Orlando Sentinel

Vessel boosts department’s water response

- By Lisa J. Huriash Staff Writer

Fireboat 49, the newest addition to the Fort Lauderdale Fire Department, will not only speed rescuers to those in distress faster than ever, but it can sniff out chemical, biological and nuclear weapons, too.

It replaces a 27-foot fishing boat that the department put a pump on.

“It wasn’t really made for firefighti­ng,” said Deputy Fire Chief Timothy C. Heiser. “It’s what we could get at that time. We did our best to make it work.”

He beamed as looked at the new Fireboat 49.

“It’s very impressive,” he said about the vessel that shoots 4,000 gallons of water per minute and can reach speeds of 40 knots.

The $1.055 million MetalCraft Marine Firestorm 36 aluminum Fireboat was purchased through a federal grant. Among its features: It can sniff out chemical, biological, radiologic­al, nuclear or explosive materials. It’s “equipped with sensors, we can actually take readings to see if boats going past have any of that stuff,” he said.

It has an enclosed compartmen­t for authoritie­s to better focus on track sonar — needed for when they are searching for bodies or cars underwater.

“It’s almost like an office,” Heiser said, “as opposed to standing on the deck when it’s raining.”

There is a raised platform, allowing a better bird’s eye view for rescue workers. There’s a second steering station outside so the driver can keep his or her “eyes on the divers from the outside. [There’s the] option of doing either one” inside or outside, Heiser said.

Rescue workers have been training since August with help from crews in Miami-Dade, which has a similar vessel.

Fort Lauderdale’s boat was formally christened Friday. It will be staffed during business hours for now, but Heiser said ultimately the agency wants it on the seas 24 hours a day, every day.

“It’s really something,” he said. “Nobody in Broward County has anything like what we have — a fire boat specifical­ly made for firefighti­ng and [the] marine team.”

It will patrol the north and south fork of the New River, the Intracoast­al. And it will be ready to respond offshore, such as a request to get a sick cruise ship patient to the hospital STAT.

It is named after Station 49, the station on State Road A1A. Two other, smaller boats will remain available — one is a back-up and the other is for “extreme emergencie­s” when two boats are needed to responded to the

 ?? MIKE STOCKER/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? The 43-foot jet-powered Fireboat 49 will allow the Fort Lauderdale Fire Department to answer calls in any weather short of a hurricane.
MIKE STOCKER/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER The 43-foot jet-powered Fireboat 49 will allow the Fort Lauderdale Fire Department to answer calls in any weather short of a hurricane.

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