the ambulance to be firefighters, we pretty much limit our volunteer pool to men.
Lets face it, not many women want to be firefighters. The vast majority of firefighters are men, with less than 4% in the United States being women.
Medicine on the other hand is made up primarily of women, nurses, physicians, OR techs. According to the Journal of Emergency Medical Services women make up about 50% of today's EMS services.
So by requiring the ambulance EMT's to be firefighters we severely limit our volunteer pool. We may have a wealth of experienced women with a medical backgrounds out there who have no interest in being a firefighter. We'll never know unless we ask.
I would change the volunteer EMT policy allowing volunteers from the 2200 square mile ambulance CON, rather than the 144 sm fire district. This would not only give us more volunteers to draw from, but cover the ambulance area better with volunteers spread out.
I would work toward Arizona's new Paramedicine Program where paramedics can do more primary care. By treating chronic conditions at home, checking on surgery patients and changing bandages before the infections and ambulance ride.
It's new, and legislation needs changed so paramedics can bill Medicare and insurance.
I know it's about money, but if we don't put lives first, it will cost us more in human lives, and lawsuits if we continue to have one firefighter show up at fires and serious vehicle accidents.
Please read Why this is so important to me
Unless we train and hire locals who know Dolan Springs and Meadview, we will always be looking for people, because they will come get experience and go on to more calls and more money.
I just believe the people deserve better care.
Jay
There is some money in the budget, unused money for grants, two unfilled positions and $165,000 for another firefighter shift in Meadview that's planned.
There's the federal money for the land we cover, and half of Meadview isn't in the fire district, that need to be addressed.
You can't wear two hats, we need to separate fire service from EMS. The vast majority of calls to the LMRFD, 70% are medical calls.
We need volunteer EMT paramedics on the ambulance, and our paid firefighters EMTs or EMT Advanced as support.
Forcing a firefighter to become a paramedic, is like forcing a construction worker to become nurses aid. Even if you manage to get it accomplished, it won't work well, or be very pretty.
Please Read the Article but also the comments, see what paramedics think about being cross trained.
Thoughts on Forced Fire EMS Cross Training
Okay it's hard to find firefighters here, but we don't need firefighters, we need EMT's. By requiring the EMT's on the ambulance to be firefighters, we pretty much limit our volunteer pool to men.
Lets face it, not many women want to be firefighters. The vast majority of firefighters are men, with less than 4% in the United States being women.
Medicine on the other hand is made up primarily of women, nurses, physicians, OR techs. According to the Journal of Emergency Medical Services women make up about 50% of today's EMS services.
So by requiring the ambulance EMT's to be firefighters we severely limit our volunteer pool. We may have a wealth of experienced women with a medical backgrounds out there who have no interest in being a firefighter. We'll never know unless we ask.
I would change the volunteer EMT policy allowing volunteers from the 2200 square mile ambulance CON, rather than the 144 sm fire district. This would not only give us more volunteers to draw from, but cover the ambulance area better with volunteers spread out.
I would work toward Arizona's new Paramedicine Program where paramedics can do more primary care. By treating chronic conditions at home, checking on surgery patients and changing bandages before the infections and ambulance ride.
It's new, and legislation needs changed so paramedics can bill Medicare and insurance.
I know it's about money, but if we don't put lives first, it will cost us more in human lives, and lawsuits if we continue to have one firefighter show up at fires and serious vehicle accidents.
Please read Why this is so important to me
Unless we train and hire locals who know Dolan Springs and Meadview, we will always be looking for people, because they will come get experience and go on to more calls and more money.
I just believe the people deserve better care.
Jay
Saturday, September 26, 2015
It's About Money I Get That.... But the Real Bottom Line is Do People Feel Safe
It's About Money I Get That.... But the Real Bottom Line is Do People Feel Safe? With around 80% of calls for medical services, why require EMT's to be firefighters?
We all want Dolan Springs and Meadview to grow and prosper. One thing we need is for all those tourist who visit and spend money to feel safe.
Until a few weeks ago when people checked the LMRFD web page, it told them the LMRFD had 7 Advanced Life Support ambulances, 4 fire rescue vehicles and lots of paid and volunteer firefighter EMT's and paramedics.
Today it says the LMRFD has 2 ambulances, actually we only have one that's being used.
When someone planning on a visit to the Grand Canyon, especially those with medical problems or children, check on EMS in the area what will they find.
At the North Rim of the Grand Canyon, the NPS has 75 EMT's and paramedics protecting visitors, and River Medical has a full time ambulance in Ashfork.
When they check the West Rim, Dolan Springs, and Meadview and find there's only one ambulance covering the 100 miles from Hoover Dam to the West Rim. That's if it the ambulance isn't gone, or out of service because the firefighters are out on a fire.
With all that's going on in the world today, people are conscious of what law enforcement and emergency services are in the area they're traveling.
Where would you take your family? North Rim lots of NPS rangers, and 75 EMTs, or one part time ambulance?
It's about money, the money we spend to keep people safe, and the money tourist spend in our area.
We all want Dolan Springs and Meadview to grow and prosper. One thing we need is for all those tourist who visit and spend money to feel safe.
Until a few weeks ago when people checked the LMRFD web page, it told them the LMRFD had 7 Advanced Life Support ambulances, 4 fire rescue vehicles and lots of paid and volunteer firefighter EMT's and paramedics.
Today it says the LMRFD has 2 ambulances, actually we only have one that's being used.
