LyondellBasell Responders Bring Aerial in Brayton Fire Training Field

LyondellBasell responders use new aerial in Brayton Fire Training Field scenario.
LyondellBasell responders use new aerial in Brayton Fire Training Field scenario.
Refineries were an essential part of life where Shell process operator and emergency responder Victoria Reneau grew up.
Leland Paniza attended a live-fire training project at Brayton Fire Training Field.
Michael F. Marchan prefers a tropical climate. He grew up on St. Croix in the Virgin Islands and spent 18 years in operations at the Hovensa refinery there before it closed in 2012.
On average, Chevron brings about 200 participants through Brayton every year with corporate fire schools scheduled for March, April, and May.
LyondellBasell’s manufacturing holdings in Pasadena, Texas, is so vast an enterprise that the single corporate fire brigade covering the three separate plant sites requires two fire chiefs to operate.
One fire training simulation at Brayton Fire Training Field in Texas in particular seemed to divide responders attending the Shell Oil Products and Motiva Enterprises corporate fire school held in February at the Brayton Fire Training Field in Texas.
With a capacity of 18,000 gpm, think of Ferrara Fire Apparatus’ latest fire vehicle like a fully accessorized quick-attack truck designed to tackle fires as big as those in storage tanks.
Hellfighter U drew 115 students for its December school at Brayton, the second of two held in 2016.
Bob Zapatka divides his time between working as an adjunct instructor at two fire schools.
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