The Fiance, My Hero

Submitted by: Vikki

This is the story about my fiance, my hero. His name is Shaun and he is a Paramedic and a Volunteer Fire Fighter. One night while sitting down with some friends for a friendly game of poker his fire dept pager alerted him to a medical emergency for a 50 year old male that was in cardiac arrest just around the corner at the local church. He immediately jumped from his chair and raced to the scene which was only seconds away. When he arrived he found the gentlemen lying lifeless on the ground in the church hall. Shaun immediately started CPR while waiting for fellow firefighters and the ambulance to arrive. The CPR had worked and the male started breathing again on his own prior to the ambulance arriving. Shaun accompanied the man in the ambulance to assist the ambulance crew for the trip to the local ER. 1 week later after going to check on his condition in the ICU while on shift, Shaun was able to meet the family of the man who introduced him to the man whos life he saved. They were able to exchange hand shakes and tears as the man said “Thank you for saving my life” They remain friends to this day.

This is the story of my hero.

There’s not one story, there’s many

Submitted byMartin E. Bell

I wish to thank you for this song. I was very moved by it. I want you to visit our web site sometime at www.cvfsa.ca and look at the LAA award winner. A volunteer firefighter with 63 years service to fellow Canadians.

Regards,

Martin E. Bell, National President
Canadian Volunteer Fire Services Association
L’Association Canadienne des Services D’incendie Volontaire
Phone: (902) 543-7090
Business Office at;
187 Avondale Avenue, North York, Ontario, M2N 2V4
Fax: (416) 225-1202
www.cvfsa.ca
[]
©

Smoky Lake Deputy Fire Chief

Submitted byJON CURRY

Hi,

My name is Jon Curry and I live in Smoky Lake. Our Deputy Fire Chief does a lot for our fire hall and the people on the team. He is a hero to us. Because he likes to train, like its a real call, but we do most training night like it is the real thing. He is my hero. He helps the team with their studying and is there for every call, when he is needed to be.

helping a fellow firefighter

Submitted byLucy

I was a volunteer firefighter for 6 years . this happened while living with my boyfriend ronnie who was also a volunteer fire fighter and his uncle george, an older gentleman in his late 60s . My boyfriend had left for work one morning and not long after his uncle fell down a flight of stairs,I caught him at the bottom of the steps ,he was unconscious ,I ran to the phone and called 911 and they helped me stay calm and notified me that the fire dept was on the way ,my fire dept ,my brothers were on the way to help me.I was afraid to move george , because I didnt know if he had internal injuries ,but he came to and tried to walk around I got him to lay down and as I was trying to calm him I could hear the sirens of the fire dept on the way ,that was the best sound I had ever heard .they arrived and checked george and helped to keep him calm till the ambulance came. george had a potasium defiency and he lost his balance on the stairs ,his body was black and blue and he had to stay in the hospital for two or three days ,and returned home. I am now retired and at the sound of a fire truck siren ,my heart speeds up and and I want to answer the call .I miss it very much. The name of the fire dept was CLARKS HARBOUR VOLUNTEER FIRE DEPT. (CLARKS HARBOUR , CAPE SABLE ISLAND SHELURNE COUNTY NOVA SCOTIA)They have now amalgamated to ISLAND AND BARRINGTON VOLUNTEER FIRE DEPARTMENT.
THANK YOU LUCY DUGAS

a family of responders

Submitted by: chantale lavoie 

It all started with Bedford Volunteer fire department My Family and I lived there and My father and 2 out 3 brothers volunteered for the department. believe me I remember the night of being woken by beepers and then the them running out of the house to the call. And I am sure there is a picture of the department with all three of in. Volunteering turning into careers One is a trainer and is a logistics officer.
I have piece of mind that if I involved in a accident as I recently was I had the reaisurance that I looked up and saw the fire truck and said could someone please dispatch my brother and the next thing I knew I was talking to him on the phone. It helped to have the connectiion. And I do have to say I am very thankful for the amount of begreifment leave they were given
nine years ago when unfortunately our mother was ill with cancer and they were able to take off as much time as they needed too which was good because we only had 6 months between dianosis and her passing.
Signed with love a very proud
Chantale

wow

Submitted by: RAY ELLSWORTH

FIRST TIME I HEAR THAT SONG DAVE I WAS A FIRE FIGHTER, WOW IT SURE BROUGHT TEARS TO MY EYES, GOD BLESS AND GOOD LUCK WITH THAT SONG IT SURE HIT HOME, RAY ELLSWORTH PICTOU COUNTY N,S CANADA

Flood Water Warriors.

