Local Paramedic's Gentle St. Bernard Steals The
Show At School Event
By BILL
JONES
Staff Writer
Maddie, a huge,
but gentle, St. Bernard dog and her handler, Greene County Paramedic Len Casey, are helping Greene
County elementary school students learn important fire-safety
information.
During a Tuesday afternoon stop at Doak Elementary School,
Maddie, the four-year-old St. Bernard whom Casey describes as the "work horse" of his four-dog
troop, was the center of attention for the school's 630 students.
Casey,
a former Bristol, Tenn., firefighter, who now teams with Emergency Medical Technician Matthew
Solomon at Greeneville-Greene County Emergency Medical Services, said after the program that he had
been using St. Bernards to help deliver his fire safety message to students since
2003.
He said he chose to use St. Bernards in the programs he presents in
his off time, because of their "laid back" nature. A St. Bernard, he said, would "hold a flashlight
for a burglar."
Baby, Maddie's one-year-old puppy also put in an
appearance at the end of the program during a session in which students were invited to pet the dogs
as the students left the gymnasium.
At the outset of his program in the
gymnasium at Doak Elementary, Casey told students that he was sure they would pay "a lot more
attention" to Maddie than they would to him.
He pointed out that Maddie
"gets paid for everything she does" with small, meaty treats.
During the
program, Maddie carried out a series of tasks, including retrieving a telephone handset for Casey
and rolling on the floor to illustrate how to put out a clothing fire.
Fire Danger Explained
At the outset of his presentation,
Casey told the Doak Elementary students that each year some 800 children between the ages of 5 and
15 die in fires.
He noted that while Tennessee ranks 17th in population
among the 50 U.S. states, it ranks fourth in terms of annual fire deaths. "That's way too high," he
said.
Noting that he had been a longtime firefighter, Casey told the
students that in four out of five fatal house fires, the home did not have a working smoke
detector.
Casey urged the students to remind their parents to replace the
batteries in their smoke detectors twice a year. He noted that he personally replaces the batteries
in his smoke detectors on January 1 and July 4 because those dates are easy to
remember.
Beware In Kitchen
While
discussing fire extinguishers, Casey told the students that the "number one cause of fires," is
cooking.
As a result, he said, a home fire-extinguisher should be kept
in the kitchen.
Casey reminded students not to attempt to use fire
extinguishers themselves and to immediately exit their homes in the event of
fire.
However, he noted, the leading cause of fire deaths is
"smoking."
Most fire deaths, Casey told the students, take place between
the hours of 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. when most residents are in bed asleep.
He
also told the students that, in the event their homes catch fire, they should not be afraid of
firefighters who come to rescue them.
'Scary' Clothing
He noted that the protective clothing firefighters wear may appear "scary," but
that firefighters are only coming assist them.
During the program, Casey
put on a full set of protective clothing, including a self-contained breathing apparatus, and went
into the stands to let students become acquainted with the clothing.
He
urged the students never to hide in the event a fire breaks out inside their homes and to always
call out for help to responding firefighters.
Make Escape
Plan
He also showed the students how to make an escape plan for their
homes, and urged them to practice escaping a burning home with their
families.
An important part of such a plan, he said, is to establish a
meeting place outside the home where all family members can gather after escaping the
house.
Under no circumstances, Casey told the students, should they ever
re-enter a burning house after escaping from it.
"There is a 90-percent
chance you won't get out again if you go back into the house [during a fire]," he told the
students.
After the program, Doak Elementary students filed past, and
petted Maddie and her puppy, Baby, who is actually taller and longer than his mother, as the two
dogs lay placidly on the gymnasium floor.
More information about fire
safety, and other programs, provided by Casey's company company, FSM Solutions, is available from
its Web site at www.firesafetydog.com.