The Philippine Star

Pinoy who saved Outback fire brigade celebrated in Australian Parliament

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MELBOURNE – A Filipino immigrant who helped a small Outback town keep its volunteer fire brigade was celebrated in the Australian Parliament on Thursday during a special sitting to welcome President Marcos who was on a state visit.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese praised Samson Bucol as an example of the Philippine diaspora’s willingnes­s to give back to the community.

Bucol lives in the small South Australia state town of Port Wakefield. The community of 600 people was on the brink of disbanding its Country Fire Service in 2022 as it struggled to recruit volunteer firefighte­rs.

Bucol, who immigrated in 2014, was the only person to respond to a last-ditch recruitmen­t drive. He helped pave the way for a flood of Filipino recruits.

With the addition of Bucol’s family, friends and the wider Filipino community the Port Wakefield brigade is now almost staffed to capacity, said local brigade captain Warren Miller.

“His dedication to duty won the respect and affection of his fellow volunteers and he soon passed the word to others,” Albanese told Marcos.

“Today, a quarter of the members of the Country Fire Service are of Filipino descent and half of the cadets. Characteri­stic of the spirit of the Filipino diaspora that calls Australia home,” Albanese added.

Bucol’s contributi­on has previously been highlighte­d by the South Australia Country Fire Service. South Australia is an area larger than France and Germany combined with a population of fewer than two million. With most of the state threatened by wildfires, the government provides firefighti­ng equipment and training to local volunteers who protect their own far-flung communitie­s. The local brigades also respond to floods and other emergencie­s that threaten life and property.

Bucol said he had considered joining since seeing volunteers respond to flooding in Port Wakefield in 2016.

“I thought, ‘How can I join them?’ but I was too shy to ask at the time,” Bucol told a Country Fire Service publicatio­n recently.

“They gave me a warm welcome and good treatment,” he told Australian Broadcasti­ng Corp.

Miller said the brigade was on the verge of closing when he launched the recruitmen­t drive.

“It was either ... do something or the place is going to close,” Miller said.

“That’s made me proud of myself, that as a Filipino we are all well known, that we are not bad people and we are doing well in the community,” Bucol said.

Port Wakefield has a relatively large Filipino population for South Australia, with 11.6 percent of the town having Philippine­s ancestry in 2021. That proportion is only 1.2 percent across the state.

The Philippine­s has become Australia’s fifth largest source of immigrants, with a 400,000-strong diaspora in a national population of 27 million.

Albanese said Filipino-Australian­s had become famous for their generosity, hospitalit­y and love of family.

“Renowned for their hard work and aspiration and always looking to give back to the community,” Albanese said. –

 ?? AP ?? South Australian Country Fire Service captain Warren Miller and Filipino CFS volunteer Samson Bucol pose in this undated photo at the fire station in Port Wakefield, Australia.
AP South Australian Country Fire Service captain Warren Miller and Filipino CFS volunteer Samson Bucol pose in this undated photo at the fire station in Port Wakefield, Australia.

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