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Submersed in leagues of their own
Brick's dive team stays busy in and
out of its element BY DANIELLE
MEDINA Correspondent
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| CHRIS KELLY staff Joe Licandro, a diver
with the township's Underwater Recovery Team,
checks his equipment before a dive drill at the
Brick Reservoir July
31. | | For some local firefighters, the lengths - and depths -
they'll go to keep Brick residents safe knows no
limits.
The Brick Township Underwater Recovery Team is
a specialized unit within the fire department that responds to
incidents that occur on the many bodies of water in and around
the township.
Commonly known as the dive team, the 28-member
volunteer unit consists of 12 divers and 16 "tenders" - dive
managers who stay on land - who spend an additional 100 hours
of dive training in addition to firefighter training for
certification.
The dive team also regularly conducts
practices drills in the Atlantic Ocean, Barnegat Bay,
Metedeconk and Manasquan rivers, Kettle Creek, Forge Pond,
Lake Riviera and most recently, the Brick Reservoir.
"We dive in all bodies of water, so we know
what the makeup is, the visibility, the hazards, the ingress
and egress, and what the bottom is like," said dive captain
Jim Hajeski, "so in the event of a search, recovery or rescue,
we are ready."
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| PHOTOSBY CHRIS KELLY staff Tom Fried,
of Toms River, a diver with Brick's Underwater
Recovery Team was one of 12 divers getting
familiar with the Brick Reservoir July
31. | | In a township that has 52 miles of waterfront property,
more than any other municipality in the state, the dive team
is frequently called upon to respond to boating accidents,
swimmers and boaters in distress, and vehicles in the
water.
Two weeks ago, the dive team rescued two
township men near Brick Beach I when the raft they were
floating on was pulled a mile and a half offshore as a
fast-moving thunderstorm rolled across town.
The dive team also assists the police
department with the recovery of crime scene evidence and
weapons.
The July 31 dive at the Brick Reservoir was
the team's second dive there since the reservoir was filled
two years ago.
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| Fran Devaney reviews how to record
safety information with dive tenders David
Cantillo and Philip VasTano during a dive practice
drill July
31. | | Divers also use the drill to collect water and algae
samples and shoot underwater video of the reservoir for the
Brick Township Municipal Utilities Authority (BTMUA).
"The reservoir has been filled for two years
now, so it'll be interesting to see what's going on down
there," said David Harpell, a BTMUA health and safety
supervisor.
Two divers on the reservoir's south end shot
video of the reservoir's intake channel, which filters water
to the BTMUA for cleaning.
With the reservoir nearly filled to its 1
billion-gallon capacity, the divers were in about 46 feet of
water in the south end and about 28 feet of water on the
reservoir's north side.
"Most of the water we dive in is about 20 feet
or less, so this is a nice change for us," Hajeski
said.
At the north end of the reservoir, four divers
and their tenders were drilled in search patterns.
"The tender's job is to make sure that the diver does a
complete search," Hajeski said.
Although tenders stay on land, they play a
crucial role in each dive. Each diver is attached to a line
that is held by a tender. Using a series of line signals, the
tender directs the diver through practice patterns. Tenders
also keep track of divers' submersion time and their depths to
determine how much surface time they need before their next
dive.
All of the divers were impressed by the
reservoir's water clarity.
"Compared to what we usually dive in, this
water is pretty clear," said diver Kevin Batzel. "It's one
step above a swimming pool."
While this practice dive took place during the
summer, Hajeski said the dive team also conducts winter
practice drills, where mock victims who have "fallen" through
the ice are rescued from Brick's frozen lakes.
Although the dive team consists of
firefighters from Fire District No. 1, the unit serves the
entire township and is often called upon to provide assistance
in mutual aid situations.
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