Notice Board / Recent Incidents - UPDATED 13th January 2012

WHEN Charlie McGrath hit 60 at midnight on January 4, his increased age wasnt the only thing weighing on his mind. The opening minutes of his sixth decade marked the end of Charlies time as a firefighter in Kilkee. He joined the service as a 19-year-old, 41 years ago in 1971, serving as an officer in the Kilkee station for 39 of those years. His longevity in the service outstrips every firefighter in the county.
In that time, I was fireman for two years, sub-officer for nine years and station officer for 30 years, Charlie told The Clare Champion.
During his 41-year stint, Charlie attended 2,000 call-outs in the Kilkee, Doonbeg and peninsula areas.
It varied from haybarns in my early days to bog fires, flooding, road traffic accidents and numerous types of fires, he recalled.
Loss of life was sometimes an unfortunate accompaniment to the call-outs. That was the hard part of it. Being a small community and as a fuel merchant, going from door to door in West Clare, I knew everybody and if I didnt know the immediate family, Id know all their relations, he said.
The thing I always found difficult was if you arrived at a scene at maybe two or three oclock in the morning and if it was confirmed that there was a fatality involved, you had to go down on your knee and do the Act of Contrition for them because the priest wouldnt be on site maybe for another half an hour, he reflected.
Whether the incident was a car accident or a house fire, family members would sometimes arrive at the scene.
The next of kin would find out about it and theyd arrive. Theyd be standing on the roadway and theyd be asking questions about what happened. We had good counselling. Theres a counsellor available to us but you didnt think of it at the time. You just got stuck in, did the job and then went away from it. But the hard part of it was when somebody found out that one of their own relations was involved in an accident. Youre standing there and you dont know what to say to them.
A firefighter never knows when theyll hear their bleeper going off.
Time didnt matter. Once the alerter went off, you didnt know what scenario you were facing until you got to the fire station. If it was a road traffic accident, youd be wondering to yourself is it one of my own family thats involved in this? Thatd be running through your head as well, he acknowledged.
Currently, there are 10 people attached to the fire service in Kilkee. In Charlies experience, once you were on call, the rest of your life had to be put on hold.
If youre leaving town then you have to notify the station officer and get a change of duty so that someone will cover you. Its not a thing of saying Ill go to a match in Doonbeg tomorrow evening. Its the station officers responsibility to guarantee a crew at all times, Charlie explained.
Theres a crew on every week from Monday morning to the following Monday morning. They change over then with the opposite crew. Theres a crew on all the time, 24 hours a day. Once the alerter goes off, I can guarantee you that seven or eight people will turn up for that call, he added.
About 10 years ago, Charlies firefighting life flashed before him. For a few frantic minutes, he thought he had lost some of his crew.
There was a local workshop that went on fire one morning in Kilkee. I remember going to the call. The flames were at the back of the building. They raced around the building in seconds. There was an oil tanker beside the building with about a thousand gallons inside in it. Within seconds it exploded. It was like a time bomb going off. I thought Id lost two firemen. Thats the worst fright I ever got, he revealed.
During his 39 years as station officer in Kilkee, Charlie is proud and relieved to note that no firefighter has lost his life under his watch.
I never had a loss of life or injury with any of my crew under me. I always feel proud about that. I wouldnt put them into a building that I wouldnt go into myself. If I cant go in, ye wont go in was his mantra.
Charlie cites the support of his wife Delia, their five children and Martin Foxy Kelly, who works for him in his fuel and garden centre business, as hugely beneficial to his firefighting career.
Still getting used to life as a retired firefighter, Charlie is confident he will manage.
I found it very difficult. It felt like a part of my life had been taken away but I have to move on. I have my service done.
Im now looking forward to going to Kenya on Friday for two weeks with the Fr Martin Keane Building of Hope Project. Itll be good therapy for me. Ill be out of here and Ill come back a fresher man, he predicted.
While labouring in Kenya, Charlie will have to aid the laying of 30,000 blocks. When he comes home, hell work on readjusting to his new life.
This doesnt mean Im going to sit at home and look out the door. Im going to get involved in some voluntary service one way or the other, he laughed, adding that he will continue to wash cars in aid of the West Clare Mini Marathon on Saturday, January 28.
Between now and then, Charlie will have time to reflect on 41 years of unstinting service to his community, often in exceptionally trying circumstances.
Peter O'Donnell - Copyright © 2012 The Clare Champion.
Castlebellingham House Fire





Scene of a Fire on the Annagassin road in Castlebellingham, Co.Louth which was attended last night by Fire Units from Ardee, Dundalk, Dunleer and Drogheda. It was later attended to by the Army Bomb Disposal Unit and a viable device was located. The fire service which had left the scene has returned as the fire reignited...(Photo credit Jenny Matthews www.newsfile.ie)
Dublin City Council approves fire service charge
A controversial new fire service charge was voted in last night by Dublin City Council.
It means householders will face a minimum 500 fee for calling out the Fire Brigade to house fires or other domestic emergencies.
The move is being opposed by fire fighters with the union SIPTU.

