Lou Angeli, the writer, provides the reader a riveting peek at life deep inside the trenches of emergency response. He has been referred to as the firefighters' storyteller, and his written work includes breaking news, features, fiction - but most importantly articles dealing with firefighter safety.
Tuesday morning, firefighters said 89 new fires broke out overnigjht and dozens of others were burning throughout the country unchecked.
The firefight is difficult as poorly- equipped municipal firefighters muster citizens to serve on hand-to-hand bucket brigades in some places. France, Italy, Cyprus and Israel have sent firefighters, with aircraft coming from France and Italy, sources reported. As of this writing another 12 countries were sending reinforcements.
Blazes came within inches of destroying the museum at Olympia, housing famous classical sculptures such as Praxiteles' Hermes. But air tankers, helicopters and scores of firefighters beat it back. 60 Firefighters and 6 engines remain on the scene in case the blaze flares up again.
“The destruction is of biblical proportions,” Nicholas Orphanos, a volunteer firefighter in the Peloponnese, told Reuters. “There are villages we want to go to (but) cannot because the roads are blocked. In 30 years, I have never seen such destruction.”
According to conservative estimates, 110 villages have been razed to the ground, six and a half million acres of farmland consumed, and countless acres of pine forest and olive groves reduced to cinders. “Much of Arcadia, in the central Peloponnese, a prime tourist attraction, is reminiscent of moonscape and thousands of rural Greeks fear financial ruin.” reported The Guardian.
On Monday, Prosecutor Dimitris Papangelopoulos ordered an investigation into whether the fires could have been the work of terrorists. 33 people have already been arrested on suspicion of arson, including an elderly woman who was cooking outside her home.
With all of the unrelated, spontaneous outbreaks, one can accept the fact that these fires are arson in nature. But the real problem here isn’t terrorism, it is Greece’s inability to deal with large scale fires of this nature and magnitude. In a country whose landscape is much like that of California, there is no Forest Firefighting service, no incident command system and nothing even close to hot shot teams. Without the ability to build and maintain firebreaks, these massive blazes simply roll across the landscape, fed by hot, dry winds from the Middle Eastern deserts.
In 2003, the government appropriated 18 million Euros to revamp the Greek Fire Service. There were to be 735 new firefighting vehicles, new protective gear for firefighters, in addition to helicopters and fireboats. The idea was to place the Greek Fire Service on equal footing with the USA, UK, Sweden and Germany. But somehow that procurement came up short, and only 50 apparatus were actually delivered, all to Athens. Some claim that government’s investment was a ruse, simply to impress foreign visitors who attended the 2004 Summer Olympic Games.
In recent months, there have been complaints of inefficiency of the fire service in Greece. Average response times by fire units serving rural areas is 35 minutes – and remember, that’s the average. This is compounded by the fact that Greek government recently prohibited the use helicopters for the firefighting for fear that such operations would create additional power cuts, a common occurrence in rural Greece.
The problem of controlling the huge fires is a general lack of investment in firefighting equipment and personnel, reports the popular UK-based blog EU Referendum. “ In Greece,’ the blog reports, ‘investments happen only after the horse has bolted".
And then there are the politics of natural disasters. In a move reminiscent of FEMA’s response to Katrina, government in Greece has firmly placed the blame on someone else – in this case the unseen terrorist. That’s understandable -- if you’re an idiot. National elections are in 3 weeks, and Greek Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis would prefer to be viewed as a hero – not the one responsible for cutting funding for firefighters and firefighting.
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Being proactive is the only solution if you want to save your home on all basic and advanced levels.
It is important to create a relationship with your community fire department and create a wildfire safety checklist. Then educate this list on your local radio station, newspapers, web sites, etc.
If you desire more advanced education on rural home wildfire protection systems, then you may want to check out http://www.firebreaksystems.com/ as this is a fairly new invention that is catching on.
The two largest insurance companies have joined partnerships with them and they only use the Phos-Chek wildfire retardant that is simply the best on the market. Phos-Chek is not only the innovator of wildfire retardant, but they have been into this technology since the 1950s testing and dropping in the Monsanto that is a National Forest in California. Firebreak Systems has an exclusive relationship with Phos-Chek when it comes to using this particular wildfire retardant in the rural home areas without the red dye you normally see during the drops from the aircraft above. The main reason for the red dye is so the pilots can see where the previous drop was. Sometimes you will see a small retired fighter plane or a small farmers single engine flying as a guide for the aerial bombers to drop the wildfire retardant.
For what it’s worth to everyone that has wildfire concerns like me residing in Breckenridge, Colorado, Firebreak Systems is something that should be educated across the board. They have small portable units that can fit in your garage next to your lawn mower, or they have a complete wildfire protection system for your home that can be self-automated. Self-automation simply means your home is being protected before the fire department arrives while it sprays the wildfire retardant around the circumferences of your home. This system can also call your local fire department and your cell phone to relay the message that your home is being protected during the rough times of evacuation.
There are educational videos on their web site with both the inventor explaining the wildfire protection system and a major insurance company that has purchased multiple trucks servicing policyholders in certain high-risk areas that come to your home when a wildfire has been detected. This saves the insurance company big destruction payouts and saving homes at the same time.
This is a bizarre wildfire article to me being so far away and I hope all the people in Greece affected by this wildfire will be ok and they all gain their piece of mind much sooner than later.
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