Guymon Daily Herald

Caldwell hosts study on rural fire emergency response

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OKLAHOMA CITY – State Rep. Trey Caldwell, R-Lawton, led an interim study Thursday, Oct. 8, to discuss the current systems in place for emergency management and ways to improve response time. The study was presented before the House Public Safety committee.

“When a person’s health or safety is at risk, they’re not concerned with whether the emergency responders come from their county or the next county over—they just want someone there to save their life,” Caldwell said. “It’s incumbent upon us as legislator­s to ease any separation between agencies so they can work together quickly and efficientl­y in the interest of public safety.”

Lance Terry, who is the 911 coordinato­r for Oklahoma Emergency Management, told the committee there were 128 centers handling 911 calls, in addition to 32 standalone dispatch centers, but that dispatch services were local decisions.

Jack Nicholson, who serves as fire chief of the Chattanoog­a Fire Dept., spoke on the re

lationship between volunteer fire department­s, municipal government­s and county dispatch services.

He told members that while many volunteer fire department­s have boundaries that cross county lines, the authority of individual department­s remains with the jurisdicti­on of the title 11 or 18 governance, re

gardless of county lines.

“Bureaucrat­ic red tape is preventing our fire department­s from servicing the areas closest to them, and it risks the lives and livelihood­s of Oklahomans,” Caldwell said. “I’m thankful for everyone who brought their expertise to the table for this discussion and I’m hopeful we can work together to find a solution that protects Oklahomans and preserves taxpayer dollars.”

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