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South Haven Area Emergency Services

The Mission of SHAES
The Mission of the South Haven (Michigan) Area Emergency Services (SHAES) is to preserve life, limb and property through aggressive fire prevention, education and fire suppression. To provide the highest quality of emergency medical care with skill and compassion. To serve our communities with pride, integrity and courage.

SHAES News Updates

SHAES Plans Large-Scale Downtown Training

South Haven Area Emergency Services will be conducting a large-scale fire training drill in the downtown area on Sunday, April 14th. The drill will start at approximately 7 a.m. and finish by 11 a.m., with most anticipated traffic disruption lasting a minimum of two hours. Traffic disruption will occur on Williams Street from Center to Phoenix Street; and Center Street from Phoenix to Williams Street. Quaker Street will also be blocked by a large diameter hose during this time from Center to Williams Street. All efforts will be made to conduct the water flow drill from the Black River to Center Street as efficiently as possible and remove any traffic obstruction as quickly as possible.

The purpose of the drill will be to verify water volume that can be pumped from our current water system located in the downtown area. We also need to verify our capability of pumping water from the river into the downtown area through large diameter hose with the use of pumping apparatus. The drill will help evaluate our capability and placement of apparatus in the event of a large fire in our downtown area. Fire and law enforcement departments throughout Van Buren and Allegan Counties will be assisting as well as Van Buren County Emergency Preparedness Office. South Haven Area Emergency Services (SHAES) is working with the City of South Haven Department of Public Works to help facilitate road barricades and cones. We are also working with the City of South Haven Water Department during the event.

Open Burning Poses High Risks

This is a time of the year when open burning poses a risk because on dry field conditions. Open burning is not allowed within the City of South Haven. Burning permits are required for properties outside the city. Permits must be sought before starting any burns. Call 639-3473 for permission to burn. SHAES maintains information signs near its stations on Blue Star Highway and 64th Street which give the fire risk for the day. check this link for burn permit informationhttp://www.shaes.org/dokuwiki/doku.php?id=public:permits

Regional Approach to Emergency Services Extended

A highly successful regional approach for providing fire protection and emergency medical services to South Haven area residents and property owners has been extended for another 25 years.

The governing boards of the City of South Haven and townships of Casco, Geneva and South Haven have each approved the extension of the agreement thru 2044. The pact received approval from South Haven Area Emergency Services (SHAES) Authority at their March 7 meeting.

In 1994 the city was facing financial challenges in the operation of ambulance (EMS) service through its fire department. The city was providing fire and EMS services on a contractural basis to South Haven township and the western half of Geneva Township. Casco township operated its own fire department.

A task force consisting of residents and officials from each of the four government agencies was formed and came to the conclusion that an “emergency services authority” be established. In 1995 it became the first such authority to be created in Michigan with funding based on the taxable property value for fire protection and population for ambulance service.

SHAES has been a huge success and has raised the bar as an example of regional cooperation,” said South Haven Township Supervisor Ross Stein who is also Chair of the SHAES Authority Board.

Today the department has 16 fulltime and 30 paid-on-call staff operating from three stations. The department responded to over 2,000 calls for service in 2018, according to Executive Director Ron Wise.

“We continue to receive several requests each year from fire departments and communities across the State inquiring on the formula to share costs on a consistent basis taking life and property into account,” said Wise.

The SHAES budget in 2018 was just under $2.7 million. The Authority derives its income from each of the governmental units, the Van Buren County ambulance millage and ambulance user fees.

The city of South Haven in 2018 funded 22% of the budget followed by Casco township 17%, South Haven township 11%, and Geneva township 9%. The Van Buren County ambulance millage and user fees each provided 20% of the budget.

Read WSJM accounthttps://www.wsjm.com/2019/03/13/south-haven-area-emergency-services-agreement-extended/

Read MLIVE storyhttps://www.mlive.com/news/kalamazoo/2019/03/south-haven-area-extends-regional-emergency-service-collaboration-25-years.html

Citizen Initiative Better Equips Responders

South Haven Area Emergency Services (SHAES) and City of South Haven Police Department are now better equipped to handle serious bleeding emergencies with Stop the Bleed kits thanks to a citizen-led initiative.

