Dawson County news. (Dawsonville, Georgia) 2015-current, April 06, 2022, Image 10
10A I DAWSON COUNTY NEWS I dawsonnews.com Wednesday, April 6,2022 Fire chief speaks to concerns about emergency operations 'Public safety is the number one thing we're tasked with so we can enjoy every thing else in this great county. The num ber one thing is being safe to enjoy it' Danny Thompson Fire Chief and Emergency Services Director By Julia Fechter jfechter@dawsonnews.com Amidst a recent influx in vocal concerns about local growth, residents have also shared their unease regarding emer gency response. During a March 29 interview, Fire Chief and Emergency Services Director Danny Thompson explained that he and his department share those concerns. “We see the challenges with growth [too] and embrace those challeng es,” Thompson said. “We try to forecast and predict and serve the county as fast as it’s growing.” Some have pointed at call volume as problemat ic. As of March 25, there has been a 20 percent overall increase in call volume. When Thompson spoke to DCN at the beginning of this year, that percentage was between 13-14 percent. https ://www.dawson- news.com/news/ government/911-calls- daw son-county-rose- 13-percent-2021/ At that time, the bulk of responses, whether from fire or EMS personnel, were for medical calls. The factors about lengthy response times are more nuanced, partic ularly when it comes to mutual aid. Currently, Dawson County has eight fire sta tions, including the new est station 8 that debuted in its north-central area last year. https://www.dawson- news.com/news/public- safety/dawson-county- cut-ribbon-new-fire-sta- tion-8/ Six of those stations are staffed with full-time fire fighters 24/7, 365 days a year, Thompson said. The other two, stations 4 and 5, have all volunteers. Mutual aid and response times From week to week, the county’s fire depart ment may require differ ent levels of mutual aid, depending on what emer gencies arise. A fire on the east side of Dawson County, where there are more water hydrants, could require three fire engines, one quint vehicle and two medical units, as well as a battalion chief. During that kind of structure fire, personnel are enabled to shift more resources into the county and move fire trucks around where there are service gaps. Because resources may be taken from one station and relo cated for service, Dawson County may ask one of the neighboring counties to temporarily cover a fire station. Those mutual responders might not actually arrive on scene, depending on the inci dent. If, say, a majority of the six full-time fire stations are helping respond to a single fire, then the chance of service delivery challenges and longer response times increases, Thompson said. That’s part of the rea son why mutual aid is uti lized is to reduce those response times, he added. Similarly, since Dawson County doesn’t have a hospital, people are often taken to facili ties closer to metro Atlanta. From the time a medi cal unit is dispatched to the time it’s back in ser vice, that may be about two hours, Thompson said. The round-trip com mute depends on whether a patient is taken to Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Gainesville, Northside Hospital Forsyth, Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta’s Scottish Rite Hospital or Grady Memorial Hospital for burns. Just like with fighting fires, it’s also proven helpful for Dawson County to rely on neigh boring emergency servic es partners. “There are times during the week that every ambulance is on a call or transport,” Thompson said. “That doesn’t mean we don’t have anybody to send. We still have fire trucks and firefighters. They’re certified and have the ability to respond to treat and stabilize patients as if an ambulance crew was there. They just can’t take patients [to a hospi tal] in a fire truck.” Personnel and facility growth While Dawson County Fire and EMS did have more vacancies at the beginning of the year, making more full-time positions and salary increases have made the department’s positions more competitive, Thompson said. https://www.dawson- news.com/news/public- safety/dawson-county- boc-approves-pay-raises- law-enforcement-public- works-employees/ Currently, the depart ment has a job posting up for a full-time paramedic or EMT (link). https ://www.dawson- county.org/jobs They are also looking for people to fill two sec ond lieutenant positions, contingent on a promo tional process, as well as a battalion chief position. Captains and above, including battalion chiefs, have to be paramedic-cer tified. Thompson called the numbers a “pretty signifi cant improvement,” and he’s still seeing applica tions come in for posi tions. Thompson called the special purpose local option sales tax, or SPFOST, beneficial to the extent it’s “almost 95 per cent of the reason we’re able to have the capital projects.” The SPFOST VII funds will help cover $2.25 mil lion for any fire truck or engine replacement; about $2.3 million in ambulance replacements; $3 million in fire station improvements and $1 million for another burn building. Those figures don’t include the $8.5 million to upgrade radio systems and construct a new 911/emergency oper ations center. Aside from the joint project, one of Thompson’s biggest goals is to not only put full time firefighters in sta tions 4 and 5, but also build renewed quarters that have spaces for fire equipment and volunteer kitchen and office space. “They’ve served this community well over the years, and the volunteers at the time did a great job building them,” he said of those stations’ building, “but they’ve long exceed ed their life span.” If these two stations were staffed, it would allow county fire person nel to offer greater cover age while also working large-scale incidents. With more other units in service during those instances, the response time could be kept down and a greater level of ser vice would be offered, he said. A lower response time can also have further ben efits by lowering the ISO fire safety rating. In short, the higher that figure is, the more homeowners tend to pay in taxes. He elaborated later that a slight millage rate increase could help pay for, say, more firefighters or deputies to serve the community. Thompson thinks his department collaborating with the BOC will contin ue to be a key factor in the way forward for improving county emer gency services. He also considered it important to keep in mind a depart mental vision that takes into account regional growth and fiscal respon sibility. “Public safety is the number one thing we’re tasked with so we can enjoy everything else in this great county,” Thompson said. “The number one thing is being safe to enjoy it.” DCHS FFA competes in Forestry Field Day By Erica Jones ejones@dawsonnews.com On Tuesday March 29, students from the Dawson County High School Future Farmers of America (FFA) group competed in the North Region Area 1 Forestry Field Day. According to FFA Advisor Keith Pankey, the event consisted of land measurement, timber stand improvement, ocu lar estimation, diseases and disorders, wildlife management, tree identi fication, timber cruising for board foot and cord volume, and compass reading. “The team placed 10th overall,” Pankey said. “First-time competition Jalen Smith received an event plaque for being the third highest individual in land measurement.” Photo courtesy of Keith Pankey On March 29, students from the Dawson County High School FFA group competed in the North Region Area 1 Forestry Field Day. FROM 6A Judge “I think that’s really important for a judge to understand that. Of course, you have to make a decision within the boundaries of the law, but at the same time, you have to consider, ‘How does this really affect these people?”’ He spoke about the weighty responsibility of his new role and “under standing and appreciating the emotional aspect of juvenile court.” “You have to decide, for example, whether a parent gets to maintain custody of her children, which is of course one of the biggest decisions that a court could ever make,” he said. “That’s compara ble to decisions whether somebody goes to prison or how long they go to prison for. I mean, that’s just as serious and, in some cases, can be more serious.” He said there were probably about half a dozen candidates for the position. The Times requested the list of appli- cants, but the court declined the request. When asked why he thinks he was chosen over the others, he identified his experience, his work ethic and the rapport he built with judges as a public defender. “I’ve been practicing here for over eight years now as a public defender, so I’ve handled a large caseload and had cases in front of all of the judges here,” he said. “I think what they saw in me was that I would put in the serious work and atten tion to make good deci sions on those really diffi cult matters.” This story was originally published in The Gainesville Times, a sister publication of the Dawson County News. U THE FUTURE OF HEART CARE. WE'RE LEADING GEORGIA THERE. At Georgia Heart Institute, our world-renowned cardiologists, heart surgeons and vascular surgeons bring breakthroughs to patients every day and coordinate expert care more closely than ever. It’s a seamless approach that means healthier hearts for our family - for generations to come. 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