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  • Glendale: An exercise in training

    Glendale News Press, CA
    Jan 30 2009


    An exercise in training

    Preschool teachers prepare to become certified to be on a community
    response team.

    City of Glendale CERT Eric Indermill uses Ovsanna Cahvejian to show
    teachers how to clear an airway during emergency preparedness training
    at St. Mary's Tufenkian Armenian Preschool on Thursday. (Roger
    Wilson/News-Press)


    By Zain Shauk
    Published: Last Updated Friday, January 30, 2009 10:34 PM PST

    She was supposed to be a disaster victim ' part of training exercises
    Thursday and Friday at St. Mary's Tufenkian Preschool for more than 80
    teachers from Armenian preschools throughout Los Angeles County ' but
    she was having fun playing the part.

    Teachers learned to apply splints and bandages to injuries, along with
    other skills, during the first of two days of training.

    At the end of the program, the teachers will become members of the
    Community Emergency Response Team, which has a certification based on
    a set of national standards, preparing the group to aid emergency
    workers during any disaster operation, said Tanya Gregorian, public
    education coordinator for the Glendale Fire Department.

    `The education that they're getting here today is important,
    especially for teachers,' Gregorian said. `What better group to train
    than the educators?'

    Community members who have learned similar skills at training programs
    nationwide can often be important contributors to disaster relief,
    Glendale Battalion Chief Greg Godfrey said.

    The Los Angeles City Fire Department turned to members of local
    response teams for help during a fire in Sylmar in 2008, with 10
    graduates of Glendale's training program participating in relief
    efforts there, Godfrey said.

    The Red Cross also turned to response team members last year when a
    hurricane made landfall in Galveston, Texas, with two Glendale
    residents participating in that relief operation after taking lessons
    here, he said.

    Glendale Fire officials regularly teach the same material in a free
    course offered to the public on Thursday nights, Gregorian said.

    The city contributes $45,000 to pay for the classes, which have
    trained more than 300 people, with another 400 scheduled to attend the
    sessions this year, fire officials said.

    The training program can make a big difference in providing extra
    relief workers after an earthquake, fire, or other disaster, Gregorian
    said.

    `We don't have enough firefighters to take care of everybody,' she
    said. `In the case of a disaster, we're going to need help.'

    Teachers on Wednesday had fun with some of the activities,
    particularly when a hard hat fell off participant Ani Misserlian's
    head as she tried to spray a fire extinguisher at a propane-fueled
    blaze.

    She eventually succeeded, after an outburst of laughter dominated the
    playground.

    ``I have [a fire extinguisher] at home, and I'm not using it, so I
    don't have any idea how it could open,' she said of removing a safety
    pin from the unit.

    Teachers came from different schools of the Western Prelacy Armenian
    Preschool group, with teachers coming from campuses in Pasadena,
    Hollywood, Glendale and North Hills.

    The schools decided to dedicate two full training days for the
    emergency-preparedness exercises to help keep the teachers on top of
    their safety skills, said Arsine Aghazarian, principal of St. Mary's
    Tufenkian Armenian Preschool.
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