Santa Cruz Sentinel

FIRE DEPARTMENT FETES NEW ENGINE

Latest fleet addition welcomed with city's first `push-in' ceremony

- By Jessica A. York jyork@santacruzs­entinel.com

Ready to hit the streets of Santa Cruz, fire engine 3113 features a number of “aggressive” new fire suppressio­n features.

The new maroon-colored fire engine, a 2023 Pierce Enforcer Fire Pumper whose purchase was approved by city leaders for up to $850,000 in November, features a 750-gallon water tank — the largest in the city fleet — and a 1,500-gallon-per-minute pump, for starters.

“For context, you could fill the average residentia­l swimming pool in 12 minutes flat,” Santa Cruz Fire Chief Rob Oatey told a small crowd Monday at his department's Younglove Avenue fire station. “We're not offering that as a service, just a little bit of background.”

Oatey's comments, eliciting chuckles from his audience, came before more than a dozen firefighte­rs rolled up their figurative sleeves and literally pushed the fire truck several feet backward into its bay. For the first time in its history, the Santa Cruz Fire Department threw a small “push-in ceremony” to welcome the fleet's latest addition. Although never known to be performed in Santa Cruz, such push-ins are a firehouse tradition harkening back to the 1700s, when fire apparatus was moved by hand, or horses that did not take kindly to backing up.

“But this is more than just pushing a vehicle into a station. It's a physical and symbolic gesture signifying the collective strength of the firefighti­ng team. It is a demonstrat­ion of the unwavering support that firefighte­rs provide to one another, a testament to the trust and reliance that binds them as a family,” Oatey said. “In the midst of the sweat and strain of pushing the apparatus, there is a unity of purpose. Each

push, each drop of sweat, represents the shared determinat­ion to uphold the values of bravery, sacrifice and selflessne­ss. It symbolizes our readiness to respond to the call of duty, no matter the circumstan­ce.”

Mayor Fred Keeley, on hand with Councilmem­ber Scott Newsome, Police Chief Bernie Escalante and City Manager Matt Huffaker, among other city officials, stressed that “the core function of local government is public safety” during opening remarks. Keeley noted that fire agencies have expanded beyond the confines of traditiona­l firefighti­ng duties and now spend much of their time responding to medical emergencie­s.

Gesturing at the new fire truck, Keeley added, “This, however, is the key to what the fire department does.”

In addition to its increased water storage and speedier pumping power, some new engine features

include firefighte­r breathing apparatus storage located on the cab's exterior, an undivided front window that eliminates a standard blind spot and 12-volt LED lighting that removes the need for noisy and polluting generators, according to Oatey.

As delivery times on fire trucks have significan­tly increased in recent years, the new pumper engine's arrival seven months after its purchase was quite fast, according to Oatey. For comparison, the department ordered a custom-made engine in January 2022 that will not arrive until December. Ordering such an engine today would require a three to four-year wait, he said. Engine 3113, however, was an off-the-shelf model that bears similariti­es to the Santa Cruz fleet, although it is too tall to fit in its originally intended downtown Santa Cruz station, Oatey said.

“Again, I talked about the 750-gallon water tank. It's an increased capacity and it's no accident that it's here on the Westside,” Oatey said, comparing other engines' 500-gallon tanks. “This capacity is going to be perfect for the Westside, the commercial district that we have and of course the North Coast, that has zero hydrants or a very limited supply. So, again, very intentiona­l. As well as the bigger pump, 1,500 gallons per minute, increased capacity for large commercial buildings out here on the Westside.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY SHMUEL THALER — SANTA CRUZ SENTINEL ?? City of Santa Cruz firefighte­rs push the department's new Engine 3113, steered by engineer John Forbes, into Station No. 3on Younglove Avenue on Monday morning as the apparatus is officially put into service. The push-in ceremony is a fire service tradition that pays tribute to firefighte­rs in the 17th century who used horse-drawn equipment and physically pushed fire engines into the bays after returning from a fire.
PHOTOS BY SHMUEL THALER — SANTA CRUZ SENTINEL City of Santa Cruz firefighte­rs push the department's new Engine 3113, steered by engineer John Forbes, into Station No. 3on Younglove Avenue on Monday morning as the apparatus is officially put into service. The push-in ceremony is a fire service tradition that pays tribute to firefighte­rs in the 17th century who used horse-drawn equipment and physically pushed fire engines into the bays after returning from a fire.
 ?? ?? Firefighte­rs from throughout the SCFD are joined by city officials as the department's new engine is readied to be pushed in to the Younglove Avenue station.
Firefighte­rs from throughout the SCFD are joined by city officials as the department's new engine is readied to be pushed in to the Younglove Avenue station.
 ?? SHMUEL THALER — SANTA CRUZ SENTINEL ?? Engineer John Forbes steers the engine as firefighte­rs push SCFD's new 3113into the Younglove Avenue fire station on Monday.
SHMUEL THALER — SANTA CRUZ SENTINEL Engineer John Forbes steers the engine as firefighte­rs push SCFD's new 3113into the Younglove Avenue fire station on Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States