Crime & Safety
Lancaster Co. Firefighters Use Video Messages to Reach Volunteers
On-camera interviews highlight the need for more volunteers of all kinds and the camaraderie and satisfaction of volunteering

Lancaster County, PA...The men and women who volunteer with local fire companies can’t personally tell every Lancaster County resident about the need for more volunteers and the amazing experiences that volunteering offers, so they’re doing the next best thing.
As part of an on-going county-wide recruitment effort, volunteers speak about their lives as volunteer firefighters and rescuers in a series of new videos, now airing on Comcast and Blue Ridge Cable channels. Watch one here:
“No one can describe the amazing, exciting, and rewarding experience of serving your neighbors in such a vital role better than those who do it,” said Lancaster County Fire Chiefs Association Recruitment and Retention Committee Spokesman Duane Hagelgans. This makes the videos, which have been shared via YouTube and Facebook, an extremely important part of the Association’s ongoing volunteer recruitment campaign, he said.
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Tracy Tomlinson, 51, is one of the firefighters who took part in the video project. Just 16 when he followed his dad into the fire service, Tomlinson volunteers at both Robert Fulton Fire Company in Peach Bottom, where he was chief from 2013 through 2017, and Quarryville Fire Company.
“A lot of times, it is an adrenaline rush,” he said. But firefighting is way more than that to Tomlinson. “Everybody needs
help now and then,” he said. “I think it’s a big, important thing to get out there and help others when you can give the help.”
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The video project is already having an impact: Since they debuted, numerous people have contacted the Association about their interest in volunteering in a variety of capacities through the association
website.
The fact that there are so many emergency and non-emergency roles available are a key component of the videos’ message. “Providing medical treatment, putting out fires, or finding someone who is lost are all incredibly important jobs,” Hagelgans said. “But so too are educating children and adults on fire prevention and safety, tending to the business of administratively running the station, holding fundraisers, directing traffic at accident scenes, and many
other tasks that county residents may not realize need to be filled.”
To learn more or sign up to volunteer, visit www.becomeafirefighter.org.