When someone planning on a visit to the Grand Canyon, especially those with medical problems or children, check on EMS in the area what will they find.
At the North Rim of the Grand Canyon, the NPS has 75 EMT's and paramedics protecting visitors, and River Medical has a full time ambulance in Ashfork.
When they check the West Rim, Dolan Springs, and Meadview and find there's only one ambulance covering the 100 miles from Hoover Dam to the West Rim. That's if it the ambulance isn't gone, or out of service because the firefighters are out on a fire.
With all that's going on in the world today, people are conscious of what law enforcement and emergency services are in the area they're traveling.
Where would you take your family? North Rim lots of NPS rangers, and 75 EMTs, or one part time ambulance?
It's about money, the money we spend to keep people safe, and the money tourist spend in our area.
Thursday, September 24, 2015
Town Hall Meeting October 6th Please Attend
There will be a Gown Hall Meeting on October 6th at 6:00 PM in the Dolan Springs Community Council building.
Consolidation and other options will be discussed.
Please attend, this is very important.
We stand to end up with no representation on the fire board.
Consolidation and other options will be discussed.
Please attend, this is very important.
We stand to end up with no representation on the fire board.
Wednesday, September 23, 2015
Lake Mohave Rancheros Fire District To Whom It May Concern,
Lake Mohave Rancheros Fire District
To Whom It May Concern,
My name is Rebecca Smith and I am a 10 year resident of Dolan Springs Arizona. Two of my sons are serving in the United States Military. My oldest son serves as a Navy SARS member, the other is a newly enlisted member of the Army. My sons believe in Democracy and the Democratic process and are willing to lay down their lives to ensure that you and I always have the ability to speak and act freely. We are free to do something or do nothing. We are free to criticize or to build up. We are free to act responsibly or to hand our responsibilities to someone else.
Regarding the plight of our Fire District; yes, a board dropped the ball. Some of the same people who SERVED on that incompetent board are now telling you to consolidate! No responsibility, just let someone else clean up the mess. Yes, some chiefs helped to bring us to insolvency, they are GONE! We now have an opportunity to do it right. In spite of what you are hearing, we DO have the money and we ARE capable. We have new faces in town and these people bring fresh ideas and energy. Some of these people are well educated and have served their communities in prior areas. They can serve here just as well.
Consolidation has been the plan all along if you go back and read the minutes. The idea that we just had to get out of debt so we could 'decide' what we wanted to do was false. This decision can, and may be made by an outside board, and one man with the approval of our supervisors, none of whom live here. This is OUR community and it is time we start acting like it. A decision made in this manner is a slap in the face of the Democratic process which my sons are willing to sacrifice their lives for.
To the NACFD board members, are you willing to by-pass the Democratic process in order to take possession of this fire district? If the decision is made in the aforementioned manner, that is exactly what you will be doing. It was stated in the August NACFD board meeting that consolidation had to be a unanimous vote in order to avoid an election because the fear is that the majority of your own community would not support the consolidation. How is this Democratic???
To those saying that we are trying to undermine the consolidation; after doing further research, we are blatantly and openly opposing the consolidation, not undermining it. We are not ashamed and do not need to hide and undermine this effort. We are more than happy to share our finding with all who will listen at a town hall meeting on October 6th at 6 o'clock p.m. at the Community Center in Dolan Springs.
To the community; how dare ANY of us sit on our rumps and not participate in this process, thus rendering my sons efforts pointless!!! We must be anxiously engaged in the pursuit of bettering our communities and ensuring that we leave something worth having to our children. I am sick of hearing that we do not have anybody who is willing or capable to serve on a board. I am also tired of being told that procuring volunteer fire fighter/EMT's is next to impossible, or that we cannot staff our district without consolidating with Northern Arizona Consolidated Fire District. That is FALSE information. The only proof we have to show for the inaccuracy of these beliefs is if we all begin to step up and take on our responsibilities as community members. We can rebuild this town. Maybe our supervisors and some of our neighbors do not believe in us, but I do! Do you?
To Whom It May Concern,
My name is Rebecca Smith and I am a 10 year resident of Dolan Springs Arizona. Two of my sons are serving in the United States Military. My oldest son serves as a Navy SARS member, the other is a newly enlisted member of the Army. My sons believe in Democracy and the Democratic process and are willing to lay down their lives to ensure that you and I always have the ability to speak and act freely. We are free to do something or do nothing. We are free to criticize or to build up. We are free to act responsibly or to hand our responsibilities to someone else.
Regarding the plight of our Fire District; yes, a board dropped the ball. Some of the same people who SERVED on that incompetent board are now telling you to consolidate! No responsibility, just let someone else clean up the mess. Yes, some chiefs helped to bring us to insolvency, they are GONE! We now have an opportunity to do it right. In spite of what you are hearing, we DO have the money and we ARE capable. We have new faces in town and these people bring fresh ideas and energy. Some of these people are well educated and have served their communities in prior areas. They can serve here just as well.
Consolidation has been the plan all along if you go back and read the minutes. The idea that we just had to get out of debt so we could 'decide' what we wanted to do was false. This decision can, and may be made by an outside board, and one man with the approval of our supervisors, none of whom live here. This is OUR community and it is time we start acting like it. A decision made in this manner is a slap in the face of the Democratic process which my sons are willing to sacrifice their lives for.
