Greetings, my little chickadees.
Last Saturday I invaded attended the Station 8 and Administration
Building open house here in sunny Spokane Valley. I was bouncing around for days beforehand
because this is my home station – located within spitting distance of my house,
if you are a really, really good spitter.
I pulled in to the station to see Ladder 1 fully extended,
sporting the American flag and looking generally awesome. I wasn’t the first one there, but I was
close. My goal is to arrive early at
these events, as I find that the people involved aren’t overly occupied and/or
harried, and are willing to give me more of their attention. Also, when you get there first, the cookies
aren’t picked over yet. Win-win.
About this time, the local TV news van pulled up. As the dominant journalist on site, I
immediately approached the van, ordered them off the premises, and then let the
air out of their tires (a move which, in retrospect, was self-defeating). Actually, I had every intention of doing
so, but they didn’t stay very long. They
probably recognized me and determined that I had it covered. Oh, and I did.
My tour started in Station 8, which was not the “new”
building. However, get this – one
interesting facet of this open house is the “name the fire station”
contest. Tradition says that the fire
station is a community building, a safe spot; a gathering place, if you
will. The local fire hall belongs to the
community, and SVFD decided that the community will name it. So next to the cookie tray, there was a box
to cast your ballot for the neighborhood station name. Being the new girl in town, I know nothing of
this neighborhood, so my ability to come up with a catchy, trendy, historically
reflective name….nothing. But there’s no
way I’m letting the opportunity to win something pass me by, so of course I
submitted one. I’ll tell you about my
vote in a bit. (In the literary world,
we call that a “tease”.)
Fireman/Paramedic Tom Carleton- who is an all-around nice
guy, by the way – stepped up to the plate and offered to give me a tour of the
station. My first thought - nice
kitchen! The appliances are gas. How very city-like. Anyway, it’s all set up automatically shut
off when the crew gets toned out, so they don’t have to remember to shut
everything off when they leave. There’s
a reset button on the wall to fire everything back up again when the crew
returns home. I thought, momentarily –
“Gee, wouldn’t it be sweet of Kat to stop by and make some dinner for her
heroes?” Momentarily, as I’ve never in my life used a gas stove….and burning
down the fire house would be bad form, now wouldn’t it. But it’s the thought that counts, and I
thought it.
Right next to the huge kitchen was a TV room, complete with
many, many Lazy Boys. Tom says that the
crew has an activity calendar each day that keeps them pretty busy; no time for
TV until after 4:30 each day. I wanted
to ask him how many of those recliners would be filled at 4:35, but I
restrained myself. I figure they deserve
a little TV time.
So get this – as is industry standard, the crew prepares and
eats dinner as a group. Turns out that
whichever apparatus is out on a call around dinner time, stops off at the local
Piggly Wiggly and picks up groceries. Even
firefighters pick up dinner on their way home from work. I, for one, thought that was hysterical. In fact, I was the ONLY one that thought that
was hysterical.
The basement housed the gym.
The first thing I noticed where various and sundry rings suspended on
ropes from the ceiling… a little Fifty Shades, maybe? But no, they are for pullups/pushups. Of course.
Cough cough.
After a quick walkthrough of the dorms – which were stark
white, we could definitely use a little Pottery Barn-I headed for the
Administration Building, where I met up with Chief Thompson. Two highlights – one, another gym
facility. Chief says that administrative
workers get 3 hours a week to use the equipment. I asked if that included CERT team
members….his look told me that the answer was “perhaps not.” Number two - a beam from the World Trade
Center placed in the lobby on September 11, 2011. Of course I had to take my Tierney dog tag
along for the tour, and here’s a photo of it:
You may recall my earlier tease. My station name submission was “Tierney
Station.” I’m positive that nobody else
would know what it means, but I figure Johnny would have gotten a kick out of
having a station named after him. How
many probies can make that claim?
And that point, Thor stopped by to squeeze me. The best part is, he got roped into a
facility tour before he found me, so in order to squeeze me, he had to spend
like 20 minutes walking through the administration building and looking at
cubicles. It’s actually rather romantic
if you think about it.
As with all things, my day at Station 8 came to an end. I just called the SVFD and learned that the
fire station remains unnamed. Evidently
my vote didn’t make the cut; but then again, nobody else's did, either. I must go
now and brainstorm.