St. Joseph Stanton Fire Department Archives - https://sjodaily.com/tag/st-joseph-stanton-fire-department/ Thu, 11 Jun 2020 14:50:04 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7 https://sjodaily.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/cropped-sjo-daily-logo-32x32.png St. Joseph Stanton Fire Department Archives - https://sjodaily.com/tag/st-joseph-stanton-fire-department/ 32 32 St. Joseph Community Festival committee plans to keep a few events in place in 2020 https://sjodaily.com/2020/06/11/st-joseph-community-festival-committee-plans-to-keep-a-few-events-in-place-in-2020/ Thu, 11 Jun 2020 14:48:16 +0000 https://sjodaily.com/?p=8703 The St. Joseph Community Fall Festival will look a little different in 2020. In a statement released from the festival committee Wednesday, “The festival committee in consultation with the American Legion, Village, and carnival, after much thought has decided to cancel most of the events for this years festival. With all of the unknowns at …

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The St. Joseph Community Fall Festival will look a little different in 2020.

In a statement released from the festival committee Wednesday, “The festival committee in consultation with the American Legion, Village, and carnival, after much thought has decided to cancel most of the events for this years festival. With all of the unknowns at this time due to the coronavirus it is hard to plan what might or might not be allowed in August.”

Being as Illinois might be in Phase 4 in August, the committee is going to try to keep a few events in place.

The Antique/lawn mower tractor pull will take place at noon on August 1 at the Sports Complex.

Pending approval of a food permit, the St. Joseph-Stanton Fire Protection District pancake breakfast will take place on Saturday, Aug. 8.

The St. Joseph Community Festival Parade will take place at 6 p.m. and fireworks are scheduled to take place at dusk.

 

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St. Joseph-Stanton Fire Department fills St. Joseph with surprises https://sjodaily.com/2020/05/21/st-joseph-stanton-fire-department-fills-st-joseph-with-surprises/ Thu, 21 May 2020 19:42:18 +0000 https://sjodaily.com/?p=8508 The last 60 days have been filled with surprises: cancellations of tournaments and games, closures of swimming pools and playground equipment, and postponements of parties and gatherings. The spring days and events that many children looked forward to became more quaint and family-focused as parents and local communities looked for ways to add a little …

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The last 60 days have been filled with surprises: cancellations of tournaments and games, closures of swimming pools and playground equipment, and postponements of parties and gatherings.

The spring days and events that many children looked forward to became more quaint and family-focused as parents and local communities looked for ways to add a little spark to traditions that had been turned upside down.

That spark led to surprises, like the ones the St. Joseph-Stanton Fire Protection District has been making as they come down the street towards a child celebrating a birthday.

“The idea was brought forth by one of our firefighters Jerry Barnett,” St. Joseph-Stanton Firefighter Dan Davis said. “He has smaller children at his home.”

Barnett thought that because kids did not have much to do in the absence of in-person school that the firefighters could take a truck, turn on the horns and drive down the child’s street for their birthday.

“I can remember I was on the first one that we went, and was over and Holly Ridge, an eight-year old girl and her name is Stella,” Davis said. 

Stella was on the back of the long driveway with her parents as the fire truck turned the corner. The truck’s lights were on and the horn went off as Stella’s parents encouraged her to walk to the front of the driveway.

“She was confused, like why are we walking towards that fire truck?” Davis remembers. But her parents let her in on the idea of what was going on and she couldn’t pedal that bicycle fast enough to the edge of the street to see, you know what was going on. 

“As we rolled up there we said ‘Happy Birthday! How old are you? How’s your day going? We also thanked her for inviting us to her birthday party so we became a part of that.”

While maintaining social distancing guidelines, Stella was able to get her picture taken by the truck.

“It was a really good experience for us,” Davis said.

So good that the idea caught on. The St. Joseph-Stanton Department began getting additional requests for birthday drive-bys. As firefighters began to go back to work, the department decided to group calls together in twos or threes, making sure that they could see several children on one trip.

“We realized that we needed to go ahead and put it on certain days and at certain times and that would help both the people that are trying to accommodate the calls but also that way it would give structure to the people so they could plan on us,” Davis said.

On each outing the crew also loads the truck with gear, fire fighting equipment, helmets and breathing masks in case they get an emergency call while they are out celebrating birthdays.

“It’s just a great joy coming around that corner and all sudden you see the kids hopping up and down,” Davis said. “And then, of course, about half run off when you blow the intersection horn because it’s like a train horn.

