|  "If you can save one life, two lives or 10 lives, you've really made 
			a difference. That's why we're encouraging fire departments to 
			conduct educational programs in their local communities that will 
			make a difference and then recognizing them for their efforts," said 
			Alan Clark, assistant vice president of Grinnell Mutual's Special 
			Investigations Unit. "The Life Safety Achievement Award honors our 
			hometown heroes -- our fire departments -- for initiating proactive 
			programs that save lives." Past award recipient Marion Fire 
			Department in Marion, Iowa, knows that public education programs 
			reduce the city's fire rate and therefore save lives. That's why the 
			Marion firefighters can be found crawling on the floor of area 
			preschools each year in full fire gear so children aren't afraid of 
			a rescuer at a fire scene. It's also why the staff is on hand at the 
			local farmers market to give passers-by an opportunity to practice 
			extinguishing a fire. These and other programs are likely the reason 
			that the city of Marion has fewer fires than other cities of similar 
			population. "I tell our firefighters all the time that we save more lives and 
			property through fire prevention programs than by combating fires on 
			the scene. With fire prevention education, we have a 100 percent 
			survivability and property conservation rate. That's what we're 
			hired to do -- save lives and conserve property," said Deb Krebill, 
			assistant fire chief of Marion Fire Department. Like many fire 
			chiefs, she's passionate about protecting her community. 
			 Firefighters across the United States save lives both quietly in 
			the course of fire prevention programs and dramatically during 
			rescues in burning buildings. Life Safety Achievement recipients 
			also save lives somewhere in between the two extremes, as West 
			Burlington Fire Chief Mike Heim describes. "In our experience, almost everyone gets out of a burning 
			building when the smoke alarm goes off, but it's the adults that try 
			to go back in for something they forgot -- purses, wallets, etc.," 
			said Heim. "That's when we find them disoriented in rooms so thick 
			with smoke that you can't see or breathe, and we have to escort them 
			out. Things can be replaced or retrieved after the fire is put out. 
			Never go back into a burning building." Recognizing hometown heroes The Life Safety Achievement Award not only honors community 
			heroes, but as past recipients will attest, the national recognition 
			plays a vital role when departments seek funding to upgrade 
			equipment, enhance training and, of course, sponsor fire prevention 
			programs. "The Life Safety Achievement Award absolutely helps our fire 
			department acquire funding. By being recognized nationally, it shows 
			that our fire prevention efforts are on the right path," said Heim. 
			His unit, the West Burlington Fire Department of West Burlington, 
			Iowa, was among 50 fire departments that received the award last 
			year for their efforts in 2011. 
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			 Award criteria Fire departments across the United States are eligible for the 
			Life Safety Achievement Award. To qualify, fire departments must 
			record zero fire deaths in residential structures or a 10 percent 
			reduction of fire deaths during 2012. In addition, they must 
			demonstrate commitment to prevent residential fires in their local 
			communities through effective fire prevention programs. The 
			applicants must present evidence that the department's fire 
			prevention efforts increased over the previous year and made a 
			positive impact. Residents can help their local heroes earn recognition by 
			encouraging their community fire department to apply for the Life 
			Safety Achievement Award. The application is available on Grinnell 
			Mutual's website at 
			www.grinnellmutual.com and on its Facebook page,
			
			www.facebook.com/myGrinnellMutual. Applications are due Aug. 9, 
			and recipients will be notified in mid-September. ___ The National Association of State Fire Marshals Fire Research and 
			Education Foundation, known as the NASFM Foundation, is a 501(c)(3) 
			organization that works with companies, government agencies, 
			associations, academic institutions and others that strive to 
			achieve higher levels of fire safety for consumers and for the 
			emergency response community. The NASFM Foundation works to support 
			the mission of the National Association of State Fire Marshals -- to 
			protect life, property and the environment from fire and related 
			hazards -- through science, innovation, research and education. For 
			more information, visit
			
			www.firemarshals.org/NASFMFoundation. Grinnell Mutual 
			Reinsurance Co., in business since 1909, provides reinsurance 
			for farm mutual insurance companies and property and casualty 
			insurance products through more than 1,600 independent agents in 12 
			Midwestern states. Grinnell Mutual is the largest primary reinsurer 
			of farm mutual companies in North America. Follow Grinnell Mutual on
			Twitter and
			
			Facebook. 
			[Text from file received from 
			Grinnell Mutual] 
			
			 
			
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