logo
Concord firefighter receives NC Award of Excellence for safety initiative that helps hearing impaired

Concord firefighter receives NC Award of Excellence for safety initiative that helps hearing impaired

Yahoo01-03-2025
CONCORD, N.C. (QUEEN CITY NEWS) — A Concord firefighter received state honors recently for his fire safety efforts that help the hearing impaired.
Gilberto Meza-Corral received the Kim Wittig Award of Excellence during the 49th Annual North Carolina Fire & Life Safety Educators' Conference held this week in Concord. This award is given each year to a firefighter who demonstrates excellence in Fire and Life Safety Education in North Carolina.
Photos: Family displaced after fire damages Concord home
A nine-year member of the Concord Fire Department, Meza-Corral is a bilingual Fire Safety Educator and Assistant Fire Marshal, and the fire department says he 'has an unmatched passion for reaching those who are often overlooked.' He brought bed-shaking smoke alarms to children and young adults in Concord who are hearing impaired.
Meza-Corral was nominated for the Award of Excellence by a fellow fire educator.
'I am grateful and truly humbled to receive this award. It means a lot to me and it's one of the highlights of my career so far,' said Meza-Corral in a statement. 'While I'm still speechless from this unexpected recognition, I'm truly honored and will continue using my knowledge, skills, and community connections to reduce risks and save lives.'
This honor is the latest recognition for Meza-Corral. In 2024, Meza-Corral was awarded both the regional and state Firefighter of the Year Award from American Legion Post 51.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Leyden High School's 100th birthday grabs national attention
Leyden High School's 100th birthday grabs national attention

Chicago Tribune

time24-06-2025

  • Chicago Tribune

Leyden High School's 100th birthday grabs national attention

A big anniversary usually calls for a big celebration, but it's not often the celebration itself wins national awards. But that happened this year when Leyden High School District 212 won national recognition with two awards for its 100th year bash. The National School Public Relations Association awarded the district's communications team a Golden Achievement Award for the year-long centennial celebration and an Award of Excellence for the documentary video series the team did as part of the anniversary project. Both awards will be given July 23 at a celebration in Washington, D.C. The celebration kicked off last fall to coincide with the founding of the school in 1924 and it ran the duration of the school year, with homecoming events, a gala fundraiser and a family picnic in May. Besides the events, the school district produced signs, a mobile exhibit of historic school artifacts and created a five-part documentary series exploring the stories and the people from the school's history. Karen Geddeis, the district's director of communications, said she wanted the ambitious project to celebrate and commemorate, as any anniversary might. But she also wanted the year to celebrate community partnerships with the district and to raise funds for the school. In other words, she wanted the celebration to remind the community that the district still needed local support. 'We wanted to raise additional funds for our Leyden scholarship foundation and we also had so many community partners,' she said. 'People really love Leyden. Our businesses and our community is really amazing. We knew it was there and this was a moment to really see and formalize those partnerships.' Geddeis has been with the district five years, and she always knew the community supported the school. But this project really illustrated how much the school cares about its students and its legacy, and how many of those students, and graduates, still love their alma mater. She said she and her communication team worked for about a year planning for the event, and all along the way, as the project grew in scope, she had help. 'It's not very normal,' Geddeis said of the size of the celebration. 'This was very ambitious.' Maybe the crown jewel of the celebration was the documentary series, available on the district's YouTube channel. Each five-minute episode of 'Leyden: Making History' focuses on a person or people — the oldest alumni, coaching legends, graduates. And each video demanded hours of footage as well as an entire custom-built soundstage for interviews. Luckily, Geddeis wasn't working alone and she credits her two-person production crew for their long hours spent on the documentary. 'We knew video would play a role,' she said. 'We weren't really sure what that would look like and we knew we wanted to capture stories of our students, staff and our alumni.' One of the video production specialists, Brandon Delgado, is a 2018 graduate of Leyden. He said working on the 'Leyden: Making History' series meant a lot to him both as a video professional and because of his history with the district. 'This was special because we were going deep in the history but we didn't want to do just a timeline,' he said. 'We wanted to put together something that resonated with the viewers.' For this, he was eager to dig deep and spend more time with subjects and spend more time in the editing bay. 'We actually built a set,' he explained. 'We booked our theater for a week and we brought out all these artifacts from Leyden's history.' As it happened, all the subjects were more than happy to sit for hours and hours of interviews. In total, the documentaries were whittled down to about 30 minutes total from 12 hours of footage, which itself was a big feat. 'It felt like such a monumental thing, and something that many districts would not be capable of,' Geddeis said.

WNC relief organization runs out of money. How volunteers are still trying to help
WNC relief organization runs out of money. How volunteers are still trying to help

Yahoo

time12-06-2025

  • Yahoo

WNC relief organization runs out of money. How volunteers are still trying to help

WENDELL, N.C. (QUEEN CITY NEWS) — A disaster relief organization based in western North Carolina is packing up and heading back east. Organizers started Operation Anchor and worked in the mountain communities for months, cleaning up the devastation left by Hurricane Helene. Now, they're out of money. 'I kept pushing us to keep staying and staying and staying and staying because I didn't want to leave,' said Steven Lambert, the vice president of Operation Anchor. 'We needed to be there. We still need to be there.' For six months, volunteers with Operation Anchor made the western part of the Tar Heel State their home following Helene. They repaired dozens of homes, businesses and churches using monetary and supply donations. 'I would say monetary, we brought in about $450 to $550,000 and then in material donations you probably brought in another $200,000 worth of materials, $300,000 worth of materials,' said Lambert. Those funds have since dried up, and the organization's president and vice president spent the past couple of months using money out of their own pockets to help. 'The donations that we had seen just had kind of stopped,' said Hannah Stutts, the president. 'People forget. Storms happen and six months later, I think in general people just assume that those communities are fine or they're back to normal.' But things aren't back to normal yet. 'There's a lot of debris removal still needing done,' said Stutts. 'There's people that still have holes in their roofs from trees that fell, you know, that were denied assistance.' It's heartbreaking for volunteers to have to leave the area knowing there's work to be done. 'To wake up one morning and tell yourself, you know what, it's time that we have to leave, there's nothing else we can do, it's not the best feeling in the world,' said Lambert. President Trump's proposal to 'wean off' FEMA sparking debate While they're not in the area anymore, they want to keep helping and supporting victims of any future Carolina storms. 'Our plan is to regroup, build our supplies back up to be ready for stage one to go onto the next hurricane,' said Lambert. We are in the midst of hurricane season, and experts predict it could be more active than usual. Some of the supplies Operation Anchor volunteers are collecting to prepare for any potential storms include food, water, blankets, clothes and other essentials. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Charlotte native serves with the next generation of Navy rescue swimmers
Charlotte native serves with the next generation of Navy rescue swimmers

Yahoo

time10-06-2025

  • Yahoo

Charlotte native serves with the next generation of Navy rescue swimmers

PENSACOLA, FL (QUEEN CITY NEWS) — A Charlotte native serving in the U.S. Navy is learning crucial skills needed to perform rescues in extreme situations. Airman Keira Makkar is a 2023 Myers Park High School graduate, who joined the Navy six months ago. Makkar now serves as a student rescue swimmer at the Aviation Rescue Swimmer School. At the Naval Air Station Pensacola, rescue swimmers learn aviation water survival training and become CPR certified. They're also taught how to execute life-or-death rescues in extreme conditions. 'I joined the Navy looking for other opportunities,' Makkar said. 'I was looking for a positive change that would challenge me and set me up for a better future.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store