Roughly three
years since its inception, a donation
fund dedicated to purchasing new
technology for the South Lake Tahoe Fire
Department has reached its first goal.
The fund, set up with the help of South
Shore resident David Kelly, recently
acquired enough money to buy a third
thermal-imaging camera, heat-detecting
devices that can greatly increase
firefighting efficiency.
Donations to the fund bought all three
cameras for the department, which now
will have one at each station.
Kelly has enlisted the help of a litany
of local service organizations and
donors in the quest for the cameras, but
a $10,000 donation by local business
owners Bob and Tammi Hassett put the
fund over the necessary mark.
Both Kelly and the Hassetts were honored by the
city Feb. 12 for their contributions.
Each of the cameras, which can sense
temperature differences of as little as
one degree, costs about as much as the
Hassetts' donation.
"It's a real versatile tool," said fire
Capt. Rick Myers.
Determining the number of ejected
victims in a car crash by looking at the
heat signatures left on the vehicle's
seats, or locating lost children who may
be hiding from rescuers were a couple of
the situations Myers used to highlight
the camera's flexibility, but it all
boils down to speeding up searches by
allowing firefighters to see what human
eyes leave obscured.
The cameras
already have been helpful to
firefighters by helping them see through
blindingly thick smoke and pinpointing
the location of a fire within a
structure.
The Hassetts recently witnessed the
latter of these benefits firsthand, when
city firefighters responded to the
couple's restaurant, The Fresh Ketch,
early Christmas morning.
After firefighters
found the restaurant's heating,
ventilating and cooling system pumping
out smoke but were unable to determine
the exact source of the fire, they used
the camera to scan the space between the
first and second floors.
Using the camera to find the hot spot in
the crawl space, firefighters were able
to put out the fire more quickly and
with less damage to the building, said
fire Capt. Jim Drennan.
But ultimately, it's lives, not
property, the cameras have been bought
to save, according to Kelly.
"If it saves one
child, one grandparent, if it saves me
or you, it's worth 10 times the amount
of money we paid for it," Kelly said
Thursday.
Although the fire equipment fund's first
goal has been reached, donations to the
fund still are being accepted so new
technology can be quickly put in the
hands of firefighters, Kelly said.
"It's not over, you know," he said.
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