Click HERE to Visit 'groundzero' website

" Appeal for Information "

Trevor Deely (born 1978) is an Irish missing person. He was last known to be seen on the morning of 8 December 2000 on a wet and windy night in the Haddington Road area of Dublin 4. He was filmed on CCTV as crossing Baggot Street Bridge at 4.14am, making his way home after attending an office Christmas party during a taxi strike.
Trevor Deely was a Bank of Ireland employee who had moved from the family home in Naas, County Kildare and lived in a shared apartment in Serpentine Avenue, Ballsbridge. He remained in regular contact with his family.
After his disappearance, the Garda Síochána mounted a large search effort, which included draining a stretch of the Grand Canal between Leeson Street and the Grand Canal Basin at Ringsend on two occasions. Fearing that he may have drowned, Garda sub-aqua divers also searched the River Dodder, which had been flooded at the time of his disappearance.
His family mounted a massive awareness campaign. Every lamp post and traffic light in Dublin, Holyhead and other ports was plastered with posters of him. They still keep up hope that he is alive, and although there is a service for Trevor every year in a Naas church, they do not call it a memorial service.
Trevor Deely is 6 feet 2 inches tall, with red hair and green eyes. Anyone with information as to his whereabouts is encouraged to contact Irishtown Garda station
Trevor is a nephew of S/O Clifford Evans, Greystones Fire Station, Greystones. Co Wicklow


FOR WHOM THE BELLS TOLLED:
A HISTORY OF CORK FIRE SERVICES
1622 1900.
by PAT POLAND.
THE HISTORY PRESS IRELAND
20.00
350 pp.
Illustrated.
FOR WHOM THE BELLS TOLLED IS THE STORY OF HOW THE FIRE SERVICE IN CORK EVOLVED THROUGH CENTURIES OF BUNGLING, INCOMPETENCE, AND HUMAN TRAGEDY. TODAY, THE SIGHT OF FIRE ENGINES PROGRESSING THROUGH THE STREETS OF CORK, ON THEIR WAY TO ANOTHER INCIDENT, IS COMMONPLACE. THE PEOPLE OF CORK KNOW THAT, IN TIME OF EMERGENCY, THE FIRE SERVICE WILL ANSWER THEIR CALL FOR HELP WITH THEIR STATE-OF-THE-ART EQUIPMENT AND HIGHLY-TRAINED MEMBERS. BUT IT WAS NOT ALWAYS SO.
IN 1877, CORK FIRE BRIGADE WAS ESTABLISHED WITH JUST AN OFFICER AND FOUR MEN TO SERVE A POPULATION IN EXCESS OF 80,000. PREVIOUSLY, THE CHURCH OF IRELAND HAD PROVIDED FIRE ENGINES (THE UBIQUITOUS PARISH PUMPS) TO SERVE LOCAL COMMUNITIES. THESE WERE FOLLOWED BY THE SPLENDIDLY-UNIFORMED PERSONNEL OF THE INSURANCE COMPANIES FIRE ENGINE ESTABLISHMENTS, THE FIRST REAL ATTEMPT AT AN ORGANIZED APPROACH TO FIRE SUPPRESSION IN THE CITY.
FILLED WITH ANECDOTES, BOTH TRAGIC AND AMUSING, FOR WHOM THE BELLS TOLLED IS AN ANIMATED AND DETAILED ACCOUNT OF THE FIRE SERVICES IN CORK, INTERWOVEN WITH A COLOURFUL HISTORY OF THE CITY ITSELF.
PAT POLAND SERVED WITH THE FIRE SERVICE FOR OVER THIRTY YEARS, AND HAS WRITTEN EXTENSIVELY ON FIRE SERVICE HISTORY.
THE BOOK IS NOW AVAILABLE IN ALL GOOD BOOKSHOPS AND ON-LINE FROM THE HISTORY PRESS IRELAND, AMAZON, ABE, ETC.


Click HERE < < < ex-Northern Ireland Firefighters website > > >


"Personalized Lapel Pins & Crests"
Click HERE <<< Fire and Rescue Ireland >>>

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