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1999 Emergency Preparedness Fair |
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The 1999 Emergency Preparedness Fair, held April 16, 17 and 18,
was very educational for both the first-time visitors and participants and
seasoned Disaster Workers such as ourselves. Every year the Fair evolves, and no
two years are ever the same, it seems. The Los Angeles Community Emergency
Response Team was there of course. Our awning was in the midst of the Los
Angeles Fire Department area. We had Basic Training and Battalion Refresher
schedules available for the public and the CERT members who came by.
This year, CERT volunteers participated in School Day on Friday,
the 16th. About 2,500 students from the Los Angeles Unified School District
attended. That is up a bit from last year, when about 1,000 students attended.
Many of the City agencies and departments had demonstrations and presentations
for the children. Each volunteer was assigned to a bus, and acted as guide and
schedule-keeper for the group from arrival at the Fair until they departed.
This group is learning about temporary and permanent signs and directions from
the Los Angeles Department of Transportation.
No Fair would be complete without some real live exciting
demonstrations. In this picture it doesn't look like it's all that much of a
jump, but it is. The platform in this picture is about 30 feet above the
asphalt. It is a long ways down when you are standing on the platform. There
are two fans which inflate the bag to provide cushioning for the one jumping.
I think I would need a considerable amount of fire at my back to get me to jump
into this bag, but the firefighters seemed to have no problem with it at all.
No public services presentation package for school children
would be complete without some up-close and personal interaction with Fire
Department and Police Department representatives. Sparky the Fire Dog told the
youngsters about fire safety and what to do if a fire happens where they are.
Police representatives taught the young participants how to remain safe during
an emergency as well as every day on their way to and from school and at the
playground and street.
There were many antique pieces of apparatus on display. This
is a horse-drawn steam-driven pump. Around the turn of the century these were
quite the state-of-the-art firefighting machine. By the time the horses had
been harnessed and the rig pulled to the fire, the steam pressure would be up
to drive the pump. This certainly was an improvement on the bucket brigade
concept, and was a stepping stone to some of the more recent innovations in
'rolling stock'.
One of the newest concepts in fire equipment is the small,
specialized units like this Humvee-based fire truck. It doesn't look like a
fire truck at first glance, but it is. Smaller units like this can get into
places faster than the larger units, which may stop a small event from
becoming much larger. This kind of 4-wheel drive unit seems ideal for hillside
areas and the undeveloped mountain regions within the area which are difficult
to access but are frighteningly close by when they are ablaze.
We CERT folk don't have a Humvee, but we seem to have an
official genuine red-and-white fire department van with our CERT logo and the
training information phone number. The Disaster Preparedness Unit is continuing
to conduct training sessions around the city. Keep a link to our Basic
Training Schedule for those in your neighborhood who would like to join our
Team. CERT members are a part of the emergency and disaster response structure
of the Los Angeles Fire Department, and with over 20,000 of us trained as of
Spring 1999, we are a significant asset to our communities, to the LAFD, and to
the City of Los Angeles.
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updated: 12 August 2001 |
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