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Training officer arrives

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The new training officer for the Drayton Valley/Brazeau County Fire Services comes to the position with a background in the military.

Matthew Noad started with the department at the beginning of June after relocating from Cold Lake’s military base.

Noad says he started working in fire services when he was 18 in Magrath, south of Lethbridge. 

“I started fire fighting about as soon as I could,” says Noad.

He says during his time in Magrath, he worked with another man who had worked as a firefighter for the Canadian Military.

“I didn’t even know that there was firefighters in the military,” says Noad.

Noad started with the military in 2018 and completed basic training as well as some firefighter training in Borden, Ontario. Once that was done, he was stationed in Cold Lake.

Military firefighters are mostly stationed at the air force bases in Canada, says Noad, although the Edmonton Army Base also has military firefighters. The rest of the bases have firefighters under National Defence rather than the military.

The firefighters are responsible for the structures and personnel on the base, as well as the aircrafts. He says other than dealing with aircraft, most of the training that they receive is the same that an on-call volunteer would receive at a municipal fire department.

“We kind of become their insurance policy in a sense,” says Noad. “We’re the ones protecting it from fire and damage.”

He says they were basically trained in airport firefighting, which isn’t as much of an issue in Drayton. However, Noad didn’t spend a lot of time dealing with wildfires at the base, so he will also be learning some things during his time here.

After six years working mostly in Cold Lake as a training officer, Noad says he decided to go with a change of direction in his firefighting career. He says he saw the opportunity in Drayton Valley and was excited by the prospects.

Noad says working in Alberta was what he had preferred, having spent most of his life in the province. However, one of the perks of the community was that it was closer to the mountains than Cold Lake was, and his wife has some family in the area.

“I’m actually super excited to be here,” says Noad. “I’m excited to be working with such a committed group of volunteers and full-time staff.”

He says he was impressed watching the dedication the department had to looking out for the County and the Town during the wildfire season in 2023. 

“That was one of the driving forces that brought me here,” he says. “There’s such a dedicated group of individuals that sacrificed their own time to be there for people on their worst days. With the extreme conditions that they were in, they did an excellent job with what they had.”

Noad says he highly encourages anyone who is interested in giving back to their community to apply to be a volunteer firefighter. Their next training recruitment is in the fall, but they accept applications throughout.

Anyone who is interested in applying can visit the Town office for an application or call the department at 780-514-2216.

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