07May2024

You are here: Home Library Newsletters VFBV Quarterly Supplement HomePage Featured
HomePage Featured

HomePage Featured (427)

Tuesday, 07 May 2024 11:55

May 2024 Newsletter

Written by

Everyone can help someone 
By Adam Barnett, VFBV Chief Executive Officer  

Later this month we will celebrate National Volunteer Week, which this year runs between the 20th–26th May 2024.

This year’s theme is ‘Something for Everyone’ which fits emergency service volunteering quite nicely considering the myriad of roles available within CFA. The key message for this year’s theme is about emphasising that there’s a place for everyone in the world of volunteering.

And while my go to Ronald Reagan quote is usually his tongue in cheek wise crack: “The nine most terrifying words in the English language are: I’m from the government and I’m here to help”, I will pivot to the more subject appropriate quote of “We can’t help everyone, but everyone can help someone.”

As you would expect, I spend a lot of my time talking about all things ‘volunteer’ to many people who may not volunteer themselves. This is often the case when dealing with government, the public service and even business groups. Sadly, it has also become more common when dealing with people within the emergency management sector itself, and even when meeting some new CFA staff.

While I don’t think being an emergency service volunteer should be a mandatory prerequisite, it is important for those that have influential roles or responsibilities within the sector to have a very good understanding of the volunteer ethos, its culture, and how volunteers should be encouraged, respected, supported and appreciated.

When people roll their eyes over what they deem to be a pretty inconsequential complaint by volunteers, I ask how many of their staff would show up for work if the agency sent out an email advising all staff they wouldn’t be paid for the next two weeks due to budget cuts.

Think of all the things an organisation would need to do to encourage its staff to still want to come to work for free, and then think about what’s required to run a fully volunteer organisation not for two weeks, but for 365 days of the year.

Of late, some think its is totally acceptable to mirror arrangements for employees and expect volunteers to be treated exactly the same. Follow this through its logical conclusion, and if roles were reversed and employees had to give up their salaries but still continue to come to work – imagine the chaos and low morale.

Why then is it so difficult to understand treating volunteers like employees will similarly result in chaos and low morale.

And while just being a volunteer does not automatically qualify you as understanding these things or being proficient in the principles of volunteer management, it certainly goes some way to provide valuable context and personal experiences that may enlighten further development down the track.

For those that do have a background in volunteering, more often than not it is often involvement in non-formal volunteering, which is kind of the- ‘all care and no responsibility’ flavour of volunteering. That’s not to say that this type of volunteering is bad, and I certainly mean no disrespect - it just simply does not create a reference point for people who have not had experience in formal volunteering for an emergency service that also includes a significant amount of obligation, the real risk of hurting yourself, as well as the removal of the flexibility to volunteer where and when they would like.

Anyone with a pager knows that emergency incidents rarely occur when convenient, nor can they be planned or blacked out in one’s diary when planning the week.

It’s not until you start truly appreciating the sacrifices that CFA and other emergency service volunteers make that you can start to really appreciate and respect it. Then there is the type of incidents emergency service volunteers frequently attend that can weigh on your soul. I often describe CFA volunteers as being with Victorians on what is often the worse day of their lives. Therefore, the mental toll is as real as the physical, and often requires significant cognitive energy to ensure these aftereffects are managed and treated.

All this is to say, that when people tell me they really respect volunteers, I often pause to consider the context with which the statement is made. The words are easy, but genuine respect can only be given if the role and duty that emergency service volunteers give is truly understood. Only then can one really value and respect something.

I reflect on the occasions when someone has been accused of disrespecting CFA volunteers, and this is often followed by an exclamation that no this isn’t so - they love volunteers and really admire what they do.

It then takes patience and deliberate effort to walk them through the logic of an ignorant though well-meaning sentiment, versus an informed knowledge of and appreciation of how volunteers differ from a paid workforce. Again, these sentiments are often not made maliciously, but the effect is none the less often the same.

In this vein, I wish to use this year’s Volunteer Week to continue to contribute towards a better understanding of the value that emergency service volunteers bring to Victoria.

We know from the work we did with Lateral Economics a few years back, that Victoria’s emergency service volunteers generate more than $2.5 billion dollars of value to Victoria each and every year. Of that, $1.4 billion is what we call emergency management value per year. This is defined as the contribution of volunteers to the direct outcomes achieved by emergency services before, during and after emergencies. This includes response, but also considers prevention/mitigation, preparedness, as well as recovery.

It should be pointed out this is not the replacement value and only represents a very conservative partial cost approach to quantify the value. That is value and saved money that gets diverted to schools, hospitals and other essential programs.

The more misunderstood component of the $2.5 billion is the $900 million that is generated every year that emergency service volunteers provide in community strengthening value. This refers to the broader and sometimes indirect ways in which emergency service volunteering helps to strengthen communities. In other words - visible, active, positive emergency volunteerism in a community can make a difference to society as a whole. Concepts fire service outcome measurements do not even pretend to contemplate.

Rather than paraphrase, I’ll reproduce the observations of Nicholas Gruen the CEO from Lateral Economics after studying Victoria’s emergency service volunteers. Nicholas is a widely published and respected Australian economist, visiting professor at King’s College London’s Policy Institute, and is the former chair of the Australian Centre for Social Innovation.

“Thinkers and philosophers have deliberated through the eons over the question of which is more important—the individual or society? The discipline of economics is built on ‘methodological individualism’ in which the wellbeing and functioning of groups is seen as no more than the sum of their individual constituents. Nevertheless economics’ ‘founding father’, Adam Smith, had a different view, building his economics around a view of humanity set out in his first book – The Theory of Moral Sentiments in which individuals became individuals as we know them through the process of being socialised into the values of their family and, beyond that, their community.”

“It is not necessary to decide the question definitively for our purposes. What we can say is that certain outcomes of the 3Vs [Volunteers, Volunteering & Volunteerism] are far more concrete than others. The value of saving a house from being engulfed in a bushfire is clear to all conceptually, and, at least in principle, it is easy to measure its economic value.”

“This is far less true of the value individuals get from volunteering and even less true of the value communities gain from individuals within them volunteering. In this regard those close to volunteering— volunteers themselves and many who help organise them—are anxious that the value creation that is easiest to measure not crowd out that which is no less real for being difficult to measure.”

So during this year’s Volunteer Week while I acknowledge the incredible work our members do each and every day in protecting their communities from fire and other emergencies, I would also like to especially thank you for the community building, social capital and cohesion you each contribute to, that makes up a large part of the public value generated by your efforts.

‘Public value’ is the philosophy of performance measurement used to evaluate the value produced normally but not exclusively by public bodies and that is ‘consumed’ collectively by the citizenry rather than individually by clients or customers.

When you drill down into the four main domains that are often used to measure public value, it is clear the value proposition that CFA generates for Victoria. Public value can be measured by the outcomes achieved; the extent to which the organisation and activities are trusted and perceived to be legitimate; the extent to which the services delivered are high quality and match the need; and finally the extent to which an organisation is achieving maximal benefits with minimal resources. When you compare the public value of some current government priorities using these measurements, the disparity is clear.

With that in mind, we will be closely monitoring the Victorian budget due early this month. CFA volunteers will have every right to judge the tangible level of respect that the Victorian Government really has for its emergency service volunteers by way of its investment and resourcing (or lack thereof) of these essential emergency services.

If CFA and volunteer emergency services are truly judged by their public value and not by other measures such as political convenience, or industrial relations alignment, then CFA volunteers and the millions of Victorians that rely on their services will have nothing to worry about.

And while I fear this may not be the case, please take this moment to celebrate the incredible work that you do and the lives that you change for the better - each and every day.

 


 

SOP Feedback

A reminder that we are seeking feedback on various Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) that are out for consultation.

Thirteen SOPs have been modified and ten are now available for review. These are SOP 3.01 Management of Junior Members; 5.05 Use of CFA Equipment; 7.01 Local Procedure Development; 7.05 Water Supplies for Firefighting; 7.07 Station Siren Use; 8.01 Incident Controller and CFA Agency Commander; 8.04 Transfer of Control; 9.13 Keeping Logs and Documents; 9.16 Media Management; and 9.18 Use of Personal Mobile Devices During Incidents.

Given the importance of SOPs in CFA’s operational doctrine, VFBV encourages all senior volunteers to make themselves familiar with the proposed changes and provide feedback ASAP.

Please visit the VFBV website to access drafts and change logs to help guide your feedback. A feedback survey is also available from the VFBV website for those who prefer to provide feedback that way.

 

 

National Volunteer Week
The week of 20-26 May is National Volunteer Week, a week that provides an opportunity to highlight the important role of volunteers in our communities and invites people not currently volunteering to give it a go.

The theme for National Volunteer Week is Something for Everyone. This recognises the diverse passions and talents everyone brings to the act of volunteering. It’s an invitation to explore the myriad of opportunities available, emphasising that there’s a place for everyone in the world of volunteering.

VFBV passes on our deep gratitude, respect and appreciation to all CFA volunteers for the work you do in your communities, 24/7. Victorians are safer because of your work and VFBV could not be more proud of you, your brigades and all those that support you in your work protecting lives and property.

We acknowledge all of Victoria’s emergency management volunteer workforce including volunteer first responders from VicSES, St John Ambulance, Ambulance Victoria, Life Saving Victoria, Coast Guard, Salvation Army, Red Cross and the Victorian Council of Churches Emergencies Ministry for their wonderful contribution.

 

VESEP

Applications are now open for the 2024 Volunteer Emergency Services Equipment Program (VESEP), with the closing date fast approaching.

VFBV has updated its Help Pack to assist brigades and groups with their applications. The Help Pack is available for download from the VFBV website.

VESEP provides grants of $2 for every $1 of Brigade or Group funding to assist brigades and groups in acquiring a wide range of additional equipment in recognition of the significant contribution emergency service volunteers provide in supporting Victorian communities.

In its 24th year, VESEP first started out as the Community Safety Emergency Support Program in 2000 and was designed in close consultation with VFBV, with the intent of being a grants program designed by volunteers with minimal administration required from volunteers.

VFBV wishes all CFA Brigades and Groups well with your applications.

