World’s most advanced fireboat dedicated at Port of Long Beach

LONG BEACH — In a dockside ceremony on June 8 attended by 100 invited guests, the fireboat Protector was dedicated in memory of Donald Domenic DiMarzo, a former Long Beach Fire Department captain. DiMarzo served as a fire marshal aboard USS Intrepid in the Pacific during World War II. He was posthumously awarded the Navy Cross for extraordinary heroism and distinguished service for leading efforts to save the aircraft carrier after an attack set it ablaze on Nov. 25, 1944.

Protector and a second, still-under-construction boat, Vigilance, will replace the port’s fireboats Challenger and Liberty, which began service in the late 1980s and were designed in an era of vessels carrying 4,500 containers.

Protector is equipped with 10 water cannons capable of extinguishing fires in the harbor or on nearby land with more than 41,000 gallons per minute — four times the output of the existing fireboats. Protector can shoot water the length of two football fields, and higher than a 20-story building, meaning firefighters can throw water or foam anywhere aboard the world’s largest container ships and oil tankers.

The new, multi-mission fireboats can also assist with chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear threats. Other features include facilities for medical treatment, a command information center, boom deployment to contain spills and an onboard crane.

The fireboat project team and partners include the Port and Fire Department staff, Robert Allan Ltd., Foss Maritime Co., Jensen Maritime Consultants, the Department of Homeland Security and the Federal Emergency Management Administration.

The construction cost is $51.6 million for the two boats, including $18.5 million in grant funding from Homeland Security’s Port Security Grant Program.

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