“It’s a great interaction with the younger citizens of our community. And also it’s a thrill to see the joy on their faces and all the pictures that their parents are taking and, of course, they’re recording it on their phone as well.”

Davis said the outings have also given the volunteers, who spend time together frequently, a way to connect during a time of social distancing.

“We have probationary firefighters, brand new people that are working to get on to the department all the way up to our chief and assistant chief,” he said.

Davis added that birthday celebrations are not the only time that the St. Joseph-Stanton Fire Protection District interacts with the children of the community.

The fire trucks can also be seen in every parade the St. Joseph community holds. 

The group goes to the schools annually in October to talk about fire safety while also giving kids a tour of a fire truck. They also enjoy going to Elite Daycare and Prince of Peace Community Early Learning Center to talk about what a firefighter’s responsibilities are while also giving the students red fire helmets.

The firefighters also look forward to St. Joseph’s Trunk or Treat where they hand out a lot of candy.

“We want the children to be able to go ahead and approach the firefighters and help them understand that we’re regular people,” Davis said.

Children can gain a better understanding of what firefighters do at the department’s annual open house. The event packed full of fun with coloring stations, bounce houses and Smokey the Dog, also features a house structure where children can practice rolling out of bed or staying low to the ground in case of a fire. 

“It connects them to where they’re not afraid of the firefighters so that they have some sense of connection and community with us,” Davis said.

Stay-at-home orders also do not mean that tragedy at home ends. Like other firefighting districts, the St. Joseph-Stanton District has had to work through what training in a pandemic looks like, knowing that they would continue to get emergency calls.

Prior to the mid-March executive order to stay-at-home, the St. Joseph-Stanton team was able to get in an intensive training program that prepares them for rescue missions.

By April, the group was trying virtual training, but as the weather begins to clear up, they should be able to get back outside to work on fire ground training.

“We will have groups of 10 or less, and two separate trucks, and the tankers,” Davis said. “We will go to two separate sites so that we’re not more than 10 as a group to practice our fire ground training.

“I can’t wait and I know a lot of guys are just chomping at the bit because getting together, working on the trucks and making something happen keeps us sharp, but also brings us together as a big team working for a common goal.”

Those goals aren’t always related to fire rescue, though. Sometimes they have to do with keeping their site, located 222 E Warren St., up to community standards.

“Mrs. Denhart and Vicky Reese are instituting the flower beds that are going in at the base of the flagpole,” Davis said. 

Lewis Holcomb-Shreeves has also helped the St. Joseph-Stanton Fire Wife Tribe with flower boxes for the front of the station.

Some of the flowers that are being planted came from the old fire station that was replaced in 2019. The new station includes a cornerstone from the original building that was located on Lincoln Street.

Alan Wall, Stuart Purcell with the help of Assistant Chief (Casey Buss) and Brian Martin alongside several other volunteers have put rock borders up around the station. 

“It’s so pretty out there,” Davis said.

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Dan Davis named 2019 Russell Chism Firefighter of the Year https://sjodaily.com/2020/01/31/dan-davis-named-2019-russell-chism-firefighter-of-the-year/ Fri, 31 Jan 2020 23:13:45 +0000 https://sjodaily.com/?p=6428 BY DANI TIETZ dani@sjodaily.com No matter how we prepare and plan for life, there are always twists and turns that lead us down roads we never dreamed of navigating. Fifty-eight year old Dan Davis, a St. Joseph resident, never expected to be rescued by emergency personnel four times in his life. He didn’t expect two …

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BY DANI TIETZ
dani@sjodaily.com

No matter how we prepare and plan for life, there are always twists and turns that lead us down roads we never dreamed of navigating.

Fifty-eight year old Dan Davis, a St. Joseph resident, never expected to be rescued by emergency personnel four times in his life. He didn’t expect two hip replacement surgeries. And he didn’t expect to become a firefighter.

But those roads led him to where he sits today, the 2019 St. Joseph Stanton Russell Chism Firefighter of the Year.

“Dan is a great example of the selfless service, commitment to improving his skill set, and helping those around him hone their abilities as well,” the announcement on St. Joseph-Stanton Fire Protection District’s Facebook page said.

Davis first encountered what it means to call for help after an accident on I-74. Years later, he had another car accident just north of St. Joseph.

But when Davis, a retired project design manager for facilities and services at the University of Illinois, was set to climb a ladder, just as he’d done many times before, he did not realize that the help he needed next would put him in a place where he smiles from ear-to-ear.

