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From our October 12, 2000,
edition.
Firemen
plan for fire prevention week
By
Cheryl Johnson, Clarendon Enterprise
During
National Fire Prevention Week, October 8-14, firefighters, fire prevention
personnel, and teachers across the country will direct attention to the
need for fire prevention in the home, on the job, and in fields and
forest.
The
Clarendon Volunteer Fire Department visited the classrooms at Clarendon
Elementary on Wednesday teaching the children about fire safety.
On Thursday, members of the fire department will hold a
demonstration with the Jaws of Life at the Clarendon School on the east
parking lot after 9 a.m.
The
department will wrap up the week with an Open House at the Fire Station on
Saturday from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. Refreshment
will be served and fire truck rides will be given to the children
attending. The winners of the
Fire Prevention Week poster contest will be presented with their awards at
the Open House.
The
annual fire safety observance commemorates the anniversary of the Great
Chicago Fire of 1871, but Texans have only to look at the state’s record
fire siege this year to appreciate the destruction wildfires can cause.
The
Texas Forest Service estimates that from January through September, 32,000
fires scorched an estimated 630,000 acres in Texas before being controlled
by a combination of local, state, and federal firefighting personnel and
equipment.
Texas
mustered hundreds of local, state, and federal interagency personnel for
fire prevention, mitigation, and suppression duties or threat of possibly
devastating fire losses in the face of a record drought.
At the height of the fire siege, over 180 Texas counties had bans
on outdoor burning in place. The Texas Forest Service credits ban implementation with
helping prevent additional wildfires and property losses.
“Fall
normally brings an increase in fire danger, due to increased outdoor
activity,” said Jim Blott, state wildland/urban interface coordinator
with the Texas Forest Service in Conroe.
“When this increase in outdoor activity coincides with
dangerously dry conditions, wildfires become increasingly likely and
potentially more deadly.”
Blott
suggested several fire safety precautions.
County
Commissioners extended the burn ban in Donley County on Monday.
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