To the NACFD board members, are you willing to by-pass the Democratic process in order to take possession of this fire district? If the decision is made in the aforementioned manner, that is exactly what you will be doing. It was stated in the August NACFD board meeting that consolidation had to be a unanimous vote in order to avoid an election because the fear is that the majority of your own community would not support the consolidation. How is this Democratic???
To those saying that we are trying to undermine the consolidation; after doing further research, we are blatantly and openly opposing the consolidation, not undermining it. We are not ashamed and do not need to hide and undermine this effort. We are more than happy to share our finding with all who will listen at a town hall meeting on October 6th at 6 o'clock p.m. at the Community Center in Dolan Springs.
To the community; how dare ANY of us sit on our rumps and not participate in this process, thus rendering my sons efforts pointless!!! We must be anxiously engaged in the pursuit of bettering our communities and ensuring that we leave something worth having to our children. I am sick of hearing that we do not have anybody who is willing or capable to serve on a board. I am also tired of being told that procuring volunteer fire fighter/EMT's is next to impossible, or that we cannot staff our district without consolidating with Northern Arizona Consolidated Fire District. That is FALSE information. The only proof we have to show for the inaccuracy of these beliefs is if we all begin to step up and take on our responsibilities as community members. We can rebuild this town. Maybe our supervisors and some of our neighbors do not believe in us, but I do! Do you?
Tuesday, September 22, 2015
When Seconds Matter
This blog is about educating people about the rolls of fire service and EMS in rural areas. People need to understand firefighter safety, and what firefighters, EMT's, EMT Advanced, and paramedics can, and can't do.
Everyone tells me when people moved here they knew what we had. Not True, for over 2 years until August the LMRFD web page mislead people telling citizens and tourist the LMRFD had 7 ALS ambulances, 4 rescue vehicles and lots of firefighters.
Time, in some calls every second counts, the difference between 5 minutes and 30 seconds, and 6 minutes can mean the difference between life and death.
I was so disappointed in our EMS crew responding to a heart attack at 48 mph the other day. On a call 10 miles from the fire station the difference between 48 mph and 55 mph is 1 1/2 minutes. That 1 1/2 minutes could well be the difference between life and death.
Most EMS calls are routine calls were two ambulance attendants can handle the situation fine. But there are those calls were you need more people, that's when every second matters.
This is no time to realize that you need help, then call for assistance from firefighters to move or load a large patient, or do CPR in route the hospital.
Working in law enforcement and EMS I've seen a lot of people die because of something simple could have been done, and someone said no.
Some patients, especially those with serve trauma you know won't survive no matter what you do, are many times eerily calm. Sometimes even trying to calm you as you try to work faster, all the time knowing there's little chance they will survive, and you both know it.
The patients who are the most frightened are those who can't breathe. These patients are scared to death, and you can tell just looking at them.
They're usually sitting up in what's called the tripod position, trying to breathe, their eyes are open wide and when they look you, there's no need to ask how they're doing.
For the first patient all you can really do is stay close and be there, but the second patient you can help.
To make someone who's short of breath wait any longer than absolutely necessary, is wrong. Waiting 30 - 45 minutes is torture when someone close with oxygen or medication could ease the suffering.
Some medical emergencies do require rapid response, assessment, and treatment....
Below are a few........
Sudden Cardiac Arrest (different than a heart attack)
A sudden cardiac arrest is when your heart has an arrhythmia, or bad heart rhythm.
If your heart goes into Ventricular Fibrillation, or Ventricular Tachycardia, you have 6 minutes to have a paramedic apply a defibrillator, or a citizen apply an AED. After 6 minutes your chance of survival drop's to near zero.
Anaphylactic Shock
NOTE ARS 36-2226 Exempts good Samaritans from liability for giving Epinephrine Arizona Anyone can give Epi in Arizona
If you give kids birthday parties then you know a lot of kids have food allergies today, other's are allergic to bees, cats, or something.
A lot of parents carry an EpiPen that contains Epinephrine to reverse the allergic reaction. It's important an EMT be close to make sure mom gave the shot, and follow up with respiratory assistance and transport to the ER.
Mom's are mom and the last thing they would ever do is hurt their child. Some not wanting to hurt their little boy or girl, wait to use the EpiPen to see if they improve. Sometimes they wait too long, and it's too late, the lungs are too tight by the time they give the EpiPen.
Drug Overdoses
Many older people today take pain medications, please keep your medications locked up, and away from kids.
Overdoses, especially for opioid overdoses there's a wonder drug called Narcan or Naloxone. If you get there in time you can reverse the effects of opioids in seconds.
Not all overdoses are people abusing drugs, accidents happen, children get in to medication.
In the video below Narcan is given to an unresponsive patient with CPR in progress, you'll be amazed at how fast Narcan works.
Narcan Being Given Narcan
Trauma
Take aspirin for your heart? Warning... What protects your heart from clotting, also make's it difficult to stop bleeding in trauma.
Most trauma is not life threatening, some trauma is. If you have internal bleeding it can be life threatening. If it's serious internal bleeding the only thing that will save you is rapid transport and a surgeon.
The four firefighters we would have can't save your home, and in some cases with two firefighters can't save your life.
Everyone tells me when people moved here they knew what we had. Not True, for over 2 years until August the LMRFD web page mislead people telling citizens and tourist the LMRFD had 7 ALS ambulances, 4 rescue vehicles and lots of firefighters.
Time, in some calls every second counts, the difference between 5 minutes and 30 seconds, and 6 minutes can mean the difference between life and death.