“I brought that ladder off of a vehicle from the outside; I thought it’d warmed up to room temperature. When I was on that ladder it (fell backwards).

“When it did, I jumped off, because I didn’t want to ride it down. I ended up taking out both my knees and tore my hip socket.”

Even after his hip replacement surgery, Davis had to call for help two more times.

His hip dislocated twice, once when he was on the stairs and another time when he was getting out of the shower.

“After having my hip replaced the second time, and going through physical therapy, then physical training, my trainer said, ‘Hey they’re recruiting at the fire station.’”

At 57-years of age, Davis didn’t think there would be a place for him on the team.

“Those young guys are so full of testosterone, they’re going to go ahead and get jacked-up, jump off the truck and run into the fire. (My therapist) goes, ‘Well, possibly someone with more mature testosterone could go ahead and, you know, think about what needs to be done.’”

The young “spitfire,” as Davis recalls, filled out an application for him. When Davis was finally called in for an interview, all he could do is be honest.

“They asked what I was doing here,” Davis said. “I said, you guys rescued me a number of times, most recently in the past year.”

“I said I raised my son and daughter here. I’ve enjoyed a great life here, and I’m going to give back to my community.”

Davis was accepted into the nine-month probationary training program. After completing it in June, the St. Joseph Stanton Department gave him a scholarship to attend the University of Illinois Fire Service Institute.

“I spent four days in 95-degree weather learning the ins and outs of being a firefighter,” Davis said. “On the fourth day, which was June 4, it was my birthday.”

The battalion chief from Chicago recognized Davis in front of his colleagues.

“He said, ‘We got someone celebrating a birthday,’” Davis recalls. “‘Have you been seen a mature gentlemen work circles around you?”

The group then sang “Happy Birthday.”

Later, when questioned about his age, Davis revealed that he just turned 58-years old.

The battalion chief spoke up, “That’s right. You’re never too young to start this whole thing.”

In his time as a firefighter, a mere two-and-a-half-years, Davis has jumped into the deep end with both feet.

“I am hooked,” he said.

Doing what he needed to in order to make sure that the team had what they needed and was running efficiently, Davis spent a Sunday afternoon in October at the station. He noticed his helmet was missing from the rack.

Davis realized that it could have been taken to change the yellow symbol on the front of the helmet, signifying that Davis was a probationary firefighter, to the red symbol on the front of his helmet, showing that he was part of the St. Joseph Stanton crew.

“I was stoked,” he said.

That evening, he got his helmet with the red symbol on it.

“Even at that age, I was just like a kid,” Davis remembers.

His very first fire was in Heather Hills. As the St. Joseph Stanton department approached the fire, the flames were above the tree line.

Dan Davis surprised his fellow firefighters by placing the American flag at the center of the new St. Joseph Stanton Fire Department. The flag to the right symbolizes firefighters who have passed in the line of duty. The gym on the second floor is named after the flag: “The Red Line Gym.” Davis donated the flag on the left, which was his Boy Scout flag as a child. He said nothing prepared him to be a firefighter like Boy Scouts.

Davis was in charge of making sure the water trucks, which can hold between 2,000 to 3,000 gallons of water, were continually filled.

“(The Chief) said, ‘You know what you’re supposed to do,” Davis said.

“I want you on the water and I want you on the back of every water truck that comes up here, keeping that pond full.”

Davis, along with the other firefighters, were on the scene from 11:30 p.m. to 3 a.m.

“I don’t know how many trips we made, but that was my first big fire and then we got it knocked down,” he said. “It was just an amazing experience.”

Since becoming a firefighter, Davis has also gone through advanced training to become an emergency medical responder. He was joined by fellow firefighter and friend, Matt Silver.

“It was four months of constant studying and meeting up here at the (Urbana) station, reviewing the material, taking the test online and going back (for practicals),” he said.

As soon as Davis received his certificate in the mail, he called Silver, who rushed to find his in the mailbox, too.

“I don’t know how many calls I went on that year,” he said. “You go out there, you’re doing double duty as a firefighter to rescue people and then as a medic to get in to help them.”

The first call Davis and Silver went on, they learned an important lesson about trauma.

The accident on I-74 left a family injured. A woman looked at Davis and asked if she was going to live.

“I know they tell you the very first thing you tell somebody is we are doing everything we can to help you,” Davis said. “And that gives them some level of calm, knowing that we’re working to help you.”

