SOMERSET — A $100,000 replacement burn building will be available to Somerset County firefighters by August so they can get real-world experience battling blazes.
“We’ve outlived our burn building,’’ said Clair Saylor of Rockwood, secretary of the Somerset County Fireman’s Association. He said changing safety regulations and training modes have made the 1981 building obsolete.
Three gigantic storage trailers – like those used to ship cargo overseas – will be assembled like Legos, two on the bottom and one stacked on top.
The prototype comes with a prebuilt maze for use with breathing apparatus.
“You can get almost anything you want with these modules,’’ Saylor said.
He said firefighters got a super price.
“We’re the first people in the Eastern U.S. to do this,’’ Saylor said. “(It cost) $104,000 to do this, that’s our price because we’re going to use it as a demonstrator for other people.
“We’ve been told by the company we can add on to it.’’
The money for the structure came from selling two tracts totaling 10 acres.
The association needs another $30,000 to $35,000, though, for electricity, a water holding tank and other necessities.
Jim Clark, the president of the Somerset County Fire Chief’s Association, said officials already are trying to raise that cash.
Fundraisers such as dinners and raffles are one option.
“We hope we don’t have to resort to that,” Clark said, noting firefighters are busy answering calls, training and raising money for their own departments.
Perhaps a corporate sponsor may step in.
Clark’s also lobbying lawmakers in both Harrisburg and Washington for assistance.
Most of the labor, Clark said, will be done by the fire departments themselves.
The building will provide “probably about as realistic an atmosphere as you can get,’’ he said.
Saylor agreed, saying although classroom work is valuable, the need remains to get firemen “in smoke and fire.
“This is our main cornerstone. If we don’t have a burn building, there’s no reality to the rest of the fire school.’’
The current training building at the Pleasant Hill site will be demolished.
Local News
Burn building sparks training for firefighters
- Local News
-
-
$27.1B budget proposed
Gov. Tom Corbett on Tuesday proposed a budget of $27.1 billion, with no tax increases, deep cuts to higher education assistance and a range of cost-cutting in services for the poor, elderly and disabled.
-
Highlights of Gov. Corbett's state spending plan
Read on to see a bulleted list of Gov. Tom Corbett’s $27.1 billion state spending plan for the year that starts July 1.
-
Universities face steep cuts
State universities still trying to recover from deep cuts last year would have their public funding slashed even further under a budget plan unveiled Tuesday, leading some institutions to warn of a choice between maintaining buildings and offering academic programs students need to graduate.
-
Plan hurts middle class, local Democrats contend
While members of his own party praised Gov. Tom Corbett’s fiscal restraint, some local Democratic lawmakers said the Republican’s proposed budget panders to corporate interests while inflicting pain on the middle class.
-
Senate approves proposed fee on shale drilling
The state Senate voted today to impose a fee on natural-gas drilling in Pennsylvania and expand regulations for the booming industry, a milestone in a debate that has raged in the Capitol for several years.
Senators voted 31-19 to approve the 174-page bill that would fund road work and environmental clean-ups and give local governments the power to decide if the fee would be imposed on their local wells.
“Could we have done better? Supposedly, but it has taken three years to get this far,” said supporter Sen. John Wozniak, D-Johnstown, among a handful who crossed party lines. “It is time to turn the page.” -
Blogging with heart
I've got so much stuff for this Sunday's American Heart Month package, that some of the stories will spill over onto Monday. But I don't know what to leave out, or hold for the next week, so it looks like a double hit this week.
-
Pa. gas drilling fee bill debate ends without vote
Pennsylvania, the only major gas-producing state that does not tax the taking of natural gas from its soil, moved closer Tuesday to imposing a fee on the drilling in the vast Marcellus Shale reserves that have transformed the state in recent years.
-
Detour hurting some Portage businesses
Craig Mazzarese’s business depends heavily on drive-by customers, but since last week fewer drive-bys have been stopping
-
Local airport funding intact
Airport leaders here are breathing sighs of relief after Congress approved funding to support local commercial air service through 2015.
-
With state revenue tight, Westmont seeks school budget input
The Westmont Hilltop school board on Tuesday night held a public forum at the middle school to explain why the district, already one of the most efficient in the state, must raise taxes each year.
- More Local News Headlines
-






