Lousada firefighters turn 100 as government pledges more support
At the centenary of the Lousada volunteer firefighters, the government floated extraordinary measures to bolster crews through wildfire season.
Some celebrations are worth telling. The Lousada volunteer firefighters marked a hundred years of service, and the date brought more than cake and speeches: it brought a government promise to put more money where it’s usually short.
With the country heading into wildfire season in earnest, a government official said it was ready to consider extraordinary measures to support firefighters, with reinforced resources over the summer. In plain words: if things heat up, there’s room to loosen the purse strings.
Why it hits close to home
In Lousada and so many towns across the country, volunteer firefighters are the first line when smoke appears on the horizon. They run on donations, membership fees and plenty of goodwill, and every summer tests their vehicles, crews and nerves. A century of service isn’t built without sacrifice, and the community knows it.
The government’s promise is welcome, but what counts is what reaches the ground: fuel, vehicle upkeep, protective gear and training. The corps want fewer speeches and more guaranteed resources before the heat peaks, not midway through a blaze.
For now, a round of applause for those who’ve given the land a hundred years of legwork. And the usual warning: at this time of year, one poorly doused spark can pile work onto the very people who collected medals today.
See also: Tanker strike in the Strait of Hormuz halts Gulf evacuation.
Imagem: Wikimedia Commons