The woman and the man she was with were both in the same ambulance with Davis. His arm was broken, and he asked the same question: “Am I going to be alright?”

“She answered it for me,” Davis said. “She goes, “They’re doing everything they can to help us.”

Calls to I-74, because of accidents, increased in 2018 when IDOT was reconstructing the road between St. Joseph and Ogden. It was partly because of Davis’ foresight that St. Joseph Stanton had enough trained volunteers during the day.

Davis went through extrication rescue training and scene incident management training to make sure they did.

In the last three years, Davis has seen and experienced things that bring him to tears. He knows there are more to come.

But at the St. Joseph Stanton Fire Department, he is part of a team that understands the weight that watching someone’s home burn down or the life go out of someone’s eyes can have on the heart.

“We have a great network of firefighters here that look after each other and know what type of exposure could do,” Davis said.

Once the team returns to the fire station, they debrief the events that happened together. Four hours later, each responder gets a call from someone, asking how they are doing. Then four days later, they meet at the fire station to continue processing and to see if anyone needs professional help.

“I mean, talk about a bunch of rough and ready individuals that are compassionate for the patients that we take care of and that we are going to go ahead and minister that compassion towards each other,” Davis said.

Amongst terrible circumstances, they also get to see miracles happen.

Recently, the medical team had to respond to a call for a man who was in dire health. The man continued to be in bad shape for weeks, but the first responder team continued to check in, even though the man was not lucid.

As the firefighters got together on Jan. 20 for their family dinner, they also celebrated a life saved and a friend going back to work.

“My colleague said he said, ‘I’ve witnessed a Christmas miracle,’” Davis said.

While about 60-percent of the calls the St. Joseph Stanton Department responds to are medical emergencies, they also respond to the call when a team needs a celebratory lift through town, when Santa visits and when kids need to learn about fire safety.

“I’ve had a lot of just rewarding experiences,” Davis said. “Beyond firefighting, rescue and medical: working with individuals and seeing kids light up and helping them understand fire safety.

“We’re part of the community, and we want to be a part of the celebration, too.”

Davis was nominated for Firefighter of the Year in 2018 for his zest within the department. When Brian Martin’s name was announced, Davis was nothing but happy for the man who mentored him since the beginning.

“And then I was nominated again this year with, again, three other outstanding individuals,” Davis said.

Before Davis heard his name as the 2019 Firefighter of the Year, he knew that his turn was up.

“(Chief) said, ‘He said we had 403 calls the past year, and this individual decided to show up 186 of them. As soon as he said 186 I knew that was me,” he recalled.

Davis never met Russell Chism, former St. Joseph Stanton Fire Chief who passed away in 2015. But he does get to serve with his son, who always gives him a hard time for being the oldest guy on the squad.

“Even though I did not get the opportunity to know him during life, I have gotten to know him because of his presence here,” Davis said. “Everything we talked before here, the standards that he set in place and always raising the bar; his legacy lives on here.

“I’m still processing it. It meant so much to me because of what it means to the men and women that are here at this station.”

Davis knows that just because he’s received the high honor, his work is not finished.

“(Chief) said, “Now that you got that award, we’re really going to be watching you,’” Davis remembers.

“I get it. Tonight is a new starting line for me.”

There are currently three probationary firefighters at the St. Joseph Stanton Department. Davis is excited to continue working with them.

Just as newcomers learn, Davis is committed to finding more ways that he can help out.

“My goal was 100 hours of Fire College, but I surpassed that some time ago,” he said. With this past weekend’s training (active shooter), I am near 150 hours of training in about two-and-a-half years.

Davis keeps the wristbands he receives with each training on a carabiner in his locker at the station.

“This is how (I) got here,” he said. “This is how to stay here and pray to God we stay safe.”

He knows that most of life is just about showing up when the call arrives.

“One thing I remember the very first fire call I went to: Chicago firefighter captain Steve Williams said, ‘You always want to be that firefighter showing up to somebody’s house that you want to show up at your house.’”

These days, Davis wants to be the firefighter that shows up with the training he needs to offer victims or patients what they need. But, he also brings along his joy.

“I feel very compelled to give back to my community with joy,” he said. “You know, I just love St. Joe. I love the fire service and I appreciate the village board. I feel privileged to do both of those activities even at the same time.

“I feel privileged to be able to do that myself but to find something that I feel, I receive great gratification from.”

