Terrorist attacks hit home
Mike Sciacca
As the country watched in horror and listened with shocked
disbelief to media reports of the tragic events that were unfolding
last Sept. 11, Americans felt great sadness and anger over the lost
lives.
For Huntington Beach resident and firefighter Scott Pokorny, the
terrorist attacks took on a more immediate and personal nature.
“I felt like they had attacked a part of my family,” he said. “The
entire fire department is like one, big family, and when I saw that
family being attacked on Sept. 11, it hit home hard. We lost so many
that day, that it was so hard to fathom.”
Pokorny is a fire captain at Huntington Beach Fire Station No. 3,
and is in his 20th year with the department. His training background
is extensive, yet the events of Sept. 11 have”changed everything,” he
said.
Fighting fires and helping to protect the public have always been
a given in his profession, he says. But in addition to their regular
training schedule -- which had included training in chemical agents
-- firefighters have since undertaken intensified training in
response to potential terrorist attacks and biological warfare,
brought to the forefront by the events of last September.
“Personally, I never thought in my 20 years that I’d be witness to
what happened on Sept. 11,” said Pokorny, married and the father of
three. “It’s nerve racking, really, and a day-to-day thing. Something
like this makes you really cherish your family when you leave your
house for work each morning. I know I cherish my days off with my
family.”
The tragic events made him appreciate his down time and
intensified his working situation.
“In terms of preparation we are covering everything when it comes
to weapons of mass destruction training,” he said. “We now have an
even more heightened awareness of the potential that’s out there.”
Since Sept. 11 most fire departments now carry on their vehicles
counteractive agents to combat biological and chemical attacks, a
benefit to firefighters who would have to respond to such a scene.
All Huntington Beach fire vehicles -- as well as those in all of
Orange County -- will soon be equipped with antidotal kits that will
help combat such attacks, he said.
Nuclear, biological and chemical weapons fall under the umbrella
of weapons of mass destruction training.
Since the attacks last Sept. 11, Pokorny said that he, personally,
has responded to three potential anthrax calls in Huntington Beach --
including two in one day. Each call came shortly after the first
national report of anthrax mailings last fall. In each case, he said,
the white, powdery substances found tested negative.
“When we watched those firefighters and police officers head into
the World Trade Center to help those in need, I think people right
then and there really had an awareness of what our job really is,” he
said. “They are now more in tune to what we do. As firefighters we
really appreciate the attention we are receiving. It has been
overwhelming, especially to the firefighters of New York City.”
“We’re here to protect the citizens and property of Huntington
Beach and its surrounding areas. But everybody should be aware that
anybody is susceptible to a terrorist attack. The key is to be
informed but still go about living life each day.”
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