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New Berea fire station second busiest in county Date published: 6/24/2008
by Hugh Muir
The Berea Fire & Rescue Station No. 12, the newest of Stafford County's 15 stations, celebrated its debut with an open house for dozens of local residents last weekend, where it was announced that in just four months of service it is already the second busiest station in Stafford County. Aquia Harbor is the busiest. Board of Supervisors Chairman George Schwartz, speaking at the ceremonies, said Station 12 has responded to more than 700 dispatches for service. That's five or six a day. "I know at first-hand the positive impact of the station," Sch-wartz said. He lives in the area covered by Berea. Most prominent among the fire, emergency and non-emergency responses by the station's 12-man staff, Schwartz said, was its work in the recovery efforts following the night-time tornado strike in May in the nearby England Run community. The station dealt with immediate damage from the storm and also served in recovery efforts afterward, clearing debris and setting up shelters and service centers. Berea is the first county-built-and-paid-for fire and rescue station in Stafford. It operates with a single piece of equipment, a large truck called a Quint, which requires a four-man crew on each of three shifts around the clock. That makes up Berea's 12-man staff, including the commanding officer, Lt. Matthew Warren. The Quint can do multiple fire-fighting jobs, often done separately by a pumper or a tanker or a ladder truck. It has: a 105-foot aerial ladder with a built-in hose that can shoot 350 gallons a minute from the top; a pump; a 480-gallon water tank and 20 gallons of foam concentrate; 1,000 feet of hose; and 85 feet of ground ladders. A Quint can do anything other individual vehicles can do except transport patients. It is the only one in Stafford and one of four in eastern Virginia. Berea is supposed to have two other vehicles on duty in addition to the Quint: a pumper/tanker fire truck and an ambulance. There is no fire truck in Station 12 and none provided for in the 2008-09 county budget. Berea acquired its $140,000 ambulance six weeks ago, but there is no staff for it in the 07-08 or 08-09 budgets. Six EMS personnel are required to run it, two for each shift.
Read more stories about Stafford Date published: 6/24/2008
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