New Firefighters Join Natick Department
State Fire Marshal Peter J. Ostroskey and Massachusetts Firefighting Academy (MFA) Director
David C. Evans announced the
graduation of the three classes
that completed the Massachusetts
Firefighting Academy’s fifty-day
Career Recruit Firefighting
Training Program.
Class #286 trained at the Stow
campus, Class #S18 trained at
the Springfield campus and Class
#BW05 trained at the Bridgewater campus. The ceremony took
place at the Department of Fire
Services in Springfield.
“This rigorous professional
training provides our newest firefighters with the basic skills to
perform their jobs effectively and
safely,” said State Fire Marshal
Ostroskey. The Massachusetts
Firefighting Academy (MFA), a
division of the Department of
Fire Services, offers this program
tuition-free.
Class #286: 17 Graduates
from 11 Fire Departments
The 17 graduates represent
the 11 fire departments of Framingham, Lexington, Nantucket,
Natick, North Attleboro, Plymouth, Reading, Swampscott,
Wilmington, Winchester, and
Winthrop.
Natick had Jeffrey Libby and
Anthony Parchesky graduate.
Class #S18: 13 Graduates from
4 Fire Departments
The 13 graduates represent
the four fire departments of
Athol, Longmeadow, Springfield,
and Westfield.
Class #BW05: 18 Graduates
from 9 Fire Departments
The 18 graduates represent the
nine fire departments of Bourne,
Franklin, Hanover, Hingham,
Hopkinton, Milton, Newton, Seekonk, and Stoughton.
“First responders are on the
frontlines protecting their communities and these newest firefighters are needed now more
than ever. We have taken advantage of technology, reduced class
size to increase social distancing,
implemented daily screening, and
required mask-wearing to keep
our instructors and students as
safe as possible during these uncertain times,” said MFA Director Evans.
Today’s Firefighters Do
Far More than Fight Fires
Today’s firefighters do far more
than fight fires. They are the first
ones called to respond to chemical and environmental emergencies, ranging from the suspected
presence of carbon monoxide to
a gas leak. They may be called
to rescue a child who has fallen
through the ice or who has locked
himself in a bathroom. They rescue people from stalled elevators
and those who are trapped in
vehicle crashes. They test and
maintain their equipment including self-contained breathing apparatus (SCBA), hydrants, hoses,
power tools, and apparatus.
At the Massachusetts Firefighting Academy, they learn all
these skills and more from certified fire instructors who are also
experienced firefighters. Students
learn all the basic skills they need
to respond to fires, to contain
and to control them. They also
receive training in public fire
education, hazardous material
incident mitigation, flammable
liquids, stress management, confined space rescue techniques,
and rappelling. The intensive,
10-week program for municipal
firefighters involves classroom
instruction, physical fitness training, firefighter skills training,
and live firefighting practice.
Training Safely During
Pandemic
In response to the pandemic,
the 10-week curriculum was reorganized to take advantage of
online learning technology while
ensuring plenty of practical skill
experience on-campus with instructors. Students alternated
between the virtual classroom
for two weeks, on campus for
practical training (using special
safeguards and social distancing)
for four weeks, back to the virtual
classroom for a week, returning
to campus for two weeks and finishing the final week in the virtual
classroom.
Basic Firefighter Skills
Students receive classroom
training in all basic firefighter
skills. They practice first under
non-fire conditions and then
during controlled fire conditions. To graduate, students must
demonstrate proficiency in life
safety, search and rescue, ladder
operations, water supply, pump
operation, and fire attack. Fire
attack operations range from
mailbox fires to multiple-floor
or multiple-room structural fires.
Upon successful completion of
the Recruit Program all students
have met the national standards
of National Fire Protection Association 1001 and are certified to
the level of Firefighter I and II,
and Hazardous Materials First
Responder Operational Level by
the Massachusetts Fire Training
Council, which is accredited by
the National Board on Fire Service Professional Qualifications.