Fired up
Ellen McCarty
NEWPORT BEACH -- Firefighters lit a model house on fire Sunday to
demonstrate extreme heat and rapidly spreading flames, but the SWAT
team’s rappelling adventure from a four-story tower was decidedly the
“hottest” event for kids at Public Safety Day at the Newport Center Fire
Station and Police Headquarters on Santa Barbara Drive.
About 300 kids hooked into a harness clipped to a rope, and -- anchored
to police officers who monitored their fall -- jumped out second- and
third-story windows, Newport Beach Police Sgt. John Klein said.
“Rappelling is exciting to show the kids,” said Klein, who showed his own
5-year-old son the ropes earlier in the day. “We rappel into a building
when there’s a barricaded suspect, a hostage situation or to serve an
arrest warrant, because they don’t expect us to come from above.”
It was Tyler Frink’s second time rappelling from the tower. Last year,
the 4-year-old jumped from the second-story window, and “liked it.”
His cousin, 5-year-old Megan Mass, waited in line for her first rappel
and said she was a little scared.
Officers gave the pair high-fives as they entered the tower. Soon their
little legs dangled over the window ledge and, one by one, they slid down
to the ground, Tyler faster than Megan, who lingered mid-fall to smile
widely at the crowd.
“I was high,” she said, beaming after landing.
Tyler was quiet, rushing over to his mom as soon as he was off the hook.
“You know he’s going to want all this stuff for Christmas,” Officer Steve
Koudelka said to the family, who have come to the event for the last four
years.
“The kids really develop an appreciation for the police and fire
departments,” said Tyler’s mom, Lisa Frink.
They also gain safety skills, Robert Morris said, as his son practiced
putting out a small fire with an extinguisher.
“When the water comes out, it’s pretty cold when you hold it,” Nicholas
Morris, 8, said to his dad, after spraying the cloudy moisture at the
flames.
“For the kids, it’s fun,” Roberts said, “and most importantly, they’ll
know what to do when a fire starts.”
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