I was so disappointed in our EMS crew responding to a heart attack at 48 mph the other day. On a call 10 miles from the fire station the difference between 48 mph and 55 mph is 1 1/2 minutes. That 1 1/2 minutes could well be the difference between life and death.
Most EMS calls are routine calls were two ambulance attendants can handle the situation fine. But there are those calls were you need more people, that's when every second matters.
This is no time to realize that you need help, then call for assistance from firefighters to move or load a large patient, or do CPR in route the hospital.
Working in law enforcement and EMS I've seen a lot of people die because of something simple could have been done, and someone said no.
Some patients, especially those with serve trauma you know won't survive no matter what you do, are many times eerily calm. Sometimes even trying to calm you as you try to work faster, all the time knowing there's little chance they will survive, and you both know it.
The patients who are the most frightened are those who can't breathe. These patients are scared to death, and you can tell just looking at them.
They're usually sitting up in what's called the tripod position, trying to breathe, their eyes are open wide and when they look you, there's no need to ask how they're doing.
For the first patient all you can really do is stay close and be there, but the second patient you can help.
To make someone who's short of breath wait any longer than absolutely necessary, is wrong. Waiting 30 - 45 minutes is torture when someone close with oxygen or medication could ease the suffering.
Some medical emergencies do require rapid response, assessment, and treatment....
Below are a few........
Sudden Cardiac Arrest (different than a heart attack)
A sudden cardiac arrest is when your heart has an arrhythmia, or bad heart rhythm.
If your heart goes into Ventricular Fibrillation, or Ventricular Tachycardia, you have 6 minutes to have a paramedic apply a defibrillator, or a citizen apply an AED. After 6 minutes your chance of survival drop's to near zero.
Anaphylactic Shock
NOTE ARS 36-2226 Exempts good Samaritans from liability for giving Epinephrine Arizona Anyone can give Epi in Arizona
If you give kids birthday parties then you know a lot of kids have food allergies today, other's are allergic to bees, cats, or something.
A lot of parents carry an EpiPen that contains Epinephrine to reverse the allergic reaction. It's important an EMT be close to make sure mom gave the shot, and follow up with respiratory assistance and transport to the ER.
Mom's are mom and the last thing they would ever do is hurt their child. Some not wanting to hurt their little boy or girl, wait to use the EpiPen to see if they improve. Sometimes they wait too long, and it's too late, the lungs are too tight by the time they give the EpiPen.
Drug Overdoses
Many older people today take pain medications, please keep your medications locked up, and away from kids.
Overdoses, especially for opioid overdoses there's a wonder drug called Narcan or Naloxone. If you get there in time you can reverse the effects of opioids in seconds.
Not all overdoses are people abusing drugs, accidents happen, children get in to medication.
In the video below Narcan is given to an unresponsive patient with CPR in progress, you'll be amazed at how fast Narcan works.
Narcan Being Given Narcan
Trauma
Take aspirin for your heart? Warning... What protects your heart from clotting, also make's it difficult to stop bleeding in trauma.
Most trauma is not life threatening, some trauma is. If you have internal bleeding it can be life threatening. If it's serious internal bleeding the only thing that will save you is rapid transport and a surgeon.
The four firefighters we would have can't save your home, and in some cases with two firefighters can't save your life.
Monday, September 21, 2015
Meadview Meeting September 21st
Good turn out at the LMRFD fire board meeting today. I was disappointed there wasn't more support from Dolan Springs.
For those at the meeting who Ellen told this was a hate site, it's not. I try and provide accurate information, and apologize for her unprofessional conduct. We need to be able to agree to disagree without name calling.
Please if you're reading this for the first time, start at the beginning.
Someone said no volunteers have signed up in Dolan. I told them people can see the budget for training in 2015/2016 was zero, so why sign up with no money for training, and no scheduled training.
When asked if the Kingman Miner was correct that his budget dropped from 5 million dollars a year, to a little over 2 million a year.
Chief Moore said that wasn't correct, but didn't know what his own fire district budget was.
If you're new to this blog please read these important posts..
Why This is So Important to Me
Why Would Any Paramedic Move Here?
Fire Staffing is a Need, Not a Want
What You Need To Know About Two Man Response
These will give you an idea of some of the problems operating with no volunteers.
The fire district is 144 square miles, the ambulance CON is 2200 square miles. When someone in command sends OUR tax supported firefighters 50 miles out of the fire district for a sprained ankle, and your home burns down, or family member dies, how long before someone files a lawsuit?
Search for firefighter staffing lawsuits, and delayed response lawsuits. With one maybe two firefighters what's our legal and moral liability for people who die waiting for help?
I don't know, but it's something we need legal advice on. An Oregon Fire department was fined $50,000 for violating the two-in-two-out rule, getting firefighters and citizen killed.
The two in two out rule was called the most significant advance in firefighter safety in decades. But it takes 4 firefighters.
Jay
For those at the meeting who Ellen told this was a hate site, it's not. I try and provide accurate information, and apologize for her unprofessional conduct. We need to be able to agree to disagree without name calling.
Please if you're reading this for the first time, start at the beginning.
Someone said no volunteers have signed up in Dolan. I told them people can see the budget for training in 2015/2016 was zero, so why sign up with no money for training, and no scheduled training.
When asked if the Kingman Miner was correct that his budget dropped from 5 million dollars a year, to a little over 2 million a year.
Chief Moore said that wasn't correct, but didn't know what his own fire district budget was.
If you're new to this blog please read these important posts..
