Local First Responders Make San Gabriel Valley Drivers Safer on the Road

Aug. 19, 2021
Through National Auto Body Council First Responder Emergency Extrication (F.R.E.E.) Program, Seidner’s Collison Centers, Automobile Club of Southern California and HURST Jaws of Life hold education event on how to extricate motorists.

More than 30 first responders from Monrovia, California, fire department gathered Aug. 10 and 11 for a hands-on demonstration of the latest techniques in emergency vehicle extrication, preparing them to provide the best response for car accident victims in Monrovia and surrounding areas, all thanks to the National Auto Body Council F.R.E.E. program, Seidner’s Collision Centers, Automobile Club of California, and HURST Jaws of Life.

When drivers in the San Gabriel Valley have an accident, they rely on the community’s first responders to be there to help them to safety. And when they are driving a late-model vehicle with numerous airbags, advanced technology or electric/hybrid engines, the rescue can be more challenging.

Seidner’s Collision Centers, at 1000 Evergreen St, Duarte, CA, hosted first responders from the surrounding area at a special NABC F.R.E.E.™ education and guidance program on August 10 and 11 to help ensure Duarte area drivers have the best prepared response in case of an accident.

“We want to help make California drivers safer on the highways by ensuring our first responders have the education and preparation they need to rescue vehicle occupants from late-model cars,” said Gene Lopez, director of development and training for Seidner’s Collision Centers, which has 13 locations, seven in the San Gabriel Valley, and six in the Inland Empire. “This is our way of giving back to the first responders who put our safety first.”

The National Auto Body Council First Responder Emergency Education (F.R.E.E.) program provides education and live demonstrations on working with high-strength steel, airbags, advanced restraint systems, onboard technology and safety around alternative fuel vehicles. First responders practice cutting techniques on advanced vehicles, addressing high-strength steel and composite materials, multiple airbags, onboard technology and changing vehicle design. The vehicles for the program were donated by Automobile Club of Southern California and HURST Jaws of Life provided the classroom education and extrication demonstration.

The growing popularity of high-voltage hybrid and electric vehicles and the many safety concerns surrounding these vehicles makes this program a necessity. Alternative fuel systems present different challenges when first responders arrive at the scene of an accident. Electric cars, hybrid cars and natural gas vehicles have fuel systems that pose dangers for first responders if need arises to “cut” the vehicle for rescue.

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