Fighting the urges to begin fires
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Deepa Bharath
It’s more than a friendly visit to the neighborhood fire station.
It’s more than a big, burly firefighter wagging his finger at you
and telling you never to play with matches again.
Orange County Fire F.R.I.E.N.D.S, which stands for Firesetter
Regional Intervention Education Network and Delivery System, is a
program that goes several steps further with children for whom
playing with fire becomes a dangerous habit and an addiction.
Costa Mesa is now part of the program, which was started by the
Orange County Fire Authority. The city’s fire department started it
in Costa Mesa about nine months ago and has counseled three children
so far, said Cheryl Wills, fire prevention specialist.
The children are usually brought in the city’s fire prevention
office on Royal Palm Drive where they are given a questionnaire to
answer. Depending on their answers, the children are either
classified as “simple, complex or emergent,” Wills said.
“All children go through a phase where they are curious about
fire,” she said. “They play with matches once or twice and stop after
they are told not to.”
But when that behavioral pattern continues as the child grows
older, it flares up and becomes a problem, Wills said.
“That curiosity should stop by the time a child gets to fourth
grade,” she said. “If they continue to light fires after that, then
that’s not normal.”
Those who fall under the “simple” category barely have a problem
and all they need is a basic lesson on fire safety, Wills said.
Children who fall under the “complex” category do have a problem and
will be asked to take basic fire safety classes, two four-hour
sessions, offered for free by the Children’s Hospital of Orange
County. And the “emergent” category of children, who are said to have
a serious problem, will receive further help from a behavioral
specialist.
The program is funded largely by the Federal Emergency Management
Agency and the Black Firefighters Assn., Wills said.
“Luckily, none of the children we saw fell under the extreme
category,” she said. “But we saw a remarkable improvement in one case
we saw where the girl never repeated that kind of behavior after she
went through the program. So, if the parent or guardian is committed
and stays with it, it could work.”
Costa Mesa Fire Chief Jim Ellis said he has seen his share of
“fire setters” during his years as a firefighter.
“It’s all well and good when parents bring their kids to the
station and Firefighter Jim talks to their kids about fire safety and
gives them a tour,” he said. “But it doesn’t necessarily work all the
time. Some kids need more.”
They need specific types of counseling, he said.
“They definitely need some serious help,” Ellis said. “And
hopefully, this kind of early intervention will nip the problem in
the bud.”
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