Submitted byCourtney MacFawn

I live in Maugerville, NB, Canada, and this small community runs along the mighty Saint John River. On April 25th, 2008, the Saint John burst its banks and began flooding the Fredericton, Maugerville and Oromocto Areas. The EMO had warned us that the water would possibly exceed levels in 1973, which was one of the worst floods in history for Fredericton. We thought nothing of it, as we have been through so many floods that we got used to it.
But, on May 1st, the water began to rise, faster and faster. My father called the flood command post. Our power had been shut off for a couple days, and it was getting cold because of the water in the basement. We waited for hours, and it was a very emotional few hours, until finally, we saw a boat on the water in the distance headed towards our house, then a CFB Gagetown truck on the road, which was covered in a meter of water. The Upper Kingsclear Fire Department saved my father, mother, dog Rosie, and myself from the rapidly rising waters. I can’t thank them enough for what they did to our family. I was later interviewed by CTV news, Global news and CBC news, but in the back of my mind I couldn’t stop thinking that these men and women risked their lives to save ours. I have decided to become a volunteer firefighter and return the favour. Thank you UKFD.

Paramedics Commended for bravery

Submitted byJason Giesbrecht

Four Ottawa paramedics who intervened in the fatal stabbing of a police officer are being honoured with an award for bravery.

Craig McInnes, Patricia St. Denis, Amanda Walkowiak and Virginia Warner will receive the N.H. McNally Award for Bravery on Thursday night at the annual conference of the Association of Municipal Emergency Medical Services of Ontario in Huntsville.

The four paramedics are being commended for trying to save the life of Ottawa police Const. Ireneuz (Eric) Czapnik after he was stabbed while on duty last December. The paramedics also disarmed and subdued his attacker.

John Prno, the director of Emergency Medical Services in the Waterloo Region and chair of the provincial awards committee, said the four took a huge risk in trying to help Czapnik.

“I mean, these are people that are unarmed, not trained to take this type of action,” he said.

“They’re basically trained to move away from a incident like this, to back away to safety, and here are four individuals … who, without regard for their own safety, obviously saw a situation that needed something to be done and took those actions and obviously should be commended for it.”

Czapnik was stabbed to death on Dec. 29, 2009, outside the civic campus of the Ottawa Hospital, where he had been sitting in his cruiser taking notes.

Kevin Gregson, a suspended RCMP officer from Saskatchewan, has been charged with first-degree murder.

Widow grateful

Prno said paramedics throughout the province were “shocked to hear about the incident.”

“I’d have to say that everybody was really pleasantly surprised of the actions of the four paramedics.”

Ottawa police unveiled a memorial plaque Saturday in honour of Const. Czapnik, who was killed in the line of duty. (Pawel Dwulit/Canadian Press)
Anthony Di Monte, the chief of Ottawa’s Paramedic Service, commended his paramedics.

“When we see our members doing something so dramatically and we’re all very proud, it does have a sense of camaraderie and morale, absolutely.”

Czapnik’s widow, Anna Korutowska, is thankful the paramedics intervened and tried to save her husband’s life.

“I thought they should be getting [awards]. I’m actually quite pleased that it’s [happened] that fast,” she said.

“I’m very, very happy that they’re being recognized and I want to congratulate them and praise them on their bravery.”

Korutowska is not allowed to communicate directly with the four paramedics because of their involvement with Czapnik’s alleged attacker. However, she would like to sit down with the paramedics eventually and hear about her husband’s final moments.

The N.H. McNally Award is the highest award for bravery an Ontario paramedic can receive. All four Ottawa paramedics will be in Huntsville for the awards ceremony on Thursday.

Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/canada/ottawa/story/2010/09/30/ott-.html#ixzz12xJjl0tL

Line of Duty Deaths

Submitted byAaron

Two long-serving paramedics with BC Ambulance service lost there lives today in a tragic accident returning back to base after a call in middle of the night. A sad day for everyone in Emergency Medical Services.

Since 1988, more than 28 paramedics from across Canada have lost their lives in the line of duty.

