| In 2003 the Norwalk Fire
Department responded to 695 incidents. This has been the
busiest year on record and represents a call increase of 110
incidents over the year 2002. Of this number 546 incidents
were inside the city limits with 103 responses to Norwalk Township
and 37 responses to Norwalk Township and 37 responses to Bronson
Township. We had 9 mutual aid response requests from other
fire departments.
We regret to report that there was one fire casuality this
year. One civilian was trapped and unable to escape an early
morning mobile home fire on November 18, 2003. Two other
civilians were injured trying to gain entry to help during this
fire. We have had one other civilian with a minor burn
injury occurring during a kitchen fire this year.
The top ten fire losses for the year 2003 are listed on page
four of the report. The total estimated fire los for the
incidents to which we responded amounted to $600,800 with the
breakdown $404,600 in the City of Norwalk, $146,200 in Norwalk
Township and $50,000 in Bronson Township. Please note that
these are our estimates at the time of the incident and actual
costs may have exceeded these figures.
During 2003 we had 56 calls that overlapped other
incidents. Storm activity on July 4, 2003 caused 8 different
reports involving 15 incidents in the same time frame. On
July 8, 2003, another storm created 5 reports involving 14
different incidents occurring in the same time frame. In
both cases, our incident command structure allowed response of
fire department units to all locations within 5 minutes. The
East Coast power blackout problem caused us to activate our local
emergency command structure.
This year we continued our work in the fire prevention education
and inspection programs. On page 10 you will notice the fire
education impact our department has had during the year. We
have increased our Adult presentations and expanded our Junior
High School presentation and the Juvenile Fire Setter Program.
Our inspections were somewhat adversely affected by an off duty
injury and the new inspector going through training. The
data entry of inspection reports into the National Fire Incident
Reporting System program was a main priority and I am happy to
report we have accomplished that mission. I expect 2004 to
be a great year in our inspection program as both fire inspectors
are available. A fire prevented is a fire that we don't have
to extinguish.
Response time for emergency calls remains excellent. Our
records show the overall average emergency response time is 3
minutes and 31 seconds for city calls, while the townships shows a
5 minute and 5 second average response in Norwalk Township, and 7
minutes and 37 seconds in Bronson Township.
During 2003 we budgeted $1,347,360.43 and had actual
expenditures of $1,264,518.49 with personnel costs accounting for
75.7% of expenditures. All equipment repairs were
accomplished with no supplemental requests being needed.
The fire department applied for three different grants during
the 2003 year. We were awarded a grant from the State Fire
Marshal, The Firefighter Training grant for reimbursement costs
associated wit the 240-hour fire academy. We received a
grant from FEMA through the Huron County EMA to purchase two new
tornado sirens ($17,000), and also the Fire Act Grant was applied
for and received in the amount of ($66,510) to purchase new SCBA
air compressor and upgrades to our (Self Contained Breathing
Apparatus) to make them Chemical, Biological, and Nuclear
protective.
The intended goals for 2004
1. Increased fire inspections
2. Building and equipment needs
3. Training requirements
Projects for 2004
1. Continued preplans of factories and
facilities
2. Hydrant testing program
3. New Construction building reviews
Respectfully submitted,
Robert N. Bores, Chief
Norwalk Fire Department
|