Cortland County
Regional Training Center
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Cortland Standard October 20, 2008
"Officials Laud Fire Training Center,
Dedication ceremony unveils new facility behind C’ville Fire Department"
Joe
McIntyre/staff photographer
New York state fire instructor Brian Pendell talks about the
work and funding that went into the new
Cortland County Regional Training Center at the center’s dedication Saturday behind the Cortlandville Fire Department.
The men who train Cortland County’s
firefighters want their students ready when the 911 calls come. They
push volunteer and professional firefighters through 160 hours of
“boot camp,” coaching them in everything from crawling through a
smoke-filled building to entering through a second-floor window — or
departing danger through one. They want firefighters to react
quickly and safely. Now county fire instructors Kevin Whitney, Brian
Pendell and Mahlon Irish Jr. have the Cortland County Regional
Training Center, behind the Cortlandville Fire Department’s main
station on Tompkins Street Extension. The building, which was
originally an auto dealership’s garage, has a classroom, a model
house that simulates all sorts of scenarios and a structure where
students can practice putting a ladder against a house and entering
through a window. The training center was dedicated Saturday in an
hour-long program that recognized a range of local, county and state
officials and volunteers. Firefighters from every county fire
district attended. “We used to travel to dilapidated structures that
the owner was going to tear down, and we’d use them for training,”
Pendell told the crowd of about 180. “Now we have this. It’s a
one-of-a-kind facility, something this county should be proud of.”
Whitney, the county’s deputy fire coordinator, thanked a number of
people who made the six-year project happen, from Cortlandville Fire
District Chairman Jack Harvey, whose family helped assemble the
classroom’s chairs, to the Homer and Marathon firefighters who
designed the house’s interior, to people who found $140,000 in
private, county and state funding. The facility was dedicated to
state Sen. James Seward, who provided $25,000 in taxpayer money.
Whitney joked that he was surprised Seward supported the project
after seeing pictures of the original building. The classroom and
its high-tech presentation equipment, which has 48 plush seats and
room for 100 more chairs, was dedicated to Brenda DeRusso, the
county’s assistant coordinator of fire and emergency management.
Whitney said her support and help in finding funds was invaluable.
The simulated house within the building was dedicated to Irish. The
house starts with a door with a gas meter outside, which leads to
two rooms inside, three kinds of circuit breakers (which
firefighters must turn off), and a second floor with different kinds
of room situations and a maze that firefighters must crawl through.
The facility’s sign acknowledges Pendell, who secured state grants
totaling $59,000, including a $30,000 grant through the state’s Fire
Act. He said the county provided $60,000, private donations brought
in almost $5,000 and a golf tournament at Walden Oaks in 2002 raised
$5,000. Firefighters began using the newer parts of the facility in
September. A backup county 911 center still must be finished in a
room adjacent to the classroom. The smoke machine that will send
smoke through the house has not arrived yet. Whitney thanked the
county Buildings and Grounds Department, which spent four months
working on the facility, and the county Legislature and County
Administrator Scott Schrader. Pendell estimated that 200
firefighters had been trained in the county since 2004. Tom Wutz,
chief of the state’s Office of Fire Prevention and Control Fire
Services, also spoke as the person who trained Whitney, Pendell and
Irish to be instructors. The three are Ithaca city firefighters and
volunteer firefighters, Irish for Homer and Pendell and Whitney for
Cortlandville. Pendell said he will look for another $400,000 to
construct a “burn building” where firefighters can train amid real
flames. “We always need to be better,” he said. “We still lose 100
firefighters each year across the nation. Everybody has to do a job,
every piece of the puzzle.”