Twenty-two kits were recently purchased through a fund raiser organized by resident Sandy Fenske. Local residents donated money towards the purchase of the kits that have been placed in every city police vehicle, SHAES fire apparatus and support vehicles that would be called to an incident where victims may have serious bleeding.

Pictured, left to right: Police Chief Natalie Thompson, Sandy Fenske, SHAES Chief Ron Wise

SHAES ambulances already have the needed equipment, but may not always be the first to arrive on scene,” said SHAES Chief Ron Wise. “The small kit can be easily grabbed by a responding firefighter or police officer and its contents quickly applied to a wound thus increasing the patient’s chance of survival.”

The kits include a tourniquet, large absorbent pressure dressing, compressed gauze for packing an uncontrolled bleeding wound, scissors for removing clothing and protective gloves.

“The kits allow for a much more robust supply of lifesaving equipment for our first responders,” said Police Chief Natalie Thompson. “Having the kits in all vehicles allows for a greater response capability in case of a multi-patient incident that could be spread out over large area.”

Sandy Fenske got the idea after watching an episode of the CBS television show “60 Minutes”. She contacted Chief Wise to see if the community's first responders could benefit from having the kits. She immediately reached out to friends who generously supported the project with their contributions.

“Today, the most prevalent call on everyone’s mind is an active shooter incident, but beyond that type of scenario, these kits will be vital to early-arriving first responders at accident scenes or non-violent injury situations,” said Wise

“Thank you to my South Haven friends for their donations and SHAES for their support,” said Sandy Fenske. ” I know we all hope and pray that South Haven will never have an incident where this life saving equipment will be needed. Perhaps in the future we can also place these devises in all our schools as a safety measure.”

Read MLive storyhttps://www.mlive.com/news/kalamazoo/2019/03/south-haven-woman-inspired-by-60-minutes-raises-funds-to-stop-the-bleed.html

Read WSJM accounthttps://www.wsjm.com/2019/03/06/citizens-donate-emergency-kits-to-south-haven-agencies/

South Haven Area Emergency Services Annual Report Released

See 2018 in Review in Photoshttp://www.shaes.org/dokuwiki/doku.php?id=public:2018_review

Read Complete Annual Reporthttp://www.shaes.org/dokuwiki/lib/exe/fetch.php?media=public:2018_shaes_annual_report.pdf

South Haven Area Emergency Services (SHAES) responded to more than 2,000 calls for the sixth consecutive year according to the department’s Annual Report for 2018.

SHAES serves the city of South Haven and the townships of Casco, Geneva and South Haven from three stations.

“A dedicated staff and a supportive community continues to allow us to provide a very high level of service,” said Chief Ronald Wise.

The 2,085 responses were the fifth highest in department history. The all-time record is 2,276 in 2016.

There were 579 fire alarm responses and 1,506 medical calls in 2018. There were 955 responses in the city of South Haven, followed by 415 in South Haven township, 349 in Geneva township and 304 in Casco township. SHAES provided mutual aid to other fire departments on 62 occasions and received assistance 31 times.

Property losses from fire in 2018 totaled $709,000 compared to $316,500 in 2017. Geneva township experienced the biggest fire loss ($457,000), followed by the city of South Haven at $145,500. Next were South Haven township ($58,000) and Casco township ($48,500).

There were no civilian fire-related injuries or injuries in 2018. There was four incidents in which a firefighter was injured in either at an emergency scene or a training exercise.

The department is comprised of 16 fulltime staff and 37 paid-on-call firefighters. The department continued an expanded community-wide pre-planning and inspection program. Staff has now completed pre-fire surveys at 448 of the 516 businesses in the SHAES coverage area. There were also 139 short-term rental inspections during the year.

The department continued its active public education programs with safety presentations to nearly 1,900 people at schools, senior living facilities, businesses and to civic groups. An estimated 450 children and adults attended the annual Fire Safety Fun Night.

A power point program highlighting the history of the department and explaining current SHAES services was developed for presentation to community groups.

During 2018 the department acquired a new 4×4 Paramedic Ambulance and state-of-the-art battery-powered Jaws of Life rescue tools.

home.1555070660.txt.gz · Last modified: 2019/04/12 12:04 by tomrenner