Costa Mesa firefighters to run emergency drill
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Deepa Bharath
The city’s fire department will conduct a special three-hour drill
today to teach residents how to prepare for an emergency situation.
This drill is another step the department is taking to get the
community geared up for disaster, said Costa Mesa Fire Chief Jim
Ellis said.
The chief, since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, has been putting
together a comprehensive plan for emergency preparedness as well as
for fire prevention.
In March, the chief formed a Citizens Corps Council -- a group of
community leaders that will help distribute information about the
city’s programs that prepare residents for emergency situations.
Costa Mesa’s program is only the fourth such in the county, after
Placentia’s, Laguna Niguel’s and the Orange County Sheriff’s
Department’s, Ellis said at the time.
Apart from this drill, Ellis said he is also looking forward to
putting together a fire prevention education trailer that would
travel to various communities and educate the public about how to
keep their homes and neighborhoods safe.
“We also hope to do safety checks and inspections by visiting
people’s homes,” he said. “We believe this trailer will be a powerful
tool to help educate the public.”
Emergency response is critical for residents in an area that is
prone to natural disasters such as earthquakes, resident Diane Hill
said, who is an active member of the fire department’s Citizens
Emergency Response Training team.
The drill will teach people the basics, she said.
“If they’ve never actually used a fire extinguisher, if they’d
like to know how to get someone from under a book case they’re
trapped under, those are some of the kind of things they’ll learn in
this drill,” Hill said.
It will serve as a “refresher” course for those who have already
been through the Citizens Fire Academy or emergency response
training, she said.
“For others who are interested in finding out what this is about,
they’ll learn about disaster preparedness within a condensed period
of time,” Hill said.
Today’s drill will also include exercises in radio communications,
said Gordon West, a city volunteer who operates an emergency van near
Costa Mesa City Hall. He runs a test every Monday to ensure the
network is connected and working.
He will communicate with the participants from the Bay Area
through a long-distance ham radio.
“I’m going to be talking to them as if Costa Mesa has had a
disaster and has been isolated,” said West, who is also a member of
the Mesa Emergency Services Amateur Communications, which is made up
of volunteers who respond to natural disasters. “It’s a good
opportunity to test and exercise our long-range capabilities.”
And, he added, “It will be quite a day for citizens.”
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