 

VFBV Board positions

Vacancies on the VFBV Board will arise when the terms of four VFBV Board members expire on the 1st October 2024. Of the four members whose terms are expiring, two are eligible for re-appointment.

VFBV invites applications from any CFA volunteer who is motivated by the prospect of making a difference and believes they have the skills to contribute to the VFBV Board.

The role of a board member involves contributing to VFBV direction, policy determination and monitoring the performance and governance of the Association. This includes actively contributing to policy discussion, consulting with CFA volunteers and contributing to the identification and management of strategic issues.

VFBV is seeking applications from gender and culturally diverse candidates in addition to a diverse range of skills and experience including applications from diverse brigade types and classifications.

Members should familiarise themselves with the VFBV Board member role statement and key selection criteria available from the VFBV website or via the office at (03) 9886 1141.

Applications close on Monday 2nd September 2024.

 

CFA Memorial Service

On Sunday May 5th, the Annual CFA Memorial Service was held at the Victorian Emergency Services Memorial in Treasury Gardens in the Melbourne CBD to honour firefighters who have lost their lives in the line of duty.

This year’s service was particularly poignant as it acknowledged and recognised the loss of two of CFA’s long-serving members who died in the line of duty in the past year; Greg Godkin of Donald brigade in August 2023 and Garry Mallen of Portland brigade in January 2024.

If you were unable to attend the service, you can view a livestream of the service on CFA’s YouTube channel.

 

Volunteer unity
Thank you for members’ strong show of support!

Again in 2023/24, CFA Brigades and Groups showed it is more important than ever that volunteers have a strong, united, independent and credible voice with almost 95% of Brigades demonstrating strong support for VFBV’s important work representing and advocating for all CFA volunteers. Thank you to all that affiliated last year.

In the coming weeks, Brigade and Group secretaries will receive the 2024/25 renewal notices for your Brigade/Groups’ VFBV Affiliation and Welfare Fund subscriptions with a due date of 30th June, 2024.

The Board is determined that brigades/groups should benefit from the strong governance of the association and have reduced the affiliation rate from $84 to $75.

Those who pay VFBV affiliations before 30th June will be automatically entered into a draw to win one of four extremely worthwhile prizes valued at approximately $4,000. Prizes have, for the fourth year running, been donated by GAAM Emergency Products and Powdersafe and we sincerely appreciate their continued support.

We strongly encourage Brigades to also subscribe to the VFBV Welfare Fund. The Welfare Fund is a capital fund and an exclusive benefit to affiliated members with VFBV funding all the administration and operating costs ensuring 100% of funds received go directly to CFA volunteers experiencing personal hardship. The VFBV Welfare Fund provides small grants up to $5,000 to assist volunteer members and long service ex members and has distributed more than $2.5 million dollars to volunteers in need since its inception.

 

Fire Wise – May 2024 online only edition

The May 2024 edition of Fire Wise has been published online only, this edition and past editions are available from the Fire Wise website.

You can support Fire Wise and the role it plays as an independent voice in keeping volunteers informed by becoming a subscriber. To become a subscriber visit the Fire Wise website or contact the Managing Editor of Fire Wise, Gordon Rippon-King either by phone 0402 051 412 or email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.    

 

ESF Residential Wellbeing Program Pilot

In April 2024 the Emergency Services Foundation (ESF) started a pilot Residential Wellbeing Program.

The pilot will involve six groups of ten people in residence for four days to work with two mental health counsellors familiar with the emergency services environment. The six pilot programs will take place between April and October this year and are open to members from ESF member agencies who met certain criteria.

For more information about the Residential Wellbeing Program and to register please visit the ESF website.

 

Recent articles on the VFBV website
Open for Consultation Dashboard

VFBV Board Vacancies – Invitation to Apply

Feedback Requested – Standard Operating Procedures (Various)

2024 VESEP Applications Now Open and VFBV Help Pack

CFA Annual Memorial Service 2024

Presumptive Legislation Update

 

Enjoy the VFBV monthly newsletter?
If you enjoy reading the VFBV newsletter each month, why not share it with your fellow volunteers?

Either share this page with others who may enjoy the articles or encourage other volunteers to sign up to receive their own copy via email each month here.

 

Want to read the VFBV 2-minute briefings from the CFA/VFBV Joint Committees?
The latest edition along with previous editions can be downloaded from the VFBV website here.

Monday, 29 April 2024 14:18

2024 VESEP Applications Now Open and VFBV Help Pack

Written by

Applications should be submitted to your District ACFO by Friday 14th June, 2024.

Applications are now open for the 2024 Volunteer Emergency Services Equipment Program (VESEP), with the closing date fast approaching. VFBV has updated its VESEP Help Pack to assist brigades and groups with their VESEP applications.

VESEP provides grants of $2 for every $1 of Brigade or Group funding to assist brigades and groups in acquiring a wide range of additional equipment in recognition of the significant contribution emergency service volunteers provide in supporting Victorian communities.

Now in its 24th year, VESEP first started out as the Community Safety Emergency Support Program in 2000 and was designed in close consultation with VFBV and volunteers, with the intent being a grants program designed by volunteers with minimal administration required from volunteers.

Since 2000, the program has funded over 2,300 projects totalling more than $170 million dollars, as an investment in maintaining and building volunteer capability by supporting volunteers through grants in five categories:

- Volunteer amenities under $5,000
- Minor works under $150,000^
- Operational Equipment
- Specialist Appliances and Field Command Vehicles
- Tankers*

^all minor works applications must be registered with the VESEP Land & Buildings Project Manager via email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. by 31st May, 2024. Applications not pre-registered for review will not be considered by the Steering Committee. 

*as with previous years, CFA have advised that additions to the fleet will be afforded a low priority with only exceptional circumstances being considered by the Chief Officer. An Addition to the Fire Fighting Fleet form will be required to be completed and approved by the District ACFO and Regional DCO.

VFBV Help Pack

VFBV's VESEP Application Help Pack is again available in 2024 to assist Brigades and Groups in completing their application, with the pack divided into easily downloadable sections at the bottom of this page.

VFBV VESEP Help Pack Contains general information about VESEP and some handy hints on how to complete your application
Attachment 1

Application forms for Special Access Grant

The Special Access Grant can reduce or in some cases eliminate all together the Brigade/Group contribution

Attachment 2

CFA VESEP Guidelines

The Special Access Grant can reduce or in some cases eliminate all together the Brigade/Group contribution

Attachment 3

CFA Application Forms

Provides Brigades and Groups with application forms for Part A: Vehicles and Operational Equipment, Part B: Volunteer Amenities and Minor Works and Addition to the Fire Fighting Appliance Fleet Operational Justification.

Appendix

CFA Information Sheets 

Collates all information sheets produced by CFA to assist with Brigade and Group applications and ideas.

 

Key Dates

Program Dates Process
19th April 2024 Program opened
31st May 2024

Registrations close for Minor Works Applications. Email registration to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. 

14th June 2024

Applications Close. All applications to be forwarded to District ACFO

14th June - 24th June 2024 DPC Meetings to review and endorse applications. 
12th August 2024 CFA Steering Committee meeting to review/endorse projects
October 2024 Anticipated Ministers announcement of successful projects

 

Additional Support 

If you need any assistance with you Application please contact your local VFBV State Councillor, VFBV Support Officer of the VFBV Office. You can also email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.    

If you would like a printed copy of the VFBV 2024 VESEP Application Help Pack please call the VFBV office on 03 9886 1141 and we will post one out.

Information is also available from CFA Members Online https://www.members.cfa.vic.gov.au/programs/vesep  

VFBV wishes all CFA Brigades and Groups well with your applications and thank you for your untiring service to Victoria!

 

Thursday, 04 April 2024 16:04

April 2024 Newsletter

Written by

Chicken or egg 
By Adam Barnett, VFBV Chief Executive Officer 

Which came first – the chicken or the egg? Before you get too uptight, no – I’m not about to prattle on about this causality dilemma considered by many ancient philosophers exploring things like infinite regress and origin paradox’s. Religion has had a crack with origin stories, and scientists have their evolutionary biology explanations. From a science perspective, tempted as I may be, I won’t even publish a spoiler, but I will say that perhaps the answer isn’t as clear cut as you may think. For the inquisitive among you, I have short linked an Australian source – the Australian Academy of Science that provide their answer – (https://tinyurl.com/vfbv-chicken)

But I digress. My main point is around the difficulty posed by situations where it is challenging to determine between alleged causes and effects. One of the most common discussion points that I frequently hear among brigades is the age-old recruitment and retention riddle. Again, people often approach this as a binary decision between does CFA have a recruitment or a retention problem? One or the other.

If we look at these separately, lets start with recruitment. While “volunteering” is generally thought to be in decline in Australia, these often-simplistic measurements often hide what’s really going on in the detail. For example, recent longitudinal studies often don’t separate out the COVID period and lockdowns that made many volunteering opportunities impossible and wiped out most of the “formal” volunteering sector during these periods.

These prophecies also ignore the fact that our form of volunteering – emergency service volunteering – accounts for just a tiny little fraction of total volunteers – so the potential pool of volunteers is still massive providing we look after them and meet their volunteering “needs”.

The COVID period of disruption proved what many of us have said for a very long time. Protect emergency service volunteering – as once you lose something as valuable as our volunteering culture – it is very hard to get it back. And while arguably CFA volunteers were able to participate in some activities during the COVID years – many discovered just how pervasive their volunteering had become over other facets of their lives. It’s not unusual for this to be a bit of a light bulb moment for some who now desire a more balanced work/life balance.

But there is also some positive in this.

This reckoning has occurred across the entire population, not just among CFA and other emergency service volunteers - and it has changed the way people want to volunteer, and what they want to get out of their volunteer experience.

The most common motivation popping out of research is many people are looking for opportunities to make a difference. They want to help people; they want to make a difference; and they want to do things that have social impact. And with more limited time on their hands with dual income families and cost of living pressures etc. people want their volunteering time to be not only impactful but efficient.

On the one hand – CFA provides a wonderful opportunity for people who want to make a difference. We literally change lives each and every day. By our very being – we literally respond to peoples’ calls for help and are often with them on the worst days of their lives. There are few vocations that are not as impactful nor rewarding as CFA.

