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J00859 Summary:

BILL NOJ00859
 
SAME ASNo Same As
 
SPONSORGRIFFO
 
COSPNSR
 
MLTSPNSR
 
 
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J00859 Actions:

BILL NOJ00859
 
05/20/2021REFERRED TO FINANCE
05/25/2021REPORTED TO CALENDAR FOR CONSIDERATION
05/25/2021ADOPTED
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J00859 Committee Votes:

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J00859 Floor Votes:

There are no votes for this bill in this legislative session.
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J00859 Text:

 
Senate Resolution No. 859
 
BY: Senator GRIFFO
 
        COMMEMORATING  the  130th  Anniversary of the Rome
        Fire Department
 
  WHEREAS, This Legislative Body is proud  to  commemorate  the  130th
Anniversary  of  the  Rome  Fire  Department  and  to honor its past and
present firefighting members for 130 years of  fire  protection  to  the
citizens of Rome, New York, and its surrounding communities; and
 
  WHEREAS,   Fire  departments  are  an  integral  part  of  community
protection services in every locality of our State; during the past  130
years,  the  courageous  and  devoted  firefighters  of  the  Rome  Fire
Department have valiantly responded to all types of fire emergencies and
have won the praise and respect of the community which they serve; and
 
  WHEREAS, In the mid-1840s, volunteers used buckets  and  hand-pumped
horse-drawn  machines  to fight fires; however, after several disastrous
blazes claimed whole city blocks, two opera houses, and the Court  House
between  1848  and  1884, officials gradually added men and machinery to
the firefighting arsenal; and
 
  WHEREAS, Shortly after a major fire in 1866 claimed the  city's  Elm
Row  area  downtown, killing one volunteer, a steamer was ordered from a
company in Rhode Island, replacing an 1825 hand  engine;  the  following
years, a second one was obtained; and
 
  WHEREAS,  When  needed, the steamers were filled with water from the
canals, creeks and  the  Mohawk  River,  and  sometimes  even  cisterns;
unfortunately,  owners  of buildings and homes far away from those water
sources were often out  of  luck;  in  1872,  a  new  water  source  was
developed,  from the city's Water Works on the banks of the Mohawk River
at Ridge Mills, and was piped to hydrants in the city center; and
 
  WHEREAS, Ten years later, the city installed a fire alarm street box
system; when a fire was spotted, a citizen would run to one of 23  boxes
around  the  city  and pull the alarm, triggering a steam whistle at the
Rome Gas & Electric  Plant  on  South  Madison  Street,  which  directed
firefighters to the location of the fire; and
 
  WHEREAS,  By  1890,  the  city's population had grown to 14,991, the
Black River and Erie canals bustled with business,  30  trains  per  day
stopped in the city, and large and small businesses were booming; and
 
  WHEREAS,  The Rome Fire Department officially got its start in 1891,
with the appointment of the first chief engineer, Andrew  Brickner,  who
was  a  seasoned  volunteer, firefighter and foreman; other paid members
included four drivers, two stokers and two engineers;  they  worked  six
days  a  week,  and were allowed to go home for meals three times a day,
walking, bicycling or riding the trolley; and
 
  WHEREAS, At that time, there were three fire stations, No. 1 at  216
N.   Washington Street, No. 2 at 113 E. Liberty Street, and No. 3 at 316
S.  George Street; when an alarm sounded, a man  at  the  desk  "tripped
 
open"  the  horse  stalls, harnesses were released from overhead and the
horses galloped to the scene of the fire; and
 
  WHEREAS,  In  1895,  a  huge  bell  was  placed on top of City Hall,
207-213 N.  James Street which tolled out the box number  of  fires,  to
direct resources to the neighborhood; and
 
  WHEREAS,  In  1915,  Hose  No.  1,  an American LaFrance, was put in
service at the North Washington Street station, and one week later,  the
first  motorized pumping engine arrived, and was named Engine No. 2, and
assigned to the East Liberty Street station; and
 
  WHEREAS, The horses were gradually  put  out  to  pasture,  and  the
firefighters'  hours were reduced to four days on, one day off; in 1929,
they were further reduced to 84 per week; and
 
  WHEREAS, By 1924, all the first response  apparatus  was  motorized,
with the purchase of a new American LaFrance ladder truck; and
 
  WHEREAS,  After  a  fire  badly  damaged  Rome Free Academy on Turin
Street in 1938, the department acquired a 75-foot tractor-drawn Seagrave
aerial ladder truck; and
 
  WHEREAS, During the 1940s, two Ward Lafrance pumpers were  purchased
and  firefighters'  hours  were  reduced to 72 per week, and since then,
there have been gradual reductions to 40 hours per week; and
 
  WHEREAS, Since the original No. 3 station had been closed in 1919, a
new one was opened at 725 Black River Boulevard in 1952, and the  No.  1
station moved to 1004 Laurel Street in 1965; and
 
  WHEREAS,  In  the  1970s,  No.  2 and No. 3 stations closed, and its
personnel moved to the new station at 158 Black River Boulevard, and the
number of box alarms had grown to 245, however, due to a growing  number
of false alarms, some were removed the following year; and
 
  WHEREAS,  Smoke detectors were mandated in the city, in multi-family
homes in 1984, and by 1991, there were 172 box alarms  left,  department
personnel numbered 99, and the firefighters used 125 tools; and
 
  WHEREAS,  As  the  department has grown, so has its requirements and
duties; firefighters  are  required  to  be  trained  emergency  medical
technicians, and they must be able to find on their rigs and know how to
use, even in the dark, numerous tools; and
 
  WHEREAS,  Firefighters  also  continually attend courses, wear fire-
and heat-resistant clothing, carry self-contained  breathing  apparatus,
conduct regular fire safety programs and others, and are responsible for
inspections at schools, hospitals, factories and businesses, making sure
they meet fire codes; and
 
  WHEREAS,  With a membership of dedicated firefighters, the record of
the Rome Fire Department in public service and fire protection is one to
be envied; for 24 hours a day, for 365  days  a  year,  for  130  years,
whenever  the alarm sounded, these noble volunteers left their homes and
went to the aid of their neighbors; and
 
  WHEREAS, The brave firefighters of  the  Rome  Fire  Department  are
prepared  to risk their lives every day to help save the lives of others
and to protect homes and property from the destruction caused  by  fire;
and
 
  WHEREAS,  In  addition to the skill and devoted service demonstrated
by individual  firefighters,  the  Rome  Fire  Department  reflects  the
history and development of firefighting over the past 130 years; and
 
  WHEREAS,  This  Legislative Body cannot express sufficient gratitude
to those devoted individuals who recognize that the preservation of life
and property is a sacred responsibility and who make that responsibility
their own by serving as firefighters; and
 
  WHEREAS, It is the sense of this Legislative  Body  that  we  should
give  special  recognition  to  those  who  work  so assiduously for the
betterment of their communities, and  acknowledge  publicly  the  heroic
good  works  performed  by  the volunteer fire departments of this great
Empire State, their officers and auxiliaries; now, therefore, be it
 
  RESOLVED, That this Legislative Body pause in its  deliberations  to
proudly  commemorate  the 130th Anniversary of the Rome Fire Department;
and be it further
 
  RESOLVED, That a copy of this  Resolution,  suitably  engrossed,  be
transmitted to the Rome Fire Department.
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