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FD3 takes training inside city park structure

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PHOTOS: A house designated as surplus within a city park was put to good use on Saturday by Clallam County Fire District 3. Thirty-five career and volunteer firefighters conducted multiple live-fire drills throughout March 21 in the two-story home within the City of Sequim’s Gerhardt Park. After proper permitting, the City of Sequim offered the house to the fire district for training purposes after they did not receive any bids to move the house at 1610 S. Third Ave.

It was allowed to safely burn down Saturday afternoon after many training rotations. “These types of trainings are truly valuable to the organization,” said Fire Chief Justin Grider. “They are such value-added. We’ve got firefighters working on our staff that since they’ve been on, they haven’t had a structure fire to go to. “They’ve done a lot of medical calls, car crashes, but fires are few and far between, so when we get an acquired structure like this, to put that much realism and that much training behind it, it’s a valuable experience for them.”

Firefighters must participate in live-fire training once a year, Grider said, and they typically do that in training container boxes. “But those are predictable because there’s only so many variables you can learn from those,” he said. Firefighters all conducted a safety walk-through in the house before the training began, including the fire district’s Explorer Scout Post 1003 of high schoolers who conducted their own training there without fire earlier in the week. Grider said firefighters on Saturday were divided up in teams, and didn’t know which of the eight rooms were going to be on fire for each rotation.

They alternated between going upstairs and downstairs for the controlled fires, he said. Large red letters, such as A for Alpha, were marked on the outside to help firefighters identify their locations. Marcus Byrne, a first-year candidate with FD3’s Explorer Scout Post 1003, said he’s wanted to be a firefighter all his life, and that helping with the training helps him and others “see things in action.” Fellow first-year recruit Adoniah Thomas said she’s interested in pursuing a line of work that helps save people’s lives, and that they received a lot of hands-on experience helping fill air bottles for firefighters and seeing their procedures to navigate buildings.

Sequim Gazette

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Michael J. Anderson is a U.S.-based fire safety enthusiast and writer who focuses on making fire protection knowledge simple and accessible. With a strong background in researching fire codes, emergency response planning, and safety equipment, he creates content that bridges the gap between technical standards and everyday understanding.

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