But how do we fair on the “efficient” part of that equation. Being a CFA volunteer is not exactly time efficient. Factor in the lengthy application process, onboarding, minimum training, mandatory skills maintenance and a lot of hurry up and wait, and we don’t tick all that many boxes.

The good news for us is most people understand that if they want to be involved in a role as hazardous and impactful as that of a CFA volunteer, there is a certain amount of “overhead” that comes with that. CFA remains a very attractive organisation of choice for the first-time volunteer. This is evidenced by the high number of expressions of interest that flow in each and every year. After large summer campaigns, literally thousands of EOI’s flow in from well intentioned people wanting to pitch in and give us a hand. These aren’t evenly distributed, and the more remote brigades frequently miss out.

I only half-jokingly opined to a CFA executive recently that given all the hoops we place in front of an aspiring CFA volunteer just to get into the organisation – we really should award them a medal on day one just to acknowledge their persistence and tenacity in actually getting through it all.

This is evidenced by the massive disparity between those that express an interest and those that actually join. While the numbers fluctuate, I estimate on average only about one-fifth to one-quarter of expressions of interest actually translate to a completed application. I have cautioned many a Minister about jumping up in Parliament to extoll the thousands of people signing up to join CFA during a campaign fire. Usually timed to dodge criticism around falling vol numbers, this mirage of applicants quickly disappears when tracking the actual number of applications completing their enrolment process.

And can anyone really blame them? While the cynic in me thinks that the application process is a very good test for aspiring applicants, as really – if they are not willing to jump through some hoops to get into the organisation at the start of their career – God help them when they realise how many more hoops will remain for the rest of their involvement just to stay. Maybe its better they learn the lesson up front and set their expectations accordingly?

But when you think about it – that’s a pretty lousy excuse for a system and model that seems to delight in testing the human limits for patience and tolerance. A recent review of a nine-page medical form gives me the impression that the only Victorian likely to be worthy of membership these days is off training for the Olympics. We’ve got to do better.

Which gets us to the retention side of the equation. I saw this dilemma on full display when I observed a recent news article in a regional newspaper appealing to members of the community to get involved. The stories pointed out the excessive red tape and bureaucracy, the journalist pointed out that due to inadequate government funding the fire truck was now 30 years old and CFA can’t afford a new fire shed for them, even though the current one has no toilet. Quite correctly they pointed out how difficult it was to attract new members, especially more diverse members when people have to use the paddock or public toilet block up the hill just to go to the bathroom. The article then invited people to apply.

It’s not the brigade’s fault they are in this position. Here we have a crucial emergency service starved of funding that leaves these civic minded community champions out in a tin shed with aging equipment, and dare I say – an aging workforce. Is this not the embodiment of the ultimate disrespect that government has for its volunteer emergency services? Who thinks this would be attractive to today’s youth?

This is the impossible position the government is putting brigades and CFA more generally into. How do we possibly attract new members when budgets are being slashed and burned? It’s not exactly a great advert when we can’t afford new trucks, or new stations and we are forced to continually ration out protective equipment and clothing to try and make it go around. While government MPs sweat about 15 year old FRV trucks yet ignore 34 year old trucks rusting away in CFA sheds, and where a paid firefighter gets an automatic allocation of multiple sets of PPC, uniforms, gloves and individual portable radios for every seat in the truck, volunteers are forced to make do with much less each and every time. Despite being ten orders of magnitude larger than the paid service, CFA receives just one third of its funding and all the cuts that go along with that, rationing every glove, boot, chainsaw and hose.

For example, the new radios recently announced are fantastic – but we can’t even afford to pop a portable radio in the truck for every seat in the cabin like our sister service does. So again, CFA is forced to make do and ration them out under fancy sounding terms like “risk assessment” and “operational justification” that if we’re lucky will allocate three portables for every five seater truck, which given the incident controller often requires two – paints the picture of what volunteers have to put up with on the fireground.

And while CFA often gets blamed for these type of policy positions – what else can it do with such systemic under funding? And for those in any doubt, I will continue dropping these little budget facts in every newsletter for every week that cuts continue to be made to CFA, in the hope you will continue to raise it with your local member of parliament and keep raising it until CFA’s budget is restored.

So when people ask me if we have a recruitment problem or a retention one, I go back to my analogy of the chicken or the egg. While it may sound trivial – there is a complex story in each. I think the recruitment problems are easier to solve. This explains why recruitment is often the first thing under siege governments usually latch onto. They are quick and results are fast. But just adding more meat to the sausage machine is not the answer if the sausage machine is broken. We have to fix the sausage machine first.

At time of writing, thousands of CFA volunteers are preparing to fundraise for the Royal Children’s Hospital. Our members will selflessly rattle tins, give up a long weekend and stand on intersections to raise millions of dollars for some of Victoria’s most vulnerable children. They will then return to raising funds for their own community’s fire station, trucks and gear. They will do so while protecting their communities and responding to all manner of emergencies that will arise over the Easter long weekend, and beyond - just like every other day of the year. They will do so proudly, and humbly.

This is the epitome of a CFA volunteer. Our reason for being. Just wanting to help others. It shouldn’t have to be this hard. Victorians rely on us, and our fight for fairer funding isn’t for us – it’s for them.


 

State champions crowned
Over two weekends in March almost 1,000 competitors contested the 2024 State Urban and Rural Championships in Mooroopna.

Melton A had two successful weekends, winning the Grand Aggregates at both the Urban Junior and Senior Championships. While the Rural Senior Championship saw Eldorado win both the Division 1 and Division 3 Aggregate’s while Truganina A took out the Division 2 aggregate. For the Rural Junior Championship, Ascot & District won both the 11-13 years and Grand Aggregates while Napoleons-Enfield A took the honours in the 11-15 years aggregate.

The Torchlight Procession was this year held in Mooroopna with the new LED powered torches replacing the traditional kerosene torches with Melton continuing their success taking out first place with 98%. Full results from all four State Championships can be found on the VFBV website or on pages 10 to 12 of this months edition of Fire Wise and on the VFBV website.

Of course, the State Championships wouldn’t be possible without the 200 judges and officials who volunteer their time over the two weekends to ensure that the championships are run at a high standard for all competitors involved. VFBV also passes on our appreciation to the competitors, coaches, supporters and families of the competitors who keep the competitions going, as well as all CFA staff who contributed to the success of the championships.

A special thank you also to the Mooroopna State Championships committee for their hard work in preparing the competition venue for the Championships alongside the Greater Shepparton City Council who continue to support the Championships.

VFBV’s competition committees will be meeting in the coming months to review this year’s Championships. If any brigades, competitors or spectators have any feedback they would like considered by either committee please email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. 

 

 

Affiliation
Thank you for members’ strong show of support!

Again in 2023/24, CFA Brigades and Groups showed it is more important than ever that volunteers have a strong, united, independent and credible voice with 95% of Brigades demonstrating strong support for VFBV’s important work representing and advocating for all CFA volunteers. Thank you to all brigades and groups who affiliated last year.

In the coming weeks, Brigade and Group secretaries will receive the 2024/25 renewal notices for your Brigade/Groups’ VFBV Affiliation and Welfare Fund subscriptions with a due date of 30th June, 2024.

The Board is determined that brigades/groups should benefit from the strong governance of the association and have found efficiencies to allow the reduction of the affiliation rate from $84 to $75. The price set when the rural and urban associations joined together in 2013/14.

To thank Brigades and Groups for their support, those who pay VFBV affiliations before 30th June will be automatically entered into a draw to win one of four extremely worthwhile prizes valued at approximately $4,000. Prizes have, for the fourth year running, been donated by GAAM Emergency Products and Powdersafe and we sincerely thank them for their continued support. A flyer detailing prizes on offer will be included with your renewal notices.

As well as affiliating, we strongly encourage Brigades to subscribe to the VFBV Welfare Fund. The Welfare Fund is a capital fund and an exclusive benefit to affiliated members with VFBV funding all the administration and operating costs ensuring 100% of funds received go directly to CFA volunteers experiencing personal hardship.

The VFBV Welfare Fund provides small grants up to $5,000 to assist volunteer members and long service ex-members. The Welfare Fund has distributed more than $2.5 million dollars since its inception.

 

SOP Feedback

A reminder that we are seeking feedback on various Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) that are out for consultation. The Driving SOPs will close for feedback shortly. An additional 13 SOPs have been modified and are now available for review.

These are SOP 3.01 Management of Junior Members; 5.05 Use of CFA Equipment; 7.01 Local Procedure Development; 7.05 Water Supplies for Firefighting; 7.07 Station Siren Use; 8.01 Incident Controller and CFA Agency Commander; 8.04 Transfer of Control; 9.13 Keeping Logs and Documents; 9.16 Media Management; and 9.18 Use of Personal Mobile Devices During Incidents.

Given the importance of SOPs in CFA’s operational doctrine, VFBV encourages all senior volunteers to make themselves familiar with the proposed changes and provide feedback ASAP.

Please visit the VFBV website to access drafts and change logs to help guide your feedback.

 

VFBV Board Vacancies 

Vacancies on the VFBV Board will arise when the terms of four VFBV Board members expire on 1 October 2024. Of the four members whose terms are expiring, two are eligible for re-appointment.

VFBV invites applications from any CFA volunteer who is motivated by the prospect of making a difference and believes they have the skills to contribute to VFBV Board.

The role of a board member involves contributing to VFBV direction, policy determination and monitoring the performance and governance of the Association. This includes actively contributing to policy discussion, consulting with CFA volunteers and contributing to the identification and management of strategic issues.

VFBV is seeking applications from gender and culturally diverse candidates in addition to a diverse range of skills and experience including applications from diverse brigade types and classifications.

Members should familiarise themselves with the VFBV Board member role statement and key selection criteria available from the VFBV website or via the office at (03) 9886 1141.

Applications close on Monday 2 September 2024.

 

 

CFA Annual Firefighter Memorial Service

This year’s Annual Firefighter Memorial Service will be held on Sunday 5th May to honour firefighters who have lost their lives in the line of duty.

