The Day

Training site for firefighte­rs proposed

Groton department­s favor location behind Town Hall Annex

- By KIMBERLY DRELICH Day Staff Writer

Groton — Local fire department­s are planning a fire training site in an area behind the Town Hall Annex on Groton Long Point Road that they said would provide a centralize­d location for them to train together.

“It’s going to give a great benefit to all area fire department­s to be able to train and work together,” said Anthony Manfredi Jr., deputy fire chief with the Mystic Fire Department and training officer with the Groton Fire Officers Associatio­n.

PZC review tonight

The proposal from the Groton Fire Officers Associatio­n, which each fire department in town belongs to, is slated to go before the Planning and Zoning Commission on Tuesday at its 7 p.m. meeting at the Town Hall Annex community room 2.

If approved by the commission, the next step would be to bring a Memorandum of Understand­ing before the Town Council, Town Manager John Burt said.

Burt said the fire department­s had approached the town several years ago to identify a townowned site. Staff and fire department­s concluded the site — between the Annex building and the Public Works building, but set back farther from the road — was the most logistical­ly appropriat­e site to use.

“This has been a long time need for our local fire department­s,” Burt said. “This site would help keep our firefighte­rs trained and ready to handle any situation.”

Manfredi, who is coordinati­ng the initiative for the fire department­s, said the activities will be confined to a fenced-in area. The plan is to install a fire training trailer and rope rescue trailer on the site, along with practice cars for vehicle extricatio­n and stabilizat­ion, and roof simulators so firefighte­rs can practice ventilatio­n on low-to-the-ground props. Firefighte­rs also would use an existing shed to practice firefighti­ng safety and bailing out through a window.

The firefighte­rs would wear full protective gear and would have safety procedures within the training room, the applicatio­n to the PZC stated.

“There is zero risk or hazard to anyone that is not within the very immediate area,” the applicatio­n stated.

“The trainings will vary from live fire training within an engineered training prop, vehicle extricatio­n utilizing donated vehicles that have had their fluids and battery removed, basic firefighti­ng drills such as laddering, (self-contained breathing apparatus) maze, hand tools, forcible entry, safety and survival, firefighte­r search assist teams, rescue systems and confined space rescue,” the applicatio­n states, adding that at least 80 percent of the trainings won’t create water drainage or waste. No hazardous materials will be stored on site, it states, and firefighte­rs would manage any materials used that are considered hazardous by following the manufactur­er’s directions and state regulation­s.

The applicatio­n states that the trainings will take place between 9 a.m. and 10 p.m., at the latest, and will “be done in way to not inconvenie­nce neighbors, anyone visiting, doing business or working at the Town Hall Annex.” Most training will be held at 5 p.m. or later, and any training involving live burn activities, including simulated smoke, will be done when the Town Hall Annex is closed.

The proposed site mainly would serve the fire department­s in Groton, though outside mutual aid partners could use it too, Manfredi said.

He pointed out that the site not only would assist members of the fire department­s in completing annual training requiremen­ts and as a site for coordinate­d training, but also could serve other town department­s. For example, an electrical safety course on the site could be opened up to all town department­s.

Poquonnock Bridge Fire Chief Joseph Winski said the proposed facility is centrally located within town so all area department­s could use it for training without having to travel long distances and store all their training props in one centralize­d location.

“In essence, it consolidat­es our training together, so we’re all on the same page,” he said.

Winski noted that coordinati­ng the training is important because the fire department­s work together.

“None of us are standalone organizati­ons,” he said. “We all depend on each other.”

The project includes relocating a material storage area used by Public Works and installing two watertight holding tanks with drains to collect runoff, the applicatio­n states.

The commission is expected to make a decision on the site plan on Tuesday unless the applicant requests a time extension, said Assistant Planning Director Deb Jones. The commission may place restrictio­ns on certain activities.

 ?? SARAH GORDON/THE DAY ?? Dressed as a mermaid-princess, Rebecca Scotka, a children’s librarian at the East Lyme Public Library, sings a song during a storytime event at Hole-in-the-Wall Beach on Monday in Niantic. The event, which is held in partnershi­p with the Department of Parks and Recreation, has been held a few times a season for four summers. “It’s just so great to take advantage of our amazing town,” said Scotka, “and I won’t complain about working from the beach for a morning.”
SARAH GORDON/THE DAY Dressed as a mermaid-princess, Rebecca Scotka, a children’s librarian at the East Lyme Public Library, sings a song during a storytime event at Hole-in-the-Wall Beach on Monday in Niantic. The event, which is held in partnershi­p with the Department of Parks and Recreation, has been held a few times a season for four summers. “It’s just so great to take advantage of our amazing town,” said Scotka, “and I won’t complain about working from the beach for a morning.”

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