Why This is So Important to Me
Why Would Any Paramedic Move Here?
Fire Staffing is a Need, Not a Want
What You Need To Know About Two Man Response
These will give you an idea of some of the problems operating with no volunteers.
The fire district is 144 square miles, the ambulance CON is 2200 square miles. When someone in command sends OUR tax supported firefighters 50 miles out of the fire district for a sprained ankle, and your home burns down, or family member dies, how long before someone files a lawsuit?
Search for firefighter staffing lawsuits, and delayed response lawsuits. With one maybe two firefighters what's our legal and moral liability for people who die waiting for help?
I don't know, but it's something we need legal advice on. An Oregon Fire department was fined $50,000 for violating the two-in-two-out rule, getting firefighters and citizen killed.
The two in two out rule was called the most significant advance in firefighter safety in decades. But it takes 4 firefighters.
Jay
Sunday, September 20, 2015
Good Business Decisions From NACFD? I Don't Think So!
If we consolidate will the NACFD make good business decisions for us? In a recent article in the Kingman Miner With Fire Trucks Relocated, Residents Worried About Coverage Chloride residents weren't happy with their consolidation with NACFD.
The article said the NACFD's budget went from 5 million a year, to a little over 2 million a year.
My question is, if the NACFD can operate 9 fire stations, an administration building, and lots of firefighters on a little over 2 million dollars a year, why can't we run 2 fire stations and a couple firefighters on over 1 million dollars a year? Doesn't make sense to me.
At the September community meeting Chief Moore said the NACFD doesn't want to just expand. So please, tell me how consolidating the NACFD with the Chloride fire district was a good business decision?
The Chloride fire district only pays $24,700 in fire tax to the NACFD each year. That's not $24,000,000 a year, that's only $24,000 a year.
That's enough for 1/2 a firefighter a day. So in my opinion, that wasn't a good business decision.
I'm tired of double talk answers. At a recent fire board meeting when I told Chief Moore that if Rosie's and the gas stations on US93 paid tax to the fire district at the same rate I do, they would pay $10,000 a year to LMRFD.
Chief Moore told me to be annexed into the fire district the property had to be contiguous, or touching our Fire district. That is true.
What the chief didn't tell me was that the businesses could pay a subscription service fee equal to the tax. He also didn't tell me that when he took over the LMRFD he stopped taking subscriptions. Another business decision I don't agree with.
The businesses are out of the fire district argument doesn't work. When Rosie's burned the LMRFD responded. Did we get paid on that fire?
MISTAKES In INFO FROM COMMUNITY MEETING
At the community meeting they handed out a lot of information. Two of the pages had calculation mistakes making it look better if their favor. I hope this was just a mistake.
On the page titled Personal Cost Analysis January 2015 with "Current" in the top right corner. They told us the cost for full time firefighters with John and Chief Moore was $802,795.71. That wasn't right, when you calculate it correctly the total is $859,327.00 not $802,795.71.
The other page titled LMRFD Projection W/Fire Chief Instead of JF NACFD with "Stand Alone" in top right corner. This page tells us the cost full time firefighters and a fire chief would be $852,786.52
So when you recalculate the employee cost with the fire chief it was actually $6541.00 less than the current figure.
Someone please tell me why the administrative assistant is paid $16.20 an hour, when a firefighter paramedic with 2000 hours of specialized training only gets $13.95 an hour?
Spending Other People's Money....
The information from the September community meeting also said the LMRFD needs a new ambulance.
It says the chief wants to spend $75,000 on a new truck chassis to put one of our old ambulance box on, so they wouldn't have to spend $150,000 on a new ambulance. In case you don't know a truck chassis is just the truck part with no box or bed installed. We put our old ambulance box on the new truck part.
Again I don't think that's a good business decision. There are many nice used ambulances for much less of OUR tax money. This is an example of a 2006 Ambulance with only 26000 miles for $20,000 Not $75,000 for a chassis, or $150,000 for a new one. It's your money, what would you do?
There's nothing wrong with the ambulance above, except how the Federal Government works. If you get $100,000 this year, and only spend $80,000, all you get next year is $80,000. So the feds get rewarded for not saving money, and someone gets good deals.
They also donated six of our AED's Automatic External Defibrillators to Kingman schools. They cost $1500 - $3000 new, they only had a $200 trade in, but it will cost a minimum of $9000 to replace them, and we needed them here.
We were broke and they give them away? Why didn't they sell them on eBay? Worse yet, there are no AED's I'm aware of in Dolan to save people from sudden cardiac arrest.
Consolidation is a bad idea in my opinion. The only acceptable way would be to separate the fire service from EMS.
We have no supervision, look how the firefighters treat people.
No matter what the Chief said, the NACFD wants to expand their district.
The LMRFD operated fine for 50 years until we stopped paying attention. Were paying attention now, and we need to keep control of our fire district.
We need local volunteers who care about the people, not arrogant firefighters who disrespect the citizens asking for help. If NACFD takes over how far do you think complaints about firefighters would go?
We paid off almost $1,000,000 over the last two and a half years, and we need to thank John and Chief Moore for their help.
The chief tells us he can't fill 2 positions he has open. I did a search for firefighter jobs in Dolan Springs, Mohave County nothing. Unless you search for "Lake Mohave Ranchos Fire District" job, you can't find the job openings.
The LMRFD survived for 50 years growing with the community needs. It wasn't just a bad board, but also a failing economy, and lack of citizen interest.
