Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Broward firefighte­rs, medics get body armor

Property seizures cover $177K cost

- By Larry Barszewski

Broward County’s firefighte­r-paramedics are used to wearing protective gear for battling blazes. Now they’ll be getting new protection — body armor vests and helmets — for when they’re assisting victims in incidents involving guns or other dangerous weapons.

It’s a sign of the times, officials say, with the proliferat­ion of active shooter and mass casualty cases across the country, including deadly incidents at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood Internatio­nal Airport in January and at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando

It’s a sign of the times, officials say, with the proliferat­ion of active shooter and mass casualty cases across the country.

last year.

“Fire-rescue responders must not only have adequate training, but also the necessary safety equipment to deal with life-threatenin­g injuries in an effective manner alongside law enforcemen­t who is dealing with the threat,” Gregory Holness, assistant chief of Broward Sheriff Fire Rescue, said in a memo requesting the equipment.

Broward commission­ers approved spending $177,000 last week to purchase 176 body armor packages that will equip every front-line fire-rescue vehicle in the department with the vests, which use steel plate inserts in the front and back, and helmets for each crew member on board.

Broward’s equipment will be paid for through law enforcemen­t trust fund dollars that come from the sale of property seized during the commission of felonies.

The Orlando and Orange County fire-rescue department­s made similar purchases after the Pulse shootings, where 49 people were killed by gunman Omar Mateen in June 2016.

Fort Lauderdale’s firerescue department has provided bulletproo­f body armor and helmets to its crews for about five years, Capt. Greg May said. Firefighte­rs and paramedics are required to wear body armor when responding to a shooting, stabbing or domestic violence incident. The helmets are required when there is an active shooter or active gunfire.

The navy blue vests and helmets are marked “fire rescue” and are shared by each shift. The city spent about $100,000. While other department­s may have a limited number of bulletproo­f vests and helmets to be used in emergencie­s, Fort Lauderdale was the first in Broward to use them systemwide, May said.

Many of the Fort Lauderdale crews who responded to the airport shootings, where six people were killed, donned the gear as they made their way through the terminals.

“Our crews are donning it more and more often,” May said. “They’re always going into the hot zone, but now they’re doing it in a safer manner.”

 ?? FORT LAUDERDALE FIRERESCUE /COURTESY FILE ?? Kalle Hakamaki, a battalion chief from Finland, dons one of Fort Lauderdale’s body armor vests while visiting the city’s fire-rescue department. Broward Sheriff Fire Rescue first responders will now also get bulletproo­f vests and helmets.
FORT LAUDERDALE FIRERESCUE /COURTESY FILE Kalle Hakamaki, a battalion chief from Finland, dons one of Fort Lauderdale’s body armor vests while visiting the city’s fire-rescue department. Broward Sheriff Fire Rescue first responders will now also get bulletproo­f vests and helmets.

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