Brigade Magazine - Spring 2021 Edition

Page 6

INCIDENTS

Apollo Bay double emergency In the same month Apollo Bay Fire Brigade dealt with two of the worst incidents in the brigade’s history. On 3 April there was a chlorine leak at Apollo Bay Aquatic Centre. Of the 21 people needing treatment, five needed urgent medical attention. Apollo Bay Firefighter and Incident Controller Aaron Melrose said it was like a war zone. “Arriving on scene, we’d been briefed on what to expect but it can never prepare you for that type of scene,” Aaron explained. “It was confronting. There were multiple patients involved and one was unconscious.

“We arrived on scene just after 3am, six minutes after receiving the pager alert, and there were 50 to 100 people out on the street watching. Five of us were on scene first and after a quick assessment we knew the first structure couldn’t be saved. “Winds were around 50 kilometres an hour and we were just setting up protecting the exposures when a gas bottle exploded causing the fire to jump to the neighbouring building. Because of the violent winds the 38mm hoses were not effective and any water getting close was turning to steam.

“Being a rescue unit, we are trained to respond to highly traumatic situations, but I’ve never responded to an incident as chaotic as this.

“Apollo Bay Captain Dave Howell upgraded to 64mm hoses which allowed us to make more of an impact. We used these for the next three hours straight.

“Ambulance Victoria was already on scene when we arrived at 10.51am. I sent a crew in breathing apparatus to sweep and secure the building. We then started triaging the patients. After assessment I escalated the situation through Fire Com to receive six additional ambulances and called the rostered duty coordinator to put out a local community warning.

“We tried an internal attack from the eastern side, but the fire was well established in the roof and we had to make a hasty retreat as more gas bottles exploded.” The first building was vacant and two people escaped unharmed from the second building, so crews only needed to evacuate the local motel.

“Around an hour into the job the last few patients were being lifted into the ambulances. By this time extra crews from Wye River and Colac CFA brigades and Fire Rescue Victoria arrived so we set up an exclusion zone.

“We were on scene for 12 hours,” Aaron added. “Crews from Wye River, Forrest and Colac brigades, plus Corangamite Group and FRV stations 63 and 62 were also on scene.”

“We pulled back about 400 metres away and set up a staging area for the oncoming crews and hazmat team. We sent in an additional crew in BA to isolate the power.

During the firefight, the brigade’s 10 crew members used 13 38mm hoses, 14 64mm hoses, and 17 BA cylinders with four members onto their fifth set.

“I remember thinking just how switched on the Apollo Bay crew was, as it’s easy to get overwhelmed by a situation like that.

“We debriefed straight after both incidents and have had a number of follow-up sessions,” Aaron said. “It’s really important to talk through incidents and take time to process them.

“I can only describe it like a war zone with the number of patients laying across the scene. It’s really hard to train for something like that, but all crews across the emergency sector worked well together.”

“The brigade is incredible, the training we have and the leadership. We’re really fortunate to have Dave as our captain. He has a calming presence and that’s the kind of leadership you need in situations like that.”

Only 11 days later, the Apollo Bay community was left shattered after a fire tore through three shops on the town’s main street. The blaze, which started in the early hours of Wednesday 14 April, destroyed the local Chinese restaurant and historic Blue Bird Cafe and badly damaged a hardware store.

Dave said the brigade has seen a recent surge in interest to join the brigade.

Driving to the station, Aaron could already see the blaze he had to face. “I don’t think anyone could imagine what would unfold that night,” Aaron said. “The fire was truly ferocious.

06

“The last few months have been some of the busiest for our little brigade,” Dave said. “The brigade did an impressive job and we’ve now seen over 10 new applications from locals wanting to join.” STORY HOLLY PENKETH


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Articles inside

New Disability Inclusion Guide

6min
pages 79-80

New Juniors sign up across the state

6min
pages 76-77

Through the Ages: Wangaratta Group

1min
pages 74-75

Upwey Juniors learn how to save lives

2min
page 78

Safer Together work continues to flourish

6min
pages 72-73

New station for Tatura

1min
page 71

New station at Port Fairy

4min
pages 66-67

Breathing new life into Wodonga West brigade

3min
page 65

FEATURE: How brigades have spent VESEP grants

6min
pages 62-64

FEATURE: Family support is crucial

4min
pages 52-53

Volunteer Recruitment Hub update

2min
page 57

Phillip Island station build continues

2min
pages 60-61

Wayne’s cooking legacy

2min
page 56

New equipment for road rescue crews

2min
page 51

Commendations for saving captain’s life

2min
page 55

Faces of CFA

2min
page 50

The Member Wellbeing Advisors team

3min
page 47

Eat well and stay healthy

2min
page 48

Understanding PTSD

3min
page 49

Mental Health Continuum Model

3min
page 45

Strengthening capability using diversity and inclusion

5min
pages 37-38

Structure fire case studies

17min
pages 39-44

Improving how we engage with communities

3min
page 36

The benefits of burn camps

2min
page 33

Recognising scarred trees

2min
page 32

Winners of the CFA 2021 photo competition

1min
pages 24-25

Volunteer Succession Planning Framework

2min
page 31

Donations rollout update

3min
page 30

Women’s Reference Groups

4min
pages 26-27

Remembering our fallen firefighters

3min
page 28

Understanding fire-generated weather

3min
page 29

Using tools to predict bushfire behaviour

2min
page 23

Chief Officer’s Quarterly Operational Update

12min
pages 12-15

CFA operations in a climate-challenged world

5min
pages 16-17

Incident statistics

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page 8

The latest news from the CEO, Chief Officer and senior leaders

12min
pages 9-11

CFA helps with NSW flood response

3min
page 7

General Firefighter training update

5min
pages 18-19

Apollo Bay double emergency

3min
page 6

Storms batter Victoria

5min
pages 4-5
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