The service will be held at the Victorian Emergency Services Memorial in Treasury Gardens, East Melbourne and will begin at 2pm.

Family members and friends, CFA and VFBV executives as well as government representatives will come together to lay wreaths, light candles, remember lives and honour the personal sacrifices and commitment firefighters make each and every day.

Junior CFA members will also attend the memorial service and will be actively involved throughout the ceremony by assisting wreath layers and patrons.

The Annual Memorial service is a free event, to attend please RSVP to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or phone 0428 406 012 by Monday 22nd April.

 

Mental Health Matters Workshops
The Emergency Services Foundation (ESF) is again offering mental health matters workshops to emergency service volunteers across Victoria.

This year ESF will travel to regional areas to deliver the 2.5 hour workshop at a time that suits the brigade and volunteers.  The Mental Health Matters workshop is a free, no pressure, conversational workshop with a focus on involving partners and family members in the workshop.

Topics covered in the workshop include: what is mental fitness; identifying the signs and symptoms; who is in your support crew and where to get help; stigma around mental health; and how to effectively ask R U OK?

For more information or to register your interest in holding a workshop, visit the ESF website.

 

VEC – Local Council Elections

The Victorian Electoral Commission (VEC) is seeking local people to help run the 2024 local council elections in specific regional areas.

Applications are open for join the VEC as a senior election official who take on specialised election management roles during election events.

For more information or to see a list of areas where the VEC is seeking senior election officials please visit the VFBV website.

Applications close on Sunday 7th April 2024.

 

Fire Wise – April 2024 online only edition

The April 2024 edition of Fire Wise has been published online only, this edition and past editions are available from the Fire Wise website.

You can support Fire Wise and the role it plays as an independent voice in keeping volunteers informed by becoming a subscriber. To become a subscriber visit the Fire Wise website or contact the Managing Editor of Fire Wise, Gordon Rippon-King either by phone 0402 051 412 or email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.   

 

Recent articles on the VFBV website
Open for consultation dashboard

Victorian Electoral Commission

2024 Bushfire and Storm Recovery Resources

Feedback Requested – Standard Operating Procedures (Various)

Feedback Requested – Standard Operating Procedures (Driving)

VFBV Board Vacancies - Invitation to Apply

2024 State Urban Senior Championship Results

2024 State Rural Junior Championship Results

2024 State Rural Senior Championship Results

2024 State Urban Junior Championship Results

International Women’s Day 2024

Presumptive Legislation Update

 

Enjoy the VFBV monthly newsletter?
If you enjoy reading the VFBV newsletter each month, why not share it with your fellow volunteers?

Either share this page with others who may enjoy the articles or encourage other volunteers to sign up to receive their own copy via email each month here.

 

Want to read the VFBV 2-minute briefings from the CFA/VFBV Joint Committees?
The latest edition along with previous editions can be downloaded from the VFBV website here.

Thursday, 28 March 2024 14:44

Victorian Electoral Commission

Written by

The VEC is seeking local people to help run the 2024 local council elections. This is a message from the VEC.

The Victorian Electoral Commission (VEC) is seeking organised hands-on leaders in specific regional areas for key roles at the October 2024 local council elections.

Applications are now open to join our pool of senior election officials (SEOs), who take on specialised election management roles during election events. As an SEO you will play a major role in the delivery of elections across Victoria. Our pool of staff will be appointed as election managers and assistant election managers for each local council area at the October 2024 local council elections. Each local council area will have one election manager and up to 3 assistant election managers appointed. If appointed, you will work in election offices, overseeing many election activities which will vary depending on the type of election.

To help us with the challenge of recruiting for several vacancies in rural areas, we are reaching out to you as part of the VFBV network to help share this opportunity.

VFBV members have what it takes to be senior election officials: you are civic-minded, hands-on, calm under pressure and have valuable local knowledge!

Our SEOs come from all walks of life: Victorians who are retired or transitioning into retirement; professionals, freelancers or small business owners with the flexibility to take extended leave; parents returning to work and more.
Prior electoral work experience is not essential and full training is provided.

If you live in or near any of the following areas, they want to hear from you!

Western Victoria

Hindmarsh Shire Council, Horsham Rural City Council, Northern Grampians Shire Council, Pyrenees Shire Council, West Wimmera Shire Council and Yarriambiack Shire Council

North-western Victoria

Gannawarra Shire Council, Greater Bendigo City Council, Loddon Shire Council, and Swan Hill Rural City Council

North-eastern Victoria

Benalla Rural City Council, Indigo Shire Council, Mansfield Shire Council, Strathbogie Shire Council, Towong Shire Council, and Wodonga City Council

South-western Victorian
Colac Otway Shire Council, Corangamite Shire Council, and Southern Grampians Shire Council 

Gippsland
Latrobe City Council.

 

Read more about SEOs by clicking here, or apply now by clicking here or visiting: https://careers.vic.gov.au/job/senior-election-officials-792285?returnurl=https%3A//careers.vic.gov.au/jobs/premier-and-cabinet/victorian-electoral-commission .

Applications close on Sunday 7 April 2024.

Please note that, in accordance with Section 17A of the Electoral Act 2002, the VEC may ask applicants for disclosure of specific political activities that could compromise the perceived independence of the organisation.

Sunday, 24 March 2024 17:03

2024 State Urban Senior Championship Results

Written by

Final results for the 2024 State Urban Senior Championships held in Mooroopna on Saturday 23 and Sunday 24 March 2024 are now available.

The full results are available for download at the bottom of this page.

Photo's of presentations are being progressively uploaded to VFBV's dedicated Championships Facebook Page. Team times for each event are available for download at the bottom of this page. 

Grand Aggregate Winner - Melton A

B Section Aggregate Winner - Cohuna 

Wet Aggregate Winner - Melton A 

Female Aggregate Winner - Tatura 

Final Aggregate Board 

SATURDAY, 23rd MARCH

Event 1 – Ladder Race, One Competitor 

1st

MARYVALE (1) (Matt Royal)

6.92

seconds

2nd

OSBORNE PARK A (2) (Jordan Winsall)

7.02

seconds

3rd

EAGLEHAWK (1) (Steven Matthews)

7.03

seconds

4th

PATTERSON RIVER (2) (Mark Mullins)

7.34

seconds

5th

OSBORNE PARK B (1) (Jaxon Winsall)

7.35

seconds

 

Event 2 – B Section Hose & Ladder, Five Competitors

1st

HOPPERS CROSSING

23.57

seconds

2nd

KYNETON

25.08

seconds

3rd

COHUNA

25.40

seconds

4th

WARRACKNABEAL

25.43

seconds

5th

ECHUCA A

26.13

seconds

 

Event 3 – A Section Y Coupling, Four Competitors 

1st

OSBORNE PARK A

7.94

seconds

2nd

DANDENONG

8.09

seconds

3rd

WENDOUREE

8.21

seconds

4th

OSBORNE PARK B

8.23

seconds

5th

MORWELL

8.48

seconds

 

Event 4 – A Section Hose and Ladder, Eight Competitors

1st

OSBORNE PARK A

22.76

seconds

2nd

MARYVALE

22.90

seconds

3rd

OSBORNE PARK B

24.61

seconds

4th

MORWELL

24.72

seconds

5th

WENDOUREE

25.31

seconds

 

Event 5 – B Section Y Coupling, Four Competitors 

1st

ECHUCA A

7.90

seconds

2nd

ECHUCA B

8.96

seconds

3rd

COHUNA

9.05

seconds

4th

CRESWICK

9.20

seconds

5th

KYNETON

9.24

seconds

 

Event 6 – Female Y Coupling, Two Competitors

1st

TATURA – NEW RECORD (Hayley Rennie, Charlotte Freemantle)

12.05

seconds

2nd

MELTON A (Gabby Keats, Lorelei Geysing)

12.27

seconds

3rd

MILDURA (Lucy Garraway, Katrina Garraway)

13.60

seconds

4th

ECHUCA B (Hannah Norman, Charlee Amos)

14.02

seconds

5th

SWAN HILL B (Jasmin Stayner, Sarah Scott)

14.14

seconds

 

Event 7 – A Section Y Coupling Ladder Eights

1st

OSBORNE PARK A

32.99

seconds

2nd

DANDENONG

37.07

seconds

3rd

OSBORNE PARK B

39.05

seconds

4th

PATTERSON RIVER

39.86

seconds

5th

SALE

40.24

seconds

 

Event 8 – B Section Hose, Hydrant and Pumper

1st

WARRNAMBOOL

15.03

seconds

2nd

ECHUCA A

15.45

seconds

3rd

HALLAM

15.85

seconds

4th

COHUNA

16.03

seconds

5th

HOPPERS CROSSING

16.76

seconds

 

Event 9 – B Section Wet Hose Striking One Disc Twice with Removable Back Cap

1st

WARRACKNABEAL – NEW RECORD

16.49

seconds

2nd

ECHUCA A

18.10

seconds

3rd

HOPPERS CROSSING

19.08

seconds

4th

KYNETON

19.77

seconds

5th

KNOX GROUP

20.12

seconds

 

Event 10 – A Section Hose, Hydrant and Pumper 

1st

MELTON A

12.62

seconds

2nd

NARRE WARREN

12.89

seconds

3rd

OSBORNE PARK A

13.66

seconds

4th

PATTERSON RIVER

14.00

seconds

5th

WERRIBEE

14.67

seconds

 

Event 11 – A Section Hose & Reel Sixes

1st

MELTON A

28.66

seconds

2nd

MARYVALE

30.17

seconds

3rd

WENDOUREE

30.22

seconds

4th

DANDENONG

32.35

seconds

5th

SALE

33.55

seconds

 

Event 12 - B Section Marshall, One Competitor 

1st

MAFFRA (1) (Brent McKenzie)

27.90

seconds

2nd

SWAN HILL A (2) (Adam Saunders)

27.99

seconds

3rd

HORSHAM (2) (Jonathon Hornsby)

28.27

seconds

4th

ECHUCA A (1) (Jordan Simpson)

28.29

seconds

5th

ECHUCA A (2) (Martyn Currey)

29.59

seconds

 

