Volunteer fire departments receive kits for wildfires
Published 12:00 am Sunday, September 27, 2009
Natchez — The Kingston and Lake Montrose Volunteer Fire Departments of Adams County received safety equipment recently from the Mississippi Forestry Commission as part of a National Fire Plan Program grant through the USDA Forest Service
“This equipment will improve the capability and effectiveness of the local volunteer fire departments in southwest Mississippi to safely protect lives and rural properties,” said Jim Phillips, assistant district forester, Southwest District located in Brookhaven.
This special grant was awarded to 73 volunteer fire departments and outfitted 730 firefighters statewide.
The grant provides wildland firefighting personal protective equipment to help local volunteer fire department personnel to extinguish grass and brush fires and assist MFC on wildfires.
Each approved volunteer fire department received 10 “Ready Kits.” Each kit contains the following items: Nomex yellow coverall suit, wildland Bullard helmet, Nomex neck shroud, headlamp, gloves, safety glasses and a yellow storage bag. Nomex is a flame-resistant material.
“When volunteer fire department personnel respond to a wildland fire or grass fire they normally wear their structural firefighting clothing, which is very heavy and hot. The structural firefighting clothing is not designed for the extreme wildland firefighting activities,” Phillips said.
“There are plans in the future for local volunteer fire department personnel to receive some specialized wildland firefighting training through a new distance learning program called Fire in the Field,” Phillips said.
The National Fire Plan Program grant does not cover the cost of the wildfire training.
Many towns and communities in the Forestry Commission’s Southwest District are at high risk for wildfires. It is important that the volunteer fire department personnel have this safety equipment to protect them on these dangerous and often unpredictable wildfires.
Most fire chiefs say that fighting a wildfire is different from extinguishing a structural fire.
The local volunteer fire departments rely on grants from the USDA Forest Service and the Mississippi Forestry Commission for this special safety gear. For more information about MFC firefighting grants, go to the MFC’s Web site:,www.mfc.state.ms.us.