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Dateline: November
13,
2003
Howardwick
firefighters receive FEMA grant
By Roger Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
Howardwick
firefighters will have better equipment and better protection following
the approval of a federal grant last week.
The
City of Howardwick Volunteer Fire Department was one of 11 Texas
communities to receive funding under the Federal Emergency Management
Agency’s (FEMA) “2003 Assistance to Firefighters Grant Program.”
The
grant for $7,398 will be used to purchase breathing equipment, including
six air packs, six spare air tanks, a three-bottle cascade system (to
allow small air tanks to be filled from bigger ones), and PASS II
monitors, which sound an alarm if a firefighter goes down.
This
is Howardwick’s third successful FEMA grant in a row, and each was
written by the department’s own Theresa Zeyen.
Howardwick
Fire Chief Joe Zeyen said his 12-member department was very pleasantly
surprised to be approved for the FEMA grant since they had been funded the
previous two years.
“We
were kind of shocked because we figured this would be a shot in the dark
– you know, twice kissed, once ignored,” he said. “But it turned out
to be a blessing.”
Last
year, Howardwick received funding for new radios, and the year before that
FEMA funded the purchase of a pumper truck.
Under
Secretary of Homeland Security for Emergency Preparedness and Response
Michael D. Brownsaid FEMA is
awarding 242 grants throughout the United States in the twenty-first round
of a program that will ultimately total approximately 7,000 awards worth
$750 million.
“In
California we have seen the benefits of the suppression efforts made by
the nation’s firefighters, and it underscores the importance of putting
fire grant funds directly into the communities,” Brown said.
“President Bush, Homeland Security, and FEMA are committed to the
prevention of all fires as we are to providing preparedness to local
firefighters with the critical financial support they need.”
This
twenty-first round of grants provides over $14 million to help local fire
departments. To date, over 5,400 fire departments have received over $380
million to support their role as first responders in the communities they
serve.
Other
Texas communities receiving funding in this round were Avery, Orange,
Matador, El Paso, Brazos, Wall, Dripping Springs, Beasley, Glenn Heights,
and Hutto.
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