Chief Officer’s Challenge Event

1st

MELTON A (Bayllie Arandt, Poppy Arandt, Leah Steele, Jayson Cassar)

20.07

seconds

2nd

CHIEF’S CHARGERS (Jason Heffernan, Rohan Luke, Brett Boatman, Adrian Gutsche)

29.41

seconds

 

Event 13 – B Section Wet Hose Striking One Disc Twice 

1st

COHUNA

16.76

seconds

2nd

KNOX GROUP

16.84

seconds

3rd

WARRNAMBOOL

17.15

seconds

4th

KYNETON

17.58

seconds

5th

WARRACKNABEAL

17.87

seconds

 

Event 14 - A Section Marshall, One Competitor 

1st

MARYVALE (2) (Jordan Royal)

24.88

seconds

2nd

DANDENONG (1) (Millar Anderson)

25.39

seconds

3rd

MELTON A (1) (Bailey Rhodes)

25.57

seconds

4th

PATTERSON RIVER (2) (Mark Mullins)

26.04

seconds

5th

MARYVALE (1) (Matt Royal)

26.07

seconds

 

Event 15 – Female Marshall, One Competitor

1st

HOPPERS CROSSING (Amanda Lawrence)

31.38

seconds

2nd

KERANG (Kendall Ash)

32.15

seconds

3rd

NARRE WARREN (Samantha McKean)

32.54

seconds

4th

MAFFRA (Charlie Giles)

34.12

seconds

5th

HORSHAM/WARRACKNABEAL (Claire Longstaff)

34.54

seconds

 

Event 16 - B Section Pumper & Ladder

1st

COHUNA

16.42

seconds

2nd

HOPPERS CROSSING

17.08

seconds

3rd

ECHUCA A

17.62

seconds

4th

WARRNAMBOOL

18.23

seconds

5th

MAFFRA

19.82

seconds

 

Event 17 - A Section Hydrant & Tanker

1st

MELTON A – NEW RECORD

12.41

seconds

2nd

WENDOUREE

12.42

seconds

3rd

KANGAROO FLAT

13.37

seconds

4th

DANDENONG

14.43

seconds

5th

OSBORNE PARK B

14.64

seconds

 

SUNDAY, 24th MARCH

Event 18 – Hydrant Race, One Competitor

1st

OSBORNE PARK A (1) (Aiden Couzens)

11.91

seconds

2nd

SWAN HILL A (2) (Adam Saunders)

12.32

seconds

3rd

DANDENONG (1) (Millar Anderson)

12.78

seconds

4th

MARYVALE (1) (Matt Royal)

12.80

seconds

5th

PATTERSON RIVER (2) (

12.82

seconds

 

Event 19 – Female Hydrant Race, One Competitor  

1st

NARRE WARREN (Samantha McKean)

14.60

seconds

2nd

HORSHAM/WARRACKNABEAL (Isabella Orszulak)

15.23

seconds

3rd

SALE (Dana King)

15.42

seconds

4th

EUROA (Teagan Kubeil)

15.61

seconds

5th

HALLAM (Melanie Naujok)

16.21

seconds

 

Event 20 – A Section Pumper & Ladder 

1st

MELTON A

14.98

seconds

2nd

WENDOUREE

16.41

seconds

3rd

DANDENONG

16.73

seconds

4th

MARYVALE

16.88

seconds

5th

OSBORNE PARK A

17.48

seconds

 

Event 21 – B Section Hydrant & Tanker

1st

SWAN HILL A – NEW RECORD

12.88

seconds

2nd

COHUNA

13.05

seconds

3rd

MELTON B

16.75

seconds

4th

ECHUCA B

16.94

seconds

5th

ECHUCA A

19.06

seconds

 

Event 22 – Female Marshall, Two Competitors

1st

TATURA (Hayley Rennie, Charlotte Freemantle)

18.89

seconds

2nd

SWAN HILL A (Porsha Bruton, Sienna Kruger)

19.31

seconds

3rd

KNOX GROUP (Isabella Gluskie, Jessica Walker)

20.42

seconds

4th

ECHUCA B (Kirra Stickleton, Hannah Norman)

20.51

seconds

5th

MILDURA (Lucy Garraway, Katrina Garraway)

21.02

seconds

 

Event 23 – B Section Hose & Reel Sixes 

1st

HOPPERS CROSSING

33.03

seconds

2nd

KYNETON

33.21

seconds

3rd

WARRACKNABEAL

33.45

seconds

4th

HORSHAM

37.88

seconds

5th

WARRNAMBOOL

39.06

seconds

 

Event 24 – A Section Marshall, Two Competitors 

1st

WENDOUREE (1) (Craig Broidy, Damon Sutton)

15.19

seconds

2nd

OSBORNE PARK A (2) (James Mullins, Aiden Couzens)

15.73

seconds

3rd

MELTON A (2) (Bailey Rhodes, Devante Johnes) 

15.99

seconds

4th

WERRIBEE (1) (Aiden Trifilio, Michael Trifilo)

16.35

seconds

5th

MELTON A (1) (Jack Geysing, Ben Geysing)

16.46

seconds

 

Event 25 – A Section Hose and Reel Eights 

1st

OSBORNE PARK A

28.09

seconds

2nd

MELTON A

29.84

seconds

3rd

OSBORNE PARK B

30.41

seconds

4th

SALE

30.58

seconds

5th

NARRE WARREN

32.93

seconds

 

Event 26 – B Section Marshall, Two Competitors 

1st

ECHUCA A (1) (Jordan Simpson, Martyn Currrey)

15.96

seconds

2nd

MAFFRA (1) (Brent McKenzie, Cameron Hood)

17.06

seconds

3rd

HOPPERS CROSSING (2) (Christopher Trawn, Gary Trawn)

17.46

seconds

4th

KNOX GROUP (1) (William Johnson, Benjamin Landells)

17.51

seconds

5th

COHUNA (1) (Adrian Stone, Shannon Treacy)

17.81

seconds

 

Event 27 – Champion Fours 

1st

MELTON A

17.30

seconds

2nd

OSBORNE PARK A

17.59

seconds

3rd

PATTERSON RIVER

17.77

seconds

4th

ECHUCA A

19.04

seconds

5th

KANGAROO FLAT

19.80

seconds

 

Vic./W.A. Challenge Event

Victorian team time – 29.08 seconds

 

East vs West Challenge Events

Hose & Reel Eights – Open

1st

West

30.59

seconds

2nd

East

31.03

seconds

 

Wet Hose Striking One Disc Twice – Female

1st

West

17.89

seconds

2nd

East

18.56

seconds

 

Torchlight Procession

1st

MELTON

98.00%

 

2nd

DIAMOND CREEK

97.00%

 

=3rd

EUROA, MARYVALE, PATTERSON RIVER, WERRIBEE

95.00%

 


FINAL AGGREGATE RESULTS

Dry Aggregate

1st

OSBORNE PARK A

23

Points

2nd

MARYVALE

19

Points

=3rd

DANDENONG & ECHUCA A

11

Points

 

Wet Aggregate

1st

MELTON A

90

Points

2nd

OSBORNE PARK A

66

Points

3rd  

COHUNA

52

Points

 

Female Aggregate

1st

TATURA

16

Points

2nd

NARRE WARREN

11

Points

3rd

HOPPERS CROSSING

8

Points

 

SECTION AGGREGATES:

‘A’ SECTION

1st

MELTON A

97

Points

2nd

OSBORNE PARK A

92

Points

3rd

MARYVALE

43

Points

 

‘A’ SECTION WET AGGREGATE

1st

MELTON A

90

Points

2nd

OSBORNE PARK A

66

Points

3rd 

WENDOUREE

28

Points

 

 ‘B’ SECTION

1st

COHUNA

56

Points

=2nd

ECHUCA A & HOPPERS CROSSING

53

Points

 

‘B’ SECTION WET AGGREGATE

1st

COHUNA

52

Points

2nd

HOPPERS CROSSING

50

Points

3rd

ECHUCA A

34

Points

 

APPLIANCE AGGREGATES

‘A’ SECTION

1st

MELTON A

48

Points

2nd

WENDOUREE

20

Points

=3rd

DANDENONG & NARRE WARREN

10

Points

 

‘B’ SECTION

1st

COHUNA

30

Points

2nd

WARRNAMBOOL

20

Points

3rd

ECHUCA A

18

Points

 

2024 CHAMPION BRIGADE:    

The team members of MELTON A are:

  1. James Arandt
  2. Jake Carrol
  3. Ben Geysing
  4. Jack Geysing
  5. Lorelei Geysing
  6. Ashley Goudie
  7. Denzel Johns
  8. Devante Johns
  9. Gabby Keats
  10. Brodie Leitch
  11. Bailey Rhodes
  12. Cooper Rhodes
  13. Ryan Stone
  14. Jacob Steel
  15. Coach & Competitor Anthony Rhodes

 

Results for the 2024 Champion Competitor:

1st

Bailey Rhodes – Melton A

30

Points

=2nd

Craig Briody and Damon Sutton – Wendouree

18

Points

 

 

Sunday, 24 March 2024 16:53

2024 State Rural Junior Championship Results

Written by

Final results for the 2024 State Rural Junior Championship held in Mooroopna on Sunday 24 March 2024 are now available.

The results are available for download at the bottom of this page. 

Presentation photos and times for all events will be posted on VFBV's dedicated Championships Facebook Page.

Results for all events are available to view here.

