• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
  • CATEGORIES & PRODUCTS
    • Categories


      Connected Firefighter

      Education

      Grants

      Health & Wellness

      PPE

      Research

      Standards

      Technology & Innovation

      Training

      Products


      Fire Helmets

      FireGrid

      Globe Boots

      Globe Hoods

      Globe Turnout Gear

      LUNAR

      SCBA

      Column
  • SUBSCRIBE

Announcing Winners in MSA’s 2022 Globe Gear Giveaway

4 Min Read | Oct 18, 2022

Reading Time: 4 minutes MSA Safety, DuPont Personal Protection, and the National Volunteer Fire Council (NVFC) are working together to provide volunteer fire departments with much-needed gear through MSA’s and DuPont’s Globe Gear Giveaway. In 2022, 13 departments will each receive four new sets of turnouts and four new helmets. Here are the winners for July, August, and September.

October 18, 2022 by Kimberly.Smith

Reading Time: 4 minutes

Proper personal protective equipment (PPE) is essential to the health and safety of first responders. That’s why MSA Safety, DuPont Personal Protection, and the National Volunteer Fire Council (NVFC) are working together to provide volunteer fire departments with much-needed gear through MSA’s and DuPont’s Globe Gear Giveaway. In 2022, 13 departments will each receive four new sets of turnouts and four new helmets.

Awards were made to the following departments in July, August, and September:

  • Riverdale Volunteer Fire Department (RFD) is an all-volunteer department located in northern New Jersey. The 33 volunteers serve a population of approximately 5,000 over 2.1 square miles and respond to an average of 200 calls annually. RFD’s service area contains portions of an interstate and major state highway as well as large stores and apartment and condominium complexes. They were last able to secure an Assistance to Firefighters Grant for new gear 10 years ago, but these sets of gear are now no longer NFPA-compliant. With much of their budget going towards other necessities, the department struggles to buy a set or two of new gear each year.
  • Springhill Volunteer Fire Department (SVFD), located in rural Nova Scotia, is an all-volunteer department with 35 members. Serving a population of approximately 5,500 over 185 square miles, SVFD responds to an average of 154 calls annually. The dedicated firefighters of SVFD respond to chimney fires, structure fires, and wildland fires, among other emergencies, as well as conduct aggressive fire prevention campaigns. Unfortunately, over 80 percent of the department’s gear is more than 10 years old. Although the community does what it can to support the department, SVFD simply does not have the funding to acquire new gear for all its members.
  • Delta Fire Department (DFD) is an all-volunteer department composed of 28 members located in rural Central Utah. Serving a population of approximately 6,000 over 5,600 square miles, DFD responds to an average of 130 calls annually in addition to providing automatic aid for seven surrounding smaller departments. DFD’s service area includes critical infrastructure such as schools, post offices, airports, a beryllium refining plant, a coal-powered power plant supplying power for much of Los Angeles County (CA), and other large industrial facilities. Despite this, most of DFD’s turnout gear is over 20 years old and no longer NFPA-compliant. With much of their budget going towards other necessities, they are unable to purchase new gear without making cuts elsewhere.
  • Northport Fire and Rescue (NFR) is an all-volunteer department located in the rural northeastern corner of Washington state. Their 15 volunteers serve a population of approximately 295 over 100 square miles, responding to an average of 150 to 200 calls annually. In addition to their regular service area, NFR provides automatic aid to a neighboring fire district and mutual aid to two other fire districts for wildland and structural fires. The department also provides EMS over a 200-square-mile service area. Despite this heavy workload, all 15 of NFR’s volunteers are equipped with gear that is more than 10 years old and therefore no longer NFPA-compliant. Financial constraints mean that the department is unable to purchase new gear and other personal protective equipment for its members.
  • Church Hill Volunteer Fire Company a 100 percent volunteer fire department located on Maryland’s Eastern Shore. The department serves a rapidly developing rural area of approximately 64 square miles with an estimated population of 4,800 residents. A large portion of the area is farmland, but some of that area is being developed with single-family homes. The department also responds to two major travel routes that have seen a steady increase in usage, which includes large trucks hauling hazardous materials such as explosives and radioactive waste. In addition, it provides automatic aid for fire, rescue, and emergency medical services with five neighboring fire departments and two adjacent counties. The department’s 55 volunteer firefighters respond to an average of 270 calls each year. Not all have assigned gear, and over half are using gear that is more than 10 years old. The department’s normal operating budget is not sufficient to equip all members with adequate PPE. These new sets will replace member gear that is non-compliant with current national standards.
  • Marlboro Volunteer Fire Company serves a population of nearly 1,300 over 41 square miles in a rural community in Vermont. Its 15 volunteer firefighters respond to an average of 128 calls annually. In addition to house/structure fires, medical emergencies, and increasing brush fires, the department’s response area includes a critical state highway that connects the capitals and federal highway system of New York and New Hampshire and the eastern seaboard, as well as being the main route for tourists/skiers coming to the state. The department is also responsible for the safety of a school, historic buildings, tourism businesses, and the Marlboro Music Festival on a 530+ acre campus with more than 58 buildings. Over half of the department’s responders are using gear that is over 10 years old, and three members have no assigned turnout gear at all. Critical station improvements, apparatus maintenance, and communication system needs have added budget constraints and left the department unable to purchase new gear. Not being able to properly outfit its responders has held the department back from accepting new members.

For more than a century, MSA has been committed to providing workers all around the world with the equipment they need to help keep them safe. We’re proud to partner with the NVFC and DuPont to provide state-of-the-art turnout gear and helmets to departments in need.

Recommended for You

Firefighter wearing MSA's G1 SCBA, with SCBA images on the side.
PPE

How Much Do You Know About SCBA Cylinder Options?

December 4, 2023
3 Min Read
PPE

Final Winners Announced in MSA’s 2023 Globe Gear Giveaway

December 27, 2023
4 Min Read
PPE

How to Maintain Performance and NFPA Compliance of MSA Fire Helmets

January 9, 2024
2 Min Read
PPE

Volunteer Departments: MSA’s 2024 Globe Gear Giveaway Application Period is Now Open

February 6, 2024
< 1 Minute Read
Share:

Footer

MSA MISSION: That men and women may work in safety and that they, their families, and their communities may live in health throughout the world.

Visit Our Sites

  • MSAFIRE.COM
  • Globe
MSA Fire on Facebook   MSA on X   MSA Fire on Instagram   MSA on LinkedIn   MSA on YouTube  

Contact

  • blog@msasafety.com
  • 1-877-672-FIRE (3473)
  • View All Contact Info
  • Subscribe

Other MSA Blogs

  • Industrial – Spotlight on Safety
  • FieldServer – The Safety Connection

© 2024 MSA. All rights reserved.

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Accept Read More
Privacy & Cookies Policy

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the ...
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Non-necessary
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
SAVE & ACCEPT