Volunteers Part Three

Submitted by: Murray Pound

Small towns make for an interesting place to grow up. As an adult, most people still remember you as the little pudgy kid that used to deliver newspapers, or come door to door in the spring looking for donations to the Cubs bottle drive to pay for summer camp. Many of the people I knew as a child still remain in Carstairs. We have all gotten older, and those long relationships have either drifted away or spread into new beginnings. All the while there remains this vital link to the community that grows stronger and deeper as the years fold upon the next.

Everyone in a small town has a role to play. This was especially noticeable before people started commuting to Calgary. Most people then worked and lived in our town, so you came to know each by their profession. I remember looking upon one of my classmates’ father in reverence as a child. Teddy’s dad was the Fire Chief. I thought that was the coolest thing imaginable to become. On hot spring days the teacher’s would open all the classroom windows in an attempt to cool the rooms. When the Fire department were called out west for a grass fire or other emergency, they would pass the school with sirens screaming and red lights frantically pulsing. The sound would fill the classroom and often it seemed like they would come right through the wall and pass between our desks en-route to their destination The kids would run over to the window and some of us would dream of being on that truck with Teddy’s Dad leading us on to some terrifically heroic journey.

I think all people have a child in there somewhere that wanted to be a Fireman, a Medic or a Police Officer. Each of us wondering how they can run off and do what is necessary. I think that is why the average Joe holds out so much reverence for his/her fellow neighbour when they become a volunteer firefighter. A Fire truck responding to a typical call may have a crew comprised of a Farmer an Engineer, a Plumber and a new Mom returning from a leave of absence. In our street clothes there is no apparent difference, and yet there is something inside that makes the difference. This is what we all hope for; that the average Joe can screw up the courage to be something great. Perhaps in a small way it gives us all hope for humanity. Sometimes fate conspires and pushes us towards an event that offers us the opportunity to prove our worth to our neighbours.

Once in a while fate and the proper training can combine to allow you to be part of a wonderful event. I will tell you one of the proudest moment of my life. A couple of years back as I was mid way through a pile of paperwork or e-mails on a mid week day. From my office I can hear my receptionist picking up the phone after it rings a couple of times. She answers in her normal way, but by the urgent tone of her voice it is apparent that this is not the average call. I pick it up to listen to one of our local business owner’s wives as she describes her husband’s condition. She is concerned that he is not feeling well, and asks if it would be too much trouble for me to stop by. Usually, most people would call 911 and get an Ambulance there as soon as possible. She knows that because I work in town, I am often around. Knowing that her husband is a very humble man, he probably thinks that it is nothing and the trouble would not be necessary. I tell her I don’t mind and that I’m on my way.

The drive down to his shop is only a couple blocks north on Main Street (10th avenue). As I pull up, the wife meets me at the door. I am ushered in the office to find what is normally a very healthly and active man, sitting loosely on a chair in his shop foyer. He is pale, weak, diaphoretic and his pulse does not feel right. I know that without proper medical care, my limited medical training will not be of much use. He says he just feels tired but my gut feeling is that his condition is about to get worse. I convince him that a quick radio call to our dispatcher will get an Ambulance here, and the family (two of his children are there as well) agree that this would be best. Luckily, an EMS supervisor happens to be a few minutes away and soon after his arrival our humble friend is diagnosed with what appears to be the onset of a heart attack. He is rushed to Calgary in an ambulance, and like many calls for me, this is normally the end of it. The person`s future is out of my hands, and seldom do you learn of the outcome. In this case, his son drops by my office the next day to tell me that his Dad is recovering in hospital after having a couple of stints implanted during a surgery the night before. The overall impression from this event is oddly quaint. It just proves that in a small town, you still ask your neighbours for help.

A couple of months pass and I find myself lunching on Chinese food with some co-workers and I spot our humble friend eating a few tables away. He looks much better than the last time I saw him. Passing by our table to pay his bill with the cashier, he turns toward me, extends his right hand, shakes mine, and simply says `thanks`. That`s it, nothing more. No one else at the table knows what this is all about, just he and I… and that`s okay. I have known this man for most of my life and he is still here, working at his shop, being a Father and a Husband and eating Chinese food from time to time in our small town corner restaurant. That is the best payment a volunteer can receive.

ps: My first and second proudest moments were the births of my daughters.