Photo Information

SOUTHWEST ASIA -- Tech. Sgt. Jerry Theriot (left) and Master Sgt. Harold Persons examine the burned out wreckage of a trailer that recently caught fire at a forward-deployed location. Both Airmen are assigned to the 386th Expeditionary Civil Engineer Squadron's fire department. Sergeant Theriot is the chief of fire prevention and is deployed from the 4th Civil Engineer Squadron at Seymour Johnson Air Force Base, N.C. Sergeant Persons is the assistant chief of fire department operations and is deployed from the 97th CES at Altus AFB, Okla. (U.S. Air Force photo by Capt. Tom Knowles)

Photo by Capt. Tom Knowles

Firefighters douse blaze, protect base facilities

19 Apr 2004 | Capt. Tom Knowles

Firefighters assigned to the 386th Air Expeditionary Wing at a forward-deployed location were just getting ready to eat lunch when their portable radios broadcast the one word that starts the adrenaline pumping -- “Fire!”

“All I heard was fire, and then everyone started running,” said Airman 1st Class Danielle Morris, a driver/operator assigned to the fire department.

Base firefighters were recently dispatched to a trailer fire after people assigned to the nearby air traffic control tower reported the blaze. About 16 firefighters raced to their vehicles, donned protective gear and rushed to the scene. Smoke was billowing and flames roared from the trailer as they arrived.

Airman Morris was among the first to arrive on scene. She operated one of the department’s tankers which is capable of carrying and delivering 2,000 gallons of water to firefighting vehicles and hoses. The tanker is essentially a “fire hydrant” on wheels, she said.

“I hooked up (my vehicle) to … the first vehicle on scene and resupplied (its) water,” Airman Morris said.

As they battled the blaze, the firefighters got a report that someone might still be inside the burning trailer.

“The (people who) work in the tower yelled down, ‘Hey we think there’s somebody still inside of there,’” said Staff Sgt. Jon Silvis, a crew chief and search and rescue specialist. “Knowing there was a possible victim in there really put me into high gear.”

Wielding hoses and axes, four firefighters burst into the trailer, simultaneously extinguishing the blaze and searching for the potential victim.

“We went in and did a search, but didn’t find anybody,” Sergeant Silvis said.

The team quickly extinguished the blaze, preventing damage to a nearby row of trailers and possibly the tower. While the trailer was a complete loss, there were no injuries or deaths associated with the fire.