New Rescue Squad is Placed in Service
 
By Mechanicsville Volunteers
August 1, 2013
 

After two years of meetings, a year after our previous heavy rescue was sold and what seemed like an eternity, the Department placed the new Rescue Squad 2 in service on July 5th at 1900 hours.

The original completion date was pushed back due to a delay in receiving components. Once completed, Pierce requested to display the unit at the Fire Department Instructors Conference (FDIC) in Indianapolis back in April. Apparatus Committee Members made the trip the first week of May to conduct the final inspection.

The Squad was officially delivered to the Department on June 1st at 1100 hours. Sales rep Randy Schwartz was all smiles as he pulled onto the apparatus apron for the first time with all of the emergency equipment activated.

Once the membership had a chance to look the squad over and the apparatus committee members tasked with equipment layout were done finalizing where everything was to go, it was taken to First Due Apparatus Solutions in Hollywood. The equipment was mounted and the company is very pleased with the job that was done. Equipment mounting took close to two weeks to complete due to being on display at the Maryland State Fireman's Convention in Ocean City. It was returned to First Due after the convention to finish up the job.

Once it returned from tool mounting, the apparatus operators of the department stepped up their game and completed the required drivers training on the squad. Fire Chief Raley set July 4th weekend as the target in service date with the requirement of having ten operators turned over in order to place it in service. On Friday, July 5th, this requirement was met and the unit was officially placed in service at the 1900 hours. It's first call was answered on July 6th at 1434 hours.

The Department is very proud of this unit as it is with all of our apparatus. The apparatus committee did an outstanding job in designing this state of the art fire and rescue vehicle. It will serve our department and the communities we serve for the next fifteen years.

The pictures added show the equipment carried. There are still a couple items that need to be completed at the time of this story.

We encourage everyone to to stop by and take a look at the unit.

 
Units: Rescue Squad 2