Immigrant Volunteers Joining Town Fire Departments
There’s good news and bad news in New York state. The bad news: numbers of volunteer firefighters are dropping across the state. The good news: in some towns, the opposite is happening because of the increase in immigrants.
According to the Firemen’s Association of the State of New York, immigrants from Central and South America are stepping up to volunteer.
Port Chester Second Assistant Chief Mike De Vittorio, called this wave of immigrants “a godsend.”
The department’s numbers are growing because of dozens of Latinos on the force. The 2010 census showed 59% of Port Chester’s residents were Latino or Hispanic, with 45% foreign-born.
Village trustee Luis Marino is the first Latino to hold public office there. He is happy getting involved, bringing in young guys who also want to serve: immigrants from Ecuador, El Salvador, and Guatemala. “Each day, we’re growing,” he said. And just to kid the natives, Marino sometimes says, “We’re going to take over.”
For locals who are faced with a house on fire, I’m sure that’s just fine with them.
For details, you can read the entire story here.