We're paying attention now, so please read the whole blog, give the other side a chance.
Jay
The article said the NACFD's budget went from 5 million a year, to a little over 2 million a year.
My question is, if the NACFD can operate 9 fire stations, an administration building, and lots of firefighters on a little over 2 million dollars a year, why can't we run 2 fire stations and a couple firefighters on over 1 million dollars a year? Doesn't make sense to me.
At the September community meeting Chief Moore said the NACFD doesn't want to just expand. So please, tell me how consolidating the NACFD with the Chloride fire district was a good business decision?
The Chloride fire district only pays $24,700 in fire tax to the NACFD each year. That's not $24,000,000 a year, that's only $24,000 a year.
That's enough for 1/2 a firefighter a day. So in my opinion, that wasn't a good business decision.
I'm tired of double talk answers. At a recent fire board meeting when I told Chief Moore that if Rosie's and the gas stations on US93 paid tax to the fire district at the same rate I do, they would pay $10,000 a year to LMRFD.
Chief Moore told me to be annexed into the fire district the property had to be contiguous, or touching our Fire district. That is true.
What the chief didn't tell me was that the businesses could pay a subscription service fee equal to the tax. He also didn't tell me that when he took over the LMRFD he stopped taking subscriptions. Another business decision I don't agree with.
The businesses are out of the fire district argument doesn't work. When Rosie's burned the LMRFD responded. Did we get paid on that fire?
MISTAKES In INFO FROM COMMUNITY MEETING
At the community meeting they handed out a lot of information. Two of the pages had calculation mistakes making it look better if their favor. I hope this was just a mistake.
On the page titled Personal Cost Analysis January 2015 with "Current" in the top right corner. They told us the cost for full time firefighters with John and Chief Moore was $802,795.71. That wasn't right, when you calculate it correctly the total is $859,327.00 not $802,795.71.
The other page titled LMRFD Projection W/Fire Chief Instead of JF NACFD with "Stand Alone" in top right corner. This page tells us the cost full time firefighters and a fire chief would be $852,786.52
So when you recalculate the employee cost with the fire chief it was actually $6541.00 less than the current figure.
Someone please tell me why the administrative assistant is paid $16.20 an hour, when a firefighter paramedic with 2000 hours of specialized training only gets $13.95 an hour?
Spending Other People's Money....
The information from the September community meeting also said the LMRFD needs a new ambulance.
It says the chief wants to spend $75,000 on a new truck chassis to put one of our old ambulance box on, so they wouldn't have to spend $150,000 on a new ambulance. In case you don't know a truck chassis is just the truck part with no box or bed installed. We put our old ambulance box on the new truck part.
Again I don't think that's a good business decision. There are many nice used ambulances for much less of OUR tax money. This is an example of a 2006 Ambulance with only 26000 miles for $20,000 Not $75,000 for a chassis, or $150,000 for a new one. It's your money, what would you do?
There's nothing wrong with the ambulance above, except how the Federal Government works. If you get $100,000 this year, and only spend $80,000, all you get next year is $80,000. So the feds get rewarded for not saving money, and someone gets good deals.
They also donated six of our AED's Automatic External Defibrillators to Kingman schools. They cost $1500 - $3000 new, they only had a $200 trade in, but it will cost a minimum of $9000 to replace them, and we needed them here.
We were broke and they give them away? Why didn't they sell them on eBay? Worse yet, there are no AED's I'm aware of in Dolan to save people from sudden cardiac arrest.
Consolidation is a bad idea in my opinion. The only acceptable way would be to separate the fire service from EMS.
We have no supervision, look how the firefighters treat people.
No matter what the Chief said, the NACFD wants to expand their district.
The LMRFD operated fine for 50 years until we stopped paying attention. Were paying attention now, and we need to keep control of our fire district.
We need local volunteers who care about the people, not arrogant firefighters who disrespect the citizens asking for help. If NACFD takes over how far do you think complaints about firefighters would go?
We paid off almost $1,000,000 over the last two and a half years, and we need to thank John and Chief Moore for their help.
The chief tells us he can't fill 2 positions he has open. I did a search for firefighter jobs in Dolan Springs, Mohave County nothing. Unless you search for "Lake Mohave Ranchos Fire District" job, you can't find the job openings.
The LMRFD survived for 50 years growing with the community needs. It wasn't just a bad board, but also a failing economy, and lack of citizen interest.
We're paying attention now, so please read the whole blog, give the other side a chance.
Jay
Friday, September 18, 2015
Fire Board Meeting September 21st
Please attend the LMRFD Fire Board Meeting 1:30 PM September 21st at the Meadview Civic Association 247 Meadview Blvd
This is very important, we need to ask some questions.
Jay
This is very important, we need to ask some questions.
Jay
Thursday, September 17, 2015
I'd rather have a hill billy in a pickup truck who cares, than a paid EMT in a fancy ambulance who doesn't
The more I thought about how the firefighters we pay $77000 to $88000 a year were treating people, the madder I got.
The attitude of the firefighters is unacceptable, the chief said they were mad. I'm sorry but if you work in public safety or emergency medicine you don't get the luxury to be mad, people's lives are at stake.
The LMRFD firefighters are paid more than anyone else in Dolan or Meadview. That's almost $90,000 a year to be a firefighter in Dolan Springs, and they're mad so they respond to heart attack call at 48 mph. Tell a lady to not call until her husband was dead when she tried to give them his DNR, Do Not Resuscitate orders.