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Martin recognizes team in being named St. Joseph-Stanton Firefighter of the Year https://sjodaily.com/2019/01/17/brian-martin/ Thu, 17 Jan 2019 15:02:41 +0000 https://sjodaily.com/?p=2651 St. Joseph resident Brian Martin has been named the 2018 St. Joseph-Stanton Firefighter of the Year.

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Brian Martin grew up knowing he wanted to be a firefighter.

“I was brought up around it,” Martin said. “My grandfather (Denver Phelps) was the chief of the Ogden Royal (Fire Department).”

Amelia Martin, Brian’s wife, had no idea she’d live a life of service.

“I was just looking for a job,” Amelia said.

Now a METCAD dispatcher, Amelia knows that a life full of service with the one she loves is the life for her.

“There’s just something inside that you want to fulfill to help people when it’s their worst day,” she said. “The different people you talk to and help on their worst day, it’s great to know that you did help.”

As a young boy, Brian was fascinated by the fire trucks and the work his grandfather did, but today, being a firefighter has taken on another meaning.

“I got older and learned to appreciate helping people,” he said. “Nobody calls 911 when they are having fun; it’s always at the worst time of their lives, and you’re called to go fix it. There is something very gratifying when you’re able to go do that.”

On Monday, the St. Joseph-Stanton Fire Protection District named Brian Martin its 2018 Russell Chism Firefighter of the Year.

Firefighter of the Year nominees are selected by the station’s chiefs, then voted on by the station’s association. The St. Joseph-Stanton Department relies on volunteers to respond to emergencies.

Brian was selected for his focus on training in 2018, helping to ensure that the station’s newest members were getting the best training that they could, troubleshooting equipment problems and working on maintenance projects.

With 15 years of experience, including a decade in the St. Joseph-Stanton Fire Department, Brian said he just wants to bring his experience and knowledge to the station every day.

But Brian said being part of the department has always been a team effort: both at the station and at home.

Brian said his close-knit group of friends who grew up in the Royal and Flatville area made their homes in the St. Joseph area and are also on the Stanton Fire Department.

“When all of my friends and I, who are on the fire department, were younger, we used to just hang out up here all the time. We’d take the rolling chairs to the front of the engines with the doors open, and just talk for hours.”

“Now we are all grown, married and have kids and jobs,” he said. “But we still put in as much time as we can. If you get a minute, you stop by to help.

“We’re basically just a big family. We’re not just firefighters together, we’re also friends outside this, too. All of us are.”

Being part of that close-knit group brings an added level of focus to each call.

Both Brian, who manages Mid-State Excavating, and Amelia feel this when they are responding to an emergency.

“Because of her working there, I know a lot of people there; one of our (firefighters) works there,” Brian said. “There’s is something to be said about hearing a familiar voice on the other end of the radio, when you’re going to a bad call.

“There’s just something comforting about knowing who is on the other end of that radio giving you the information and helping get that job done.”

Amelia said that while the METCAD dispatchers cannot control what happens in the field, they are going to do whatever they can do keep the first responders safe.

“They are the real MVPs,” Brian said.

“They help people without the luxury of being able to look at them or put their hands on them. They are just talking to them on the phone, giving them CPR instruction if someone is choking.”

When Amelia is working and an emergency call comes through from the St. Joseph-Stanton area, she wants to be on the other line.

“There’s just something about hearing his voice and knowing that he’s okay,” Amelia said.

Since getting together six years ago, Brian and Amelia have not spent a day apart.

Amelia was immediately interested in Brian when she first met him nearly eight years ago while visiting Arrow Ambulance, where Brian worked at the time.

“I saw him, and I asked my friend, ‘Who is that guy? He’s hot,” Amelia recalled.

Nothing came of it until two years later when Amelia reached out to Brian via social media.

“We met, hung out and never spent a day apart,” she said.

Being public servants, the Martins also have to sacrifice their time together for the betterment of the community.

“It gets hard though because we don’t have a lot of time together,” Amelia said. “Our schedules don’t match up.

“I work the night and he works days. My days off are during the week. We get two days off together, really and sometimes when we are doing something or even nothing, and the pager goes off, it’s hard.”

“If I’m home and available, I always come,” Brian said. “I don’t pick and choose calls. Someone who slipped, fell down and needs help up is just as important as someone who was in a bad car wreck.”

Brian said without Amelia’s support and sacrifice he would not be able to put in the time that he does at the department.

“I know I wouldn’t be able to do or put in the time that I’m able to without her,” he said. “She lets me.”

“We’re a public service household,” Brian said.

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