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Thursday, December 3, 2015
Indian River’s Siren Refurbishment Status Update

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Thursday December, 3 2015

Nature: Indian River’s Siren Refurbishment Status Update

Location: Oak Orchard

Indian River’s Siren Refurbishment Status Update

As identified in earlier announcements, the Indian River Volunteer Fire Company has chosen to temporarily discontinue its siren to ensure adequate refurbishment and relocation at the Oak Orchard facility.

While the siren has not been operational for approximately eight weeks, it has been missed and many residents continue to inquire about the siren’s return.

The siren in the Oak Orchard – Long Neck area has been appreciated, obviously missed, and is not considered an ignorant, insensitive, antiquated and useless practice.

http://www.delmarvanow.com/story/opinion/2015/11/30/letter-conley/76581374/

While agreed, the siren is no longer the front line of fire dispatching in many communities, sirens continue to operate in communities throughout Delaware and across the country. These devices continue to be a valuable resource to alert volunteers and the community when emergency services are needed.

Sirens are an invaluable tool when pager batteries die, cell phones have no service, or firefighters are in weak signal areas, such as inside metal buildings or basements. Sirens are typically activated by electronic external receivers controlled by the Sussex County Emergency Operations Center that are far more reliable than interior portable equipment, and many volunteer fire companies have kept their sirens in service for that reason.

Indian River’s fire siren was located behind the Oak Orchard fire station on a utility pole and after decades of use and exposure to the elements it is in need of refurbishment and relocating. It is believed that the last reconditioning effort was in the early 1980s.

While Indian River utilizes the latest advancement in technology to alert firefighters, the continued usage of the siren is most desirable in the Oak Orchard community. While these faded red-plated horns have given way to "hand-held radios" and most recently to radio paging, cell phones, or computer aided dispatching as the primary alerting methodology. The siren is still the most preferred method for community awareness.

This refurbishment project has being coordinated by a group of members including: Jim Wagner, Chief Engineer; Robert Mills, Technical Consultant; William Tobin, and Leolga Wright, Project Coordinator.

As of December 3rd with the assistance of the Delaware Electric Cooperative, the installation of new transmission poles and actual mounting of the siren has been completed. The remaining reconnection and activation work will be coordinated within the immediate foreseeable future.

Illustrated herewith are various photographs during the pole installation and siren mounting process as well as links to the previous communication.

http://www.irvfc.com/gallery/detail/15579?ss=1

http://www.irvfc.com/gallery/detail/10302