Cork County Fire Service Welcomes Three New Fire Engines
Cork County Council’s Fire Service has taken delivery of three new fire engines to serve the communities of Fermoy, Carrigaline, Skibbereen and surrounding areas. The appliances were funded by the National Directorate for Fire and Emergency Management at the Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage.
Each state-of-the-art fire engine can accommodate eight crew, has an integrated body, an 1,800-litre water tank and comes fitted with a water and compressed air foam pumping system. The appliances also carry a set of ladders capable of reaching up 13.5m in height.
Mayor of the County of Cork, Cllr. Danny Collins welcomed the latest additions to the Council’s Fire Service fleet saying,
Fermoy’s new appliance will be designated the call sign ‘Charlie-Kilo-Two-Five-Alpha-One’ (CK25A1) and will be the first turnout appliance in the station. The station is also equipped with another special Emergency Tender appliance to assist with road traffic collisions on the M8 Motorway.
Carrigaline’s new Class B fire appliance designated CK35A1, will be the first turn out appliance for the station. The specialist Incident Command Unit is also located in Carrigaline along with a second Class B fire appliance.
Skibbereen’s new engine will replace a 2003 appliance that was put into service when the new station on Marsh Road was opened in 2003. Another Class B fire appliance is also stationed in Skibbereen which has a firefighting crew of 10 and attends approximately 90 incidents per annum.
Chief Executive of Cork County Council, Tim Lucey highlighted the importance of modernising the existing Fire Service fleet in Cork County,
The county’s Fire Service also took delivery of a specialised Aerial high reach Platform in 2022. Based in Midleton, the appliance has a working reach of 28m facilitating access to high areas and is capable of providing over 2,000 litres of water per minute at large industrial fires.