Champion Team - Ascot & District A

 

11 - 13 Years Aggregate Winner - Ascot & District A

11 - 15 years Aggregate Winner - Napoleons-Enfield A

 

Event 1A:  Low Down Pump & Ladder – 11-13 Years       

1st

Miners Rest A

20.21

Seconds

2nd

Maiden Gully A

20.59

Seconds

3rd

Mandurang A

20.60

Seconds

4th

Beazley’s Bridge B

20.68

Seconds

5th

Gapsted A

20.70

Seconds

 

Event 1B:  Low Down Pump & Ladder – 11-15 Years

1st

Napoleons-Enfield A

16.95

Seconds

2nd

Ascot & District A

18.25

Seconds

3rd

Napoleons-Enfield B

19.02

Seconds

4th

Beazley’s Bridge A

19.58

Seconds

5th

Dunrobin/Nangeela A

20.36

Seconds

 

Chief Officer’s Challenge Event, Low Down Pump & Ladder

1st

Miners Rest A 11-13 Years (Levi Watt, Harry Walls, Maden Irving & Ed McHoul)

2nd

Napoleons-Enfield 11-15 Years (Billy Bedgood, Mitch Hazlett, Harrison VanGaans & Charlotte Roberts)

3rd

Chief Officer’s Charges: Chief Officer Jason Heffernan, DCO Brett Boatman, Acting DCO Adrian Gutsche & ACFO Tony Owen)

 

Event 2A:  Wet Hose & Ladder – 11-13 Years      

1st

Ascot & District A

23.56

Seconds

2nd

Mandurang A

24.58

Seconds

3rd

Maiden Gully A

25.49

Seconds

4th

Miners Rest B

25.77

Seconds

5th

Beazley’s Bridge A

26.19

Seconds

 

Event 2B:  Wet Hose & Ladder – 11-15 Years      

1st

Napoleons-Enfield A

20.50

Seconds

2nd

Beazley’s Bridge A

22.07

Seconds

3rd

Ascot & District A

22.29

Seconds

4th

Napoleons-Enfield B

22.96

Seconds

5th

Eldorado A

23.04

Seconds

 

Event 4A:  Tanker – Priming, Pumping & Ladder – 11-13 Years

1st

Ascot & District A

29.36

Seconds

2nd

Napoleons-Enfield A

30.58

Seconds

3rd

Beazley’s Bridge C

30.97

Seconds

4th

Gapsted A

34.24

Seconds

5th

Mandurang A

34.85

Seconds

 

Event 4B:  Tanker – Priming, Pumping & Ladder – 11-15 Years

1st

Beazley’s Bridge B

26.18

Seconds

2nd

Ascot & District A

26.65

Seconds

3rd

Napoleons-Enfield A

26.90

Seconds

4th

Dunrobin/Nangeela A

27.83

Seconds

5th

Napoleons-Enfield B

29.54

Seconds

 

Event 5A:  Hydrant & Tanker – 11-13 Years

1st

Beazley’s Bridge A

28.06

Seconds

2nd

Ascot & District A

29.69

Seconds

3rd

Beazley’s Bridge B

30.15

Seconds

4th

Miners Rest A

33.52

Seconds

5th

Maiden Gully A

33.63

Seconds

 

Event 5B:  Hydrant & Tanker – 11-15 Years

1st

Beazley’s Bridge A

25.34

Seconds

2nd

Mandurang A

27.12

Seconds

3rd

Beazley’s Bridge B

27.35

Seconds

4th

Napoleons-Enfield B

28.56

Seconds

5th

Ascot & District A

29.26

Seconds

 

Event 6A:  Tanker – Drawing Water from Tank – 11-13 Years

1st

Beazley’s Bridge A

23.09

Seconds

2nd

Ascot & District A

24.37

Seconds

3rd

Miners Rest A

27.73

Seconds

4th

Gapsted A

28.05

Seconds

5th

Napoleons-Enfield B

28.18

Seconds

 

Event 6B:  Tanker – Drawing Water from Tank – 11-15 Years

1st

Mandurang A

20.80

Seconds

2nd

Beazley’s Bridge B

22.47

Seconds

3rd

Eldorado A

22.57

Seconds

4th

Ascot & District A

24.46

Seconds

5th

Napoleons-Enfield A

27.71

Seconds

 

FINAL AGGREGATES

              

11-13 YEARS AGGREGATE

1st

Ascot & District A

52

Points

2nd

Beazley’s Bridge A

34

Points

3rd

Miners Rest A

26

Points

 

11-15 YEARS AGGREGATE

1st

Napoleons-Enfield A

40

Points

2nd

Beazley’s Bridge B  (on a countback)

32

Points

3rd   

Ascot & District A   (on a countback)

32

Points

 

CHAMPION TEAM:

1st

Ascot & District A

84

Points

2nd

Beazley’s Bridge A

64

Points

3rd

Napoleons-Enfield A

50

Points

 

VFBV State President Encouragement Award winner:  Maiden Gully B

 

Stan Ross Conduct Trophy winner:   Springhurst Brigade

 

Junior Firefighter Sprint winners:

11-13 Years – Female: Tilly McErlain, Ascot & District   

11-13 Years – Male:    Tom Griffiths, Gapsted

11-15 Years – Female: Charlotte Roberts, Napoleons-Enfield

11-15 Years – Male:    Equal 1st – Aiden Bryant, Mannerim and Otis Patton, Beazley’s Bridge

 

 

Saturday, 23 March 2024 17:32

2024 State Rural Senior Championship Results

Written by

Final results for the 2024 State Rural Senior Championship held in Mooroopna on Saturday 23 March 2024 are now available.

The results are available for download at the bottom of this page. 

Presentation photos and times for all events will be posted on VFBV's dedicated Championships Facebook Page.

Results for all events are available to view here.

Division 1 Aggregate Winner - Eldorado A 

 

Division 2 Aggregate Winner - Truganina A 

Division 3 Aggregate Winner - Eldorado D

 

Event 1:  Low Down Pump & Ladder

Division 1:

1st

Eldorado A

16.28

Seconds

 

2nd

Leopold A

16.55

Seconds

 

3rd

Beazley’s Bridge A

17.40

Seconds

 

4th

Beazley’s Bridge B

17.47

Seconds

 

5th

Mandurang A

17.53

Seconds

 

 

 

 

 

Division 2:

1st

Truganina A

17.01

Seconds

 

2nd

Elaine A

17.13

Seconds

 

3rd

Dunrobin/Nangeela B

18.10

Seconds

 

4th

Swan Hill A

19.09

Seconds

 

5th

Pearcedale A

19.66

Seconds

 

 

 

 

 

Division 3:

1st

Maiden Gully A

19.37

Seconds

 

2nd

Napoleons-Enfield A

21.16

Seconds

 

3rd

Doreen A

21.57

Seconds

 

4th

Eldorado D

22.65

Seconds

 

5th

Truganina B

23.25

Seconds

 

Event 2:  Wet Hose & Ladder

Division 1:

1st

Leopold A

14.44

Seconds

 

2nd

Beazley’s Bridge B

15.53

Seconds

 

3rd

Beazley’s Bridge A

16.56

Seconds

 

4th

Eldorado A

16.70

Seconds

 

5th

Sedgwick A

17.16

Seconds

 

 

 

 

 

Division 2:

1st

Dunrobin/Nangeela B

16.28

Seconds

 

2nd

Pearcedale A

16.73

Seconds

 

3rd

Truganina A

17.14

Seconds

 

4th

Eldorado B

17.64

Seconds

 

5th

Eldorado C

18.55

Seconds

 

 

 

 

 

Division 3:

1st

Moorooduc B

17.48

Seconds

 

2nd

Maiden Gully A

17.92

Seconds

 

3rd

Moorooduc A

18.40

Seconds

 

4th

Eldorado D

18.92

Seconds

 

5th

Napoleons-Enfield A

19.36

Seconds

 


Event 3:  Tanker Hose Reel & Ladder

Division 1:

1st

Eldorado A

41.53

Seconds

 

2nd

Leopold A

41.68

Seconds

 

3rd

Connewarre A

44.13

Seconds

 

4th

Beazley’s Bridge A

44.64

Seconds

 

5th

Sedgwick A

46.53

Seconds

 

 

 

 

 

Division 2:

1st

Truganina A

47.97

Seconds

 

2nd

Elaine A

48.74

Seconds

 

3rd

Pearcedale A

52.56

Seconds

 

4th

Leopold B

53.33

Seconds

 

5th

Mannerim A

53.68

Seconds

 

 

 

 

 

Division 3:

1st

Maiden Gully A

55.93

Seconds

 

2nd

Eldorado D

57.70

Seconds

 

3rd

Truganina B

58.19

Seconds

 

4th

Mannerim B

58.25

Seconds

 

5th

Chiltern A

59.24

Seconds

 

Event 4:  Tanker - Priming, Pumping & Ladder

Division 1:

1st

Springhurst A

21.16

Seconds

 

2nd

Sedgwick A

22.15

Seconds

 

3rd

Hurstbridge A

23.07

Seconds

 

4th

Leopold A

23.26

Seconds

 

5th

Hurstbridge B

23.71

Seconds

 

 

 

 

 

Division 2:

1st

Eldorado C

24.61

Seconds

 

2nd

Truganina A

25.24

Seconds

 

3rd

Elaine A

25.69

Seconds

 

4th

Swan Hill A

25.95

Seconds

 

5th

Dunrobin/Nangeela B

26.98

Seconds

 

 

 

 

 

Division 3:

1st

Eldorado D

26.42

Seconds

 

2nd

Doreen A

26.98

Seconds

 

3rd

Moorooduc A

31.41

Seconds

 

4th

Chiltern A

31.87

Seconds

 

5th

Mannerim B

33.09

Seconds

 

Event 5:  Hydrant & Tanker

Division 1:

1st

Hurstbridge A

18.76

Seconds

 

2nd

Strathmerton A

19.95

Seconds

 

3rd

Beazley’s Bridge A

20.17

Seconds

 

4th

Dunrobin/Nangeela A

20.24

Seconds

 

5th

Leopold A

20.47

Seconds

 

 

 

 

 

Division 2:

1st

Eldorado B

22.95

Seconds

 

2nd

Dunrobin/Nangeela B

23.05

Seconds

 

3rd

Truganina A

23.45

Seconds

 

4th

Pearcedale A

24.15

Seconds

 

5th

Rutherglen A

24.23

Seconds

 

 

 

 

 

Division 3:

1st

Moorooduc A

20.58

Seconds

 

2nd

Napoleons-Enfield A

22.83

Seconds

 

3rd

Eldorado D

23.11

Seconds

 

4th

Maiden Gully A

24.69

Seconds

 

5th

Moorooduc B

25.98

Seconds

 


Event 6:  Tanker – Drawing Water from Tank

Division 1:

1st

Eldorado A

16.63

Seconds

 

2nd

Hurstbridge A

17.18

Seconds

 

