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Two Menlo firefighters among first in county to receive COVID vaccine

Engineer/paramedic Dave Magnan, one of six firefighters to volunteer to staff the Menlo Park Fire Protection District's Pandemic Medical Response Unit, was vaccinated against COVID-19 last week. Courtesy Menlo Park Fire Protection District.

Two firefighters were among the first in San Mateo County to receive one of the COVID-19 vaccines last week.

They were part of a group of six firefighters and paramedics who volunteered to staff a two-person Pandemic Emergency Response Unit for the Menlo Park Fire Protection District, which serves Menlo Park, Atherton, East Palo Alto and surrounding unincorporated communities, according to a Dec. 24 district press release. The team was equipped with an upgraded level of personal protective equipment and protocols to respond to possible COVID-19 medical incidents.

"Having our six personnel who volunteered to put themselves at a higher risk in order to protect others, when we knew so little, was an important moment that showed their courage, compassion and leadership," said fire Chief Harold Schapelhouman. "That's why we put them at the front of the line of our front-line fire personnel to be vaccinated, if they wanted to do this, and trust me, everyone in our organization gets it and appreciated it."

Over the last nine months, nearly half of the district's 100 first responders have been tested and/or quarantined due to possible exposure to the virus. Two firefighters contracted the virus and both survived, according to the press release.

The pandemic team responded to care facilities, homeless encampments and cramped housing conditions, where entire families tested positive for the virus, to car accidents, suicides, stabbings, overdoses and difficulty breathing calls in which the patients' actual medical conditions were less known. Some 10% of the medical responses over the last nine months were flagged as patients potentially having COVID, and a third of those were confirmed as positive cases.

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The team returned to normal duty when other fire responders became comfortable with new patient care protocols and safety measures, the release states.

Future vaccinations

A third of the fire district's 150 employees — support staff, or administrative personnel — are not considered front-line workers and will not be vaccinated now.

"I don't plan to be vaccinated until every other employee that works for me has had the opportunity to go first," said Schapelhouman. "I also feel strongly that front-line police officers need to be vaccinated before we do. It's hard to imagine why these important members of our public safety family and team, 'street cops' who closely work to support our front-line fire personnel working literally side by side out in the community, are not being vaccinated as of yet. I'm sure it will get resolved but many on my staff don't feel we should go before them."

Meanwhile, Atherton's police Chief Steve McCulley expects his officers to be vaccinated toward the end of January, he said in a Dec. 27 email.

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Angela Swartz
 
Angela Swartz joined The Almanac in 2018 and covers education and small towns. She has a background covering education, city politics and business. Read more >>

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Two Menlo firefighters among first in county to receive COVID vaccine

Two firefighters were among the first in San Mateo County to receive one of the COVID-19 vaccines last week.

They were part of a group of six firefighters and paramedics who volunteered to staff a two-person Pandemic Emergency Response Unit for the Menlo Park Fire Protection District, which serves Menlo Park, Atherton, East Palo Alto and surrounding unincorporated communities, according to a Dec. 24 district press release. The team was equipped with an upgraded level of personal protective equipment and protocols to respond to possible COVID-19 medical incidents.

"Having our six personnel who volunteered to put themselves at a higher risk in order to protect others, when we knew so little, was an important moment that showed their courage, compassion and leadership," said fire Chief Harold Schapelhouman. "That's why we put them at the front of the line of our front-line fire personnel to be vaccinated, if they wanted to do this, and trust me, everyone in our organization gets it and appreciated it."

Over the last nine months, nearly half of the district's 100 first responders have been tested and/or quarantined due to possible exposure to the virus. Two firefighters contracted the virus and both survived, according to the press release.

The pandemic team responded to care facilities, homeless encampments and cramped housing conditions, where entire families tested positive for the virus, to car accidents, suicides, stabbings, overdoses and difficulty breathing calls in which the patients' actual medical conditions were less known. Some 10% of the medical responses over the last nine months were flagged as patients potentially having COVID, and a third of those were confirmed as positive cases.

The team returned to normal duty when other fire responders became comfortable with new patient care protocols and safety measures, the release states.

Future vaccinations

A third of the fire district's 150 employees — support staff, or administrative personnel — are not considered front-line workers and will not be vaccinated now.

"I don't plan to be vaccinated until every other employee that works for me has had the opportunity to go first," said Schapelhouman. "I also feel strongly that front-line police officers need to be vaccinated before we do. It's hard to imagine why these important members of our public safety family and team, 'street cops' who closely work to support our front-line fire personnel working literally side by side out in the community, are not being vaccinated as of yet. I'm sure it will get resolved but many on my staff don't feel we should go before them."

Meanwhile, Atherton's police Chief Steve McCulley expects his officers to be vaccinated toward the end of January, he said in a Dec. 27 email.

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