On some calls it takes the firefighters 5 minutes and 25 seconds to leave the fire station after receiving a page. The NFPA standard for Turnout Time, the time it takes from when they receive the page for a call, to when they are in route is 60 seconds, NOT 5 minutes and 25 seconds.
At 7:20 or so in the morning the ambulance got a call at mp5 on US93. After turning North on US93 law enforcement on scene asked for an ETA. The EMT told the dispatcher their ETA was 45 minutes ot an hour. Dispatch told them to cancel, Lake Mead was going to respond.
What do you think? It was 7:30 in the morning and they get off at 8:00. They were 36 miles from the call at mile post 5 on US93, at 69 MPH it would take 33 minutes, at 75 MPH 28 minutes, and at 80 MPH only 28 minutes. Are they really that bad a judge of distance and time, or they didn't want to go on the call.
When the lady at the community meeting went to the fire station to give the EMT's a copy of her husbands DNR, and the EMT told her he didn't want it, to just wait until she was sure he was dead to call, that was just wrong.
An EMT should never do anything to violate the trust a patient has in them. To do so violates everything we are taught as EMT's and paramedics, and damages us all as professionals.
A DNR is a Do Not Resuscitate Order telling EMT's not to use life saving methods.
It DOES NOT mean for EMT's to do nothing. Many cancer patients suffer severe pain, and the EMT had better treat them like it was their dad dying of cancer. Make them comfortable, take care of the pain, and if they should code on the way to the hospital, follow the DNR and do nothing life saving. Just hold their hand and let them know someone was there who cared when they died. People arn't afraid to die, people are afraid to die in pain.
After thinking about how she was treated by the firefighter we pay over $77,000 a year, I got mad. If we consolidate we lose control. If NACFD takes over without volunteers for backup, we can't even fire one of these guys.
If I need an ambulance, I'd rather have a hill billy in a pickup truck who cares, than a paid EMT in a fancy ambulance who doesn't.
The mindset of a firefighter is that of public safety. Firefighters are required to be EMT's. The mindset of an EMT is that of a health care professional, and their primary concern is patient care.
On the worst day of my life, when I have to call 911, I don't want someone coming to help who had to take the test.
In the article Firefighters Don't Fight Fires it tells us over the past 35 years fires have decreased by more than 40%, while carrer firefighters increased by more than 40%. Medical calls on the other hand have gone up, so to justify all the money fire departments got into EMS.
Problem is firefighters don't want to be ambulance attendants. Read the Links to Firefighter EMS Links page look at the What Firefighters Think About Being Forced to Be EMT's or paramedic's.
I don't know about you, but I don't want some EMT who drives up here from Lake Havasu to help the poor folk in Dolan Springs, then drives back home to Havasu.
Firefighters should be required to live where they can be at the fire station within 30 minutes in we need them. Not 100 miles away.
What We Need
What we need is a volunteer community paramedic program Rural Assistance Center Community-paramedicine program information.
Dolan Springs Meadview White Hills are in a special taxing district. We need to educate the people and those who agree draw a boundary and vote for an effective EMS system and a clinic.
The attitude of the firefighters is unacceptable, the chief said they were mad. I'm sorry but if you work in public safety or emergency medicine you don't get the luxury to be mad, people's lives are at stake.
The LMRFD firefighters are paid more than anyone else in Dolan or Meadview. That's almost $90,000 a year to be a firefighter in Dolan Springs, and they're mad so they respond to heart attack call at 48 mph. Tell a lady to not call until her husband was dead when she tried to give them his DNR, Do Not Resuscitate orders.
On some calls it takes the firefighters 5 minutes and 25 seconds to leave the fire station after receiving a page. The NFPA standard for Turnout Time, the time it takes from when they receive the page for a call, to when they are in route is 60 seconds, NOT 5 minutes and 25 seconds.
At 7:20 or so in the morning the ambulance got a call at mp5 on US93. After turning North on US93 law enforcement on scene asked for an ETA. The EMT told the dispatcher their ETA was 45 minutes ot an hour. Dispatch told them to cancel, Lake Mead was going to respond.
What do you think? It was 7:30 in the morning and they get off at 8:00. They were 36 miles from the call at mile post 5 on US93, at 69 MPH it would take 33 minutes, at 75 MPH 28 minutes, and at 80 MPH only 28 minutes. Are they really that bad a judge of distance and time, or they didn't want to go on the call.
When the lady at the community meeting went to the fire station to give the EMT's a copy of her husbands DNR, and the EMT told her he didn't want it, to just wait until she was sure he was dead to call, that was just wrong.
An EMT should never do anything to violate the trust a patient has in them. To do so violates everything we are taught as EMT's and paramedics, and damages us all as professionals.
A DNR is a Do Not Resuscitate Order telling EMT's not to use life saving methods.
It DOES NOT mean for EMT's to do nothing. Many cancer patients suffer severe pain, and the EMT had better treat them like it was their dad dying of cancer. Make them comfortable, take care of the pain, and if they should code on the way to the hospital, follow the DNR and do nothing life saving. Just hold their hand and let them know someone was there who cared when they died. People arn't afraid to die, people are afraid to die in pain.
After thinking about how she was treated by the firefighter we pay over $77,000 a year, I got mad. If we consolidate we lose control. If NACFD takes over without volunteers for backup, we can't even fire one of these guys.
If I need an ambulance, I'd rather have a hill billy in a pickup truck who cares, than a paid EMT in a fancy ambulance who doesn't.