3rd

Beazley’s Bridge B

18.84

Seconds

 

4th

Hurstbridge B

19.76

Seconds

 

5th

Leopold A

19.77

Seconds

 

 

 

 

 

Division 2:

1st

Truganina A

18.25

Seconds

 

2nd

Eldorado C

18.31

Seconds

 

3rd

Dunrobin/Nangeela B

18.90

Seconds

 

4th

Swan Hill A

19.08

Seconds

 

5th

Elaine A

19.55

Seconds

 

 

 

 

 

Division 3:

1st

Eldorado D

20.44

Seconds

 

2nd

Moorooduc A

21.07

Seconds

 

3rd

Napoleons-Enfield A

21.51

Seconds

 

4th

Maiden Gully A

22.99

Seconds

 

5th

Moorooduc B

24.65

Seconds

 

 

FINAL AGGREGATES

 

DIVISION 1 AGGREGATE

 

1st

Eldorado A

52

points

 

2nd  

Leopold A

44

Points

 

3rd  

Hurstbridge A

32

Points

 

 

 

 

 

 

DIVISION 2 AGGREGATE

 

1st

Truganina A

70

Points

 

2nd

Dunrobin/Nangeela B

40

Points

 

=3rd

Elaine A & Eldorado C

28

Points

 

DIVISION 3 AGGREGATE

 

1st

Eldorado D

56

Points

 

2nd

Maiden Gully A

50

Points

 

3rd

Moorooduc A

38

Points

 

 

Alan King AFSM Memorial Conduct Trophy winner:    Moorooduc Brigade

 

Outstanding Female Team:         District 9/27 Women’s Network

 

Winners of the Firefighter Sprint:

 

Female competitors:       1st           Alicia Roberts, Napoleons-Enfield

                                    2nd          Trinity Williams, Chiltern

                                    3rd          Emma Templeton, Swan Hill

 

Male competitors:           1st           Lachlan Wilkinson, Leopold

                                    2nd          Yee Zhao, Pearcedale

                                    3rd          Nathan Bolger. Connewarre

 

Thursday, 21 March 2024 16:11

2024 State Championships This Weekend

Written by

The 2024 State Urban Senior Championship and the State Rural Senior and Junior Championships will be held this coming Saturday and Sunday, 23 and 24 March 2024 at the Mooroopna Recreation Reserve, Midland Highway, Mooroopna.

Once again the Urban Senior and Rural State Championships will be held on the same weekend, at the same venue on their own competition tracks.  Competing across the two days will be 40 junior teams and 76 senior teams including a number of new and returning teams. 

The Championships will commence with an opening ceremony on Saturday morning at 8:20am, before competition begins on each competition track from 9am.

The popular and impressive Torchlight Procession will be conducted on the evening of Sunday 23 March in Mooroopna.  The Torchlight Procession will begin at 8:30pm on Saturday evening.

Sunday mornings events will commence at 8:30am on each track.

Results from the Championship will be progressively posted over the weekend on VFBV’s dedicated Championships Facebook Page.

 

Teams competing in the Rural State Championships:

Seniors: 

Division 1 Division 2 Division 3
Beazley’s Bridge A
Beazley's Bridge B
Connewarre A
Dunolly A
Dunrobin-Nangeela A
Dunrobin-Nangeela C
Eldorado A
Hurstbridge A
Hurstbridge B
Hurstbridge C
Leopold A
Mandurang A
Sedgwick A
Sedgwick B
Springhurst A
Strathmerton A
Beazley's Bridge C
Dunrobin/Nangeela D
Dunrobin-Nangeela B
Elaine A
Eldorado B
Eldorado C
Eltham A
Gapsted A
Leopold B
Mannerim A
Pearcedale A
Rutherglen A
Springhurst B
Swan Hill A
Truganina A
Yarroweyah A
Beazley's Bridge D
Chiltern A
District 9 & 27 Women's Network A
Doreen A
Eldorado D
Leopold C 
Maiden Gully A
Mannerim B
Moorooduc A
Moorooduc B
Napoleons-Enfield A
Pearcedale B
Strathmerton B
Truganina B

Juniors: 

Ascot & District A Maiden Gully A
Beazley's Bridge A Maiden Gully B
Beazley's Bridge B Mandurang A
Beazley's Bridge C Mannerim A
Chiltern A Miners Rest A
Doreen A Miners Rest B
Doreen B Napoleons-Enfield A
Dunolly A Napoleons-Enfield B
Dunrobin/Nangeela A Pearcedale A
Elaine A Pearcedale B
Eldorado A Springhurst A
Gapsted A Strathmerton A
Gapsted B Wodonga West A

Teams competing in the State Urban Senior Championship:

A Section B Section 
Dandenong
Eaglehawk
Kangaroo Flat
Maryvale
Melton A
Morwell
Narre Warren
Osborne Park A
Osborne Park B
Patterson River
Sale
Tatura
Wendouree
Werribee
Bendigo
Cohuna
Creswick
Echuca A
Echuca B
Euroa
Hallam
Hamilton/Colac
Hoppers Crossing
Horsham
Kerang
Knox Group
Kyneton
Maffra
Melton B
Mildura
Mooroopna
Pakenham/Narre Warren
Red Cliffs
Seymour
Stawell
Swan Hill A
Swan Hill B
Warracknabeal
Warrnambool
Whittlesea

 

Sunday, 17 March 2024 13:02

2024 State Urban Junior Championship Results

Written by

Final results for the 2024 State Urban Junior Championships held in Mooroopna on Saturday 16 and Sunday 17 March 2024 are now available.

The results are listed below and are also available for download at the bottom of this page. 

Presentation photos and placegetters for all events have been posted on VFBV's dedicated Championships Facebook Page. Team times for each event are available for download at the bottom of this page. 

 

RESULTS – Saturday 16th March

Event  1               Hydrant – One Competitor, Under 14 Years

1st

MELTON A (Ryder Millington)

10.43

seconds

2nd

KANGAROO FLAT (Chris Mason)

11.09

seconds

3rd

ECHUCA A (Gratton Harrison)

11.21

seconds

4th

MELTON C (Ricky Cassar)

11.51

seconds

5th

KYNETON (Bonnie Tracey)

11.69

seconds


Event  2               Y Coupling – Two Competitors, Under 17 Years

1st

MELTON A (Devante Johns, Brodie Leitch)

11.61

seconds

2nd

KYNETON (Sam Foster, Royce Sharp)

12.09

seconds

3rd

MELTON B (Jay Challis, Riley Hunter)

13.17

seconds

4th

ECHUCA A (Mason Whinfield, Sophie Amos)

13.17

seconds

5th

SALE (Daniel King, Ruth King)

13.38

seconds

 

Event  3               Wet Hose Striking Second Disc – Four Competitors, Under 14 Years

1st

MAFFRA (Kobe Parsons, Tyler Schoenmaekers, Kristin Murphy, Kye Bence)

19.12

seconds

2nd

MELTON A (Ryder Millington, Tyler Goudie, Poppy Arandt, Lily Leitch)

19.19

seconds

3rd

ECHUCA A (Gratton Harrison, Archie Collier, Rick Ronnan, Connor Drinkwell)

19.65

seconds

4th

KYNETON (John Perace, Charlie Tracey, Bonnie Tracey, Patrick Sutton)

20.71

seconds

5th

SWAN HILL A (Xavier Morpeth, Orla Scott, Isiah Blair, Sasha Hayes)

21.01

seconds

 

Event  4               Y Coupling – Four Competitors, Under 17 Years

1st

KANGAROO FLAT (Dylan Gilbee, Lucy Gilbee, Oliver Lowndes, Katrina O;Neill)

8.32

seconds

2nd

MELTON A (Devante Johns, Brodie Leitch, Bayllie Arandt, Leah Steele)

8.64

seconds

3rd

MELTON C (Ryan Stone, Jyce Pascoe, Jayson Cassar, Mikaylah Crawford)

9.46

seconds

4th

ROWVILLE A (Matthew De Flippis, Thomas Landells, Lauren Braysahw, Brenton Radford)

9.63

seconds

5th

ECHUCA A (Sam Schmedje, Mason Whinfield, Sophie Amos, Kaylea Blake)

9.98

seconds

 

Event 5                Wet Hose Striking 1st & 2nd Discs – Four Competitors, Under 17 Years

1st

MELTON A (Devante Johns, Brodie Leitch, Bayllie Arandt, Leah Steele)

18.51

seconds

2nd

MELTON C (Ryan Stone, Jyce Pasco, Jayson Cassar, Mikaylah Crawford)

19.12

seconds

3rd

ROWVILLE A (Matthew De Flippis, Thomas Landells, Laurne Brayshaw, Brenton Radford)

19.26

seconds

4th

WERRIBEE A (Matthew Packer, Mitchell Inglis, Noah Carver, Rose Higgs)

20.13

seconds

5th

GISBORNE (Asher Kroon, Lincoln Moyes, Zac Dickson, Dylan Anderson-Treacy, Riley Judd)

21.28

seconds

  

Event  6               Marshall – One Competitor, Under 14 Years

1st

ECHUCA A (Archie Collier)

31.09

seconds

2nd

KANGAROO FLAT (Chris Mason)

33.95

seconds

3rd

SWAN HILL A (Isiah Blair)

34.38

seconds

4th

MELTON A (Tyler Goudie)

34.73

seconds

5th

HAMILTON (Jordan Uebergang)

37.07

seconds

 

Event  7               Wet Hose Striking 1st & 2nd Discs – Four Competitors, Under 14 Years

1st

SWAN HILL A (Xavier Morpeth, Orla Scott, Isiah Blair, Sasha Hayes)

21.61

seconds

2nd

ECHUCA A (Gratton Harrison, Archie Collier, Rick Ronnan, Connor Drinkwell)

21.87

seconds

3rd

MELTON A (Ryder Millington, Tyler Goudie, Poppy Arandt, Lily Leitch)

22.30

seconds

4th

MAFFRA (Kobe Parsons, Tyler Schoenmaekers, Kristin Murphy, Kye Bence)

23.19

seconds

5th

KYNETON (John Pearce, Charlie Tracey, Bonnie Tracey, Patrick Sutton)

