Wednesday, December 3, 2008
A Call to Arms For Children's Sake
The death toll on children taken by fire this winter season seems
unusually heavy, officials at the U.S. Fire Administration say,
although there are no firm statistics yet. And like most fire
service professionals who’ve witnessed the brutal reality of
child deaths and serious injuries in fires, they’re taking it
hard.
“It’s been
devastating,” says Charlie Dickinson, deputy U.S. fire
administrator. The rage in his voice intensifies as he reads a list of
recent multiple fatality fires from his office at the USFA in
Emmitsburg, Md.
“Dec. 22, five children died in an apartment fire in Texas;
“Dec. 23, four children in Canton, Ohio;
“Dec. 29, a teenage girl died in Fairfax County, Virginia;.
“Dec. 30, three people in New York, including two children;
“Dec. 30, three people in Virginia, including a teenage
girl.”
And the casualties continue. On Monday, an 11-year-old, a 13-year-old
and a grandmother died in a house fire in Germantown, New York.
Dickinson and U.S. Fire Administrator Dave Paulison have begun to feel
it’s time to do something more than just feel frustrated and sad.
“As a society, how can we accept this?” wonders Dickinson.
“Where’s the outrage by the fire service that we continue
to lose children like this?”
Paulison and Dickinson are issuing a call to arms to the nation’s
fire service leaders. Serious fires should be followed with serious
messages from fire chiefs, they say. “These deaths mean we must
rededicate ourselves to educating the public about this serious –
and largely preventable – scourge in our communities,” said
Paulison, in an
editorial sent to FIRE CHIEF today.
Knowing that fire chiefs may feel a bit like
Chicken Little as they try to get fire prevention and safety messages
through a jaded media, Paulison sought advice from public affairs
experts at the USFA and FEMA on how fire chiefs can make Fire
Prevention Week come early this year. “What is the best way for
you – the fire chiefs of this nation – to reach your
community with fire safety messages? I asked public affairs
professionals in FEMA and the U.S. Fire Administration to think about
that question and provide you with some strategic advice on reaching
out to the media as a partner in fire education,” said
Paulison.
See
“After a Serious Fire: Maximize Media Attention to Promote
Safety” by R. David Paulison.
It would be easy for many fire chiefs to feel discouraged as they
witness the human toll taken by fires this winter season, but Paulison
and Dickinson implore fire chiefs and fire prevention officials to beat
their drums only louder. Dickinson recalls feeling that sense of
hopelessness himself when he was a fire chief in Pittsburgh and several
children died in a fire under his watch. He used that occasion to
engage the media; he told reporters he felt a personal sense of failure
that his department’s prevention efforts hadn’t reached
that family before the tragedy. If only that family had gotten the
message of how important it is to change the batteries in their smoke
alarm; if only they had learned how important it is not to leave
children alone in a fire; not to leave candles out in the open and of
the importance of a family escape plan; these simple things might have
saved their lives.
“I got the news media’s attention and we went
fourteen months without losing a child. That was the greatest fourteen
months we ever had,” recalled Dickinson.
But you have to do your homework with the press, he said. “You
can’t say, ‘No comment’ and stand across the street.
They’re not going to come and help you. You’ve got to
engage these folks, and you’ve got to make them a part of your
team. And sometimes you have to take them inside the fire scene and
show them ugly things, because you need them to feel the passion that
you have. You need them to feel your hopelessness when you look at
these kids and see how god awful it is.”
Let these fatal fires serve as a catalyst to renew your commitment to
improving fire safety and prevention in your community, said Paulison.
“As fire professionals, we take each fatal fire personally. It
seems as if we have failed our community in some way. A fatal fire,
though, might be just the wake-up call your community needs…. You
are key to this. You can help turn the tragedy of fire deaths to a
triumph of a safer community.”
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