The mindset of a firefighter is that of public safety. Firefighters are required to be EMT's. The mindset of an EMT is that of a health care professional, and their primary concern is patient care.
On the worst day of my life, when I have to call 911, I don't want someone coming to help who had to take the test.
In the article Firefighters Don't Fight Fires it tells us over the past 35 years fires have decreased by more than 40%, while carrer firefighters increased by more than 40%. Medical calls on the other hand have gone up, so to justify all the money fire departments got into EMS.
Problem is firefighters don't want to be ambulance attendants. Read the Links to Firefighter EMS Links page look at the What Firefighters Think About Being Forced to Be EMT's or paramedic's.
Over 70% of calls for service to the LMRFD are medical calls. We need to seperate the ambulance from the firefighters, and use volunteer EMT's to run the ambulance.
I don't know about you, but I don't want some EMT who drives up here from Lake Havasu to help the poor folk in Dolan Springs, then drives back home to Havasu.
Firefighters should be required to live where they can be at the fire station within 30 minutes in we need them. Not 100 miles away.
What We Need
What we need is a volunteer community paramedic program Rural Assistance Center Community-paramedicine program information.
Dolan Springs Meadview White Hills are in a special taxing district. We need to educate the people and those who agree draw a boundary and vote for an effective EMS system and a clinic.
Wednesday, September 16, 2015
Need Volunteers for CERT Citizens Emergency Response Team
I spoke to Mike Browning at Mohave County Emergency Services. He said there will be a training course for a local CERT Team, or Citizens Emergency Response Team coming up in January 2016.
It was apparently setup for Chloride, and training will be in Chloride or Kingman. If we get enough people, we may be able to talk them into having some classes here.
He needs around 20 people. So now is the time to show everyone there are good people in Dolan and Meadview who will volunteer.
The fire district needs to support a CERT team. I guess we'll see who wins the consolidation and if we really get volunteers.
Mohave County CERT Team Information
Contact Mike Browning
It was apparently setup for Chloride, and training will be in Chloride or Kingman. If we get enough people, we may be able to talk them into having some classes here.
He needs around 20 people. So now is the time to show everyone there are good people in Dolan and Meadview who will volunteer.
The fire district needs to support a CERT team. I guess we'll see who wins the consolidation and if we really get volunteers.
Mohave County CERT Team Information
Contact Mike Browning
- Emergency Mgmt. Assistant Coordinator, Mike Browning, (928) 757-0930
- mike.browning@mohavecounty.us
Please if you contact Mike to volunteering let me know at leapspeaker@gmail.com
Thanks
Jay
Tuesday, September 15, 2015
Fire Board Meeting September 21st Meadview
Please attend the Fire Board Meeting September 21st @ 1:30PM at the Meadview Civic Center 247 E Meadview Blvd Meadview AZ
The course our fire service and ambulance takes will decide the fate of many of our friends and neighbors when they call 911.
Will you get a firefighter who's required to be an EMT, or an EMT who's a healthcare provider?
Here's an article on how some firefighters feel about being an EMT. In my opinion any firefighters who are required to be an EMT, and haven't advanced to paramedic in a short time, to provide better patient care, and make more money, have no interest in EMS, they're firefighters, not healthcare providers.
What Firefighters Think About Being Forced to Be EMT's or Paramedic from EMS World
Forced EMS is a killer. Just having to ride the meat wagon as an EMT is bad enough, but here in PG they changed the job title of Firefighter to Emergency Rescue Technician. Upon being hired you have to sign a contract saying you will acquire your Paramedic certification in a certain amount of time which is 3 years I think. This certification has to be obtained on your on time and expense. This has killed recruitment and retention here. They have already lowered the entrance exam score in order to try and attract more people. When they do get a class, by the time it’s time for them to have their Paramedic certification they are leaving for surrounding departments that don’t have this requirement.
PG is now being used as a stepping stone. Get hired by PG, get trained and get some time on the job and head for greener pastures when it’s time to become a Paramedic.
EMS has always been a part of the service but it’s crazy to force people that want to be a firefighter to become Paramedics also.
http://www.firehouse.com/forums/t35852
The course our fire service and ambulance takes will decide the fate of many of our friends and neighbors when they call 911.
Will you get a firefighter who's required to be an EMT, or an EMT who's a healthcare provider?
Here's an article on how some firefighters feel about being an EMT. In my opinion any firefighters who are required to be an EMT, and haven't advanced to paramedic in a short time, to provide better patient care, and make more money, have no interest in EMS, they're firefighters, not healthcare providers.
What Firefighters Think About Being Forced to Be EMT's or Paramedic from EMS World
Forced EMS is a killer. Just having to ride the meat wagon as an EMT is bad enough, but here in PG they changed the job title of Firefighter to Emergency Rescue Technician. Upon being hired you have to sign a contract saying you will acquire your Paramedic certification in a certain amount of time which is 3 years I think. This certification has to be obtained on your on time and expense. This has killed recruitment and retention here. They have already lowered the entrance exam score in order to try and attract more people. When they do get a class, by the time it’s time for them to have their Paramedic certification they are leaving for surrounding departments that don’t have this requirement.
PG is now being used as a stepping stone. Get hired by PG, get trained and get some time on the job and head for greener pastures when it’s time to become a Paramedic.
EMS has always been a part of the service but it’s crazy to force people that want to be a firefighter to become Paramedics also.
http://www.firehouse.com/forums/t35852