23.51

seconds

 

Event  8               Marshall – One Competitor, Under 17 Years

1st

ROWVILLE A (Matthew De Filippis)

26.93

seconds

2nd

SWAN HILL A (Hunta Lindsay)

28.18

seconds

3rd

MELTON A (Devante Johns)

28.41

seconds

4th

MELTON C (Ryan Stone)

28.65

seconds

5th

ECHUCA A (Mason Whinfield)

28.75

seconds

 

Event  9               Wet Hose – Two Competitors, Under 17 Years

1st

MELTON A (Devante Johns, Brodie Leitch)

10.12

seconds

2nd

MELTON C (Jyce Pasco, Ryan Stone))

10.25

seconds

3rd

SWAN HILL A (Hunta Lindsay, Amity Scott)

10.81

seconds

4th

WERRIBEE A (Mitchell Inglis, Noah Carver)

10.92

seconds

5th

KYNETON (Sam Foster, Royce Sharp)

11.03

seconds

 

Event 10              Marshall – Two Competitors, Under 14 Years

1st

MAFFRA (Kobe Parsons, Tyler Schoenmaekers)

19.46

seconds

2nd

MELTON A (Ryder Millington, Tyler Goudie)

19.69

seconds

3rd

ECHUCA A (Gratton Harrison, Archie Collier)

20.18

seconds

4th

MELTON C (Jyce Pasco, Jayson Cassar)

20.20

seconds

5th

SALE (Tom de Nobile, Connor Knights)

22.06

seconds

 

Event 11              Wet Hose – Two Competitors, Under 14 Years

1st

MELTON A (Ryder Millington, Tyler Goudie)

12.98

seconds

2nd

ECHUCA A (Gratton Harrison, Archie Collier)

13.54

seconds

3rd

KYNETON (Charlie Tracey, Patrick Sutton)

13.59

seconds

4th

SWAN HILL A (Isiah Blair, Sasha Hayes)

13.75

seconds

5th

HAMILTON (Amely Pech, Jayda Bruni)

13.93

seconds

  

RESULTS – Sunday 17th March

Event 12              Hydrant – One Competitor, Under 17 Years

1st

MELTON A (Devante Johns)

12.23

seconds

2nd

WARRACKNABEAL  (Cody Polack)

13.69

seconds

3rd

KANGAROO FLAT (Dylan Gilbee)

13.71

seconds

4th

ECHUCA A (Sam Schmedje)

14.15

seconds

5th

MELTON C (Ryan Stone)

14.78

seconds

 

Event 13              Y Coupling – Two Competitors, Under 14 Years

1st

SWAN HILL A (Xavier Morpeth, Isiah Blair)

13.11

seconds

2nd

WARRACKNABEAL A (Zander Jonasson, Ben Wright)

13.97

seconds

3rd

ECHUCA A (Gratton Harrison, Archie Collier)

15.77

seconds

4th

SALE (Tom De Noble, Connor Knights)

15.82

seconds

5th

MELTON C (Ronan Steele, Ricky Cassar)

16.70

seconds

 

Event 14                Wet Hose Striking Second Disc - Four Competitors, Under 17 Years

1st

MELTON A (Devante Johns, Brodie Leitch, Bayllie Arandt, Leah Steele)

15.46

seconds

2nd

MELTON C (Ryan Stone, Jyce Pasco, Jayson Cassar, Mikaylah Crawford)

17.48

seconds

3rd

SWAN HILL A (Hunta Lindsay, Amity Scott, Sarah Scott, Madison Roberts)

17.89

seconds

4th

MELTON B (Alexis Johnston, Riley Hunter, Jay Challis, Matilda Franzo)

18.48

seconds

5th

ROWVILLE A (Matthew De Filippis, Thomas Landells, Lauren Brayshaw, Brenton Radford)

18.55

seconds

 

Event 15              Y Coupling – Four Competitors, Under 14 Years

1st

MAFFRA (Kobe Parsons, Tyler Schoenmaekers, Kristin Murphy, Kye Bence)

9.31

seconds

2nd

SWAN HILL A (Xavier Morpeth, Orla Scott, Isiah Blair, Sasha Hayes)

10.30

seconds

3rd

MELTON A (Ryder Millington, Tyler Goudie, Poppy Arandt, Lily Leitch)

10.35

seconds

4th

ECHUCA A (Gratton Harrison, Archie Collier, Rick Ronnan, Connor Drinkwell)

10.66

seconds

5th

WARRACKNABEAL A (Zander Jonasson, Ben Wright, Maddison Bentley, Riley Bish)

11.62

seconds

 

Event 16              Wet Hose Striking One Disc Twice – Four Competitors, Under 14 Years

1st

MAFFRA (Kobe Parsons, Tyler Schoenmaekers, Kristin Murphy, Kye Bence)

16.53

seconds

2nd

ECHUCA A (Gratton Harrison, Archie Collier, Rick Ronnan, Connor Drinkwell)

16.92

seconds

3rd

MELTON C (Ronan Steele, Ricky Cassar, Charlotte Crawford, Jayden Nixon)

17.65

seconds

4th

KYNETON (John Pearce, Charlie Tracey, Bonnie Tracey, Patrick Sutton)

18.72

seconds

5th

MELTON A (Ryder Millington, Tyler Goudie, Poppy Arandt, Lily Leitch)

19.11

seconds

 

Event 17              Marshall – Two Competitors, Under 17 Years

1st

MELTON A (Devante Johns, Brodie Leitch)

15.57

seconds

2nd

KANGAROO FLAT (Dylan Gilbee, Oliver Lowndes)

18.60

seconds

3rd

SALE (Daniel King, Izac Thexton)

19.30

seconds

4th

WARRACKNABEAL A (Cody Polack, Hayden Polack)

19.73

seconds

5th

RED CLIFFS A (Dylan Leerson, Tay Oliver)

20.44

seconds

 

Event 18              Wet Hose Striking One Disc Twice – Four Competitors, Under 17 Years

1st

MELTON A (Devante Johns, Brodie Leitch, Bayllie Arandt, Leah Steele)

14.14

seconds

2nd

KANGAROO FLAT (Dylan Gilbee, Lucy Gilbee, Oliver Lowndes, Katrina O’Neill)

15.25

seconds

3rd

MELTON C (Ryan Stone, Jyce Pasco, Jayson Cassar, Mikaylah Crawford)

15.61

seconds

4th

KYNETON (Sam Foster, Royce Sharp, Steph Sharp, Milika Fortune)

16.72

seconds

5th

WARRACKNABEAL A (Cody Polack, Hayden Polack, Rohan Richards, Eliza Williamson)

17.61

seconds

 

FINAL AGGREGATE RESULTS

 

DRY AGGREGATE:

1st

MELTON A

50

Points

2nd

KANGAROO FLAT

26

Points

3rd

ECHUCA A

25

Points

 

 

WET AGGREGATE

1st

MELTON A

49

Points

2nd

MELTON C

21

Points

=3rd

ECHUCA A & KANGAROO FLAT

18

Points

 

UNDER 14 YEARS AGGREGATE

1st

ECHUCA A

37

Points

2nd

MELTON A

35

Points

3rd

MAFFRA

34

Points

 

UNDER 17 YEARS AGGREGATE

1st

MELTON A

64

Points

2nd

MELTON C

24

Points

3rd

KANGAROO FLAT

21

Points

 

GRAND AGGREGATE                    

1st

MELTON A

99

Points

2nd

ECHUCA A

43

Points

3rd

SWAN HILL A

38

Points

 

2024 - Champion Team – Melton A

Coaches Anthony Rhodes, Bailey Rhodes, Ashley Goudie and Denzel Johns and competitors:

  1. Bayllie Arandt
  2. Poppy Arandt
  3. Tyler Goudie
  4. Devante Johns
  5. Brodie Leitch
  6. Lily Leitch
  7. Ryder Millington
  8. Leah Steele

 

Final Aggregate Board

Under 14 Years Aggregate Winner - ECHUCA A

 

Under 17 Years Aggregate & Grand Aggregate Winner - MELTON A

 

Thursday, 14 March 2024 15:50

2024 State Urban Junior Championship This Weekend

Written by

The 2024 State Urban Junior Championship will be held this coming Saturday and Sunday, 16 and 17 March 2024 in Mooroopna. This year will be the 50th time the State Urban Junior Championship has been held.

Come along and see tomorrow’s CFA volunteers proudly demonstrate their skills.

If you are not involved with the CFA juniors program or haven’t witnessed the value the State Urban Junior Championship provides for young volunteers to develop practical skills and to be actively involved in CFA, then get along and be inspired.

Urban junior competitions have a proud 51 year history. This year 38 teams from CFA brigades from across Victoria will compete over the weekend.  

The 2024 Championship is being held at the Mooroopna Recreation Reserve, Midland Hwy, Mooroopna and events will begin at 8:30am each morning.

Results from the Championship will be progressively posted over the weekend on VFBV’s dedicated Championships Facebook Page

Teams competing in the 2024 State Urban Junior Championship are:

Ararat
Colac
Diamond Creek
Echuca A
Echuca B
Echuca/Mildura
Euroa A
Euroa B
Eynesbury
Frankston
Gisborne
Grovedale
Hamilton
Hoppers Crossing
Horsham
Kangaroo Flat
Kyneton
Maffra
Melton A
Melton B
Melton C
Red Cliffs A
Red Cliffs B
Rowville A
Rowville B
Sale
Seymour
Stawell
Swan Hill A
Swan Hill B
Upwey A
Upwey B
Wangaratta
Warracknabeal A
Warracknabeal B
Wendouree
Werribee A
Werribee B

Information for brigades competing this weekend can be downloaded from this page

Next weekend 23rd and 24th March will see the State Urban Senior Championship along with the State Rural Senior and Junior Championships take place at the Mooroopna Recreation Reserve also. With the popular Torchlight Procession to be held on Saturday 23rd March in Mooroopna. 

Page 1 of 31
CFA Volunteers are the unpaid professionals of our Emergency Services. VFBV is their united voice, and speaks on behalf of Victoria's 60,000 CFA Volunteers.

Newsletter

Contact Us