| Media
Contacts:
Tim Lucas, News
Services, 919/515-3470
Michelle
Petrovich, Dept. of Homeland Security, 202/772-9886
Dec.
15, 2003
Homeland
Security Dept. Awards First Contract to NC State
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s
Science and Technology division and the Technical Support
Working Group (TSWG) announced today a contract award
to North Carolina State University for the development
of the next generation of structural fire-fighting personal
protective equipment, which will include chemical and
biological agent protection.
“Secretary Ridge and I are delighted
to award this first homeland security contract to North
Carolina State University,” said Dr. Charles McQueary,
Under Secretary of Science and Technology. “We
eagerly await their resulting products which will help
protect our nation’s first responders.”
Under the agreement, NC State will receive
more than $830,000 for an 18-month term. NC State’s
proposal was selected from more than 3,300 submitted
in response to a May 2003 Broad Agency Announcement
issued jointly by Homeland Security and TSWG.
The NC State team will design equipment
that will provide protection consistent with the high
standards of the National Fire Protection Association
for both structural fire-fighting protection and chemical/biological
protection. These next-generation garments will provide
dramatically enhanced protection against chemical and
biological agents while improving the flexibility, weight,
durability, heat stress reduction, service life and
costs associated with currently available protective
gear.
The
initial prototypes will be showcased at the International
Association of Fire Chiefs’ Fire-Rescue Meeting
in New Orleans in August, 2004. In 2005, these prototypes
will be tested and evaluated in major metropolitan fire
departments for functional performance and user acceptance.
Dr.
Roger L. Barker, Director of the Center for Research
on Textile Protection and Comfort in the College
of Textiles, will lead the NC State team of materials
and clothing design experts from academia and industry.
Representatives of DuPont, Globe Manufacturing Company,
Portable Environments LLC, and the Fairfax, Va. and
La Mesa, Calif. fire departments, will work closely
with NC State throughout the project to design, test
and field the improved equipment.
“We’ll be working at a rapid
pace to develop prototypes of the new gear,” said
Barker. “For the next 18 months, this is our top
priority.”
Over
the past decade, research at the NC
State Textile Protection and Comfort Center has
led to many advances in protective gear, including improved
fire- and heat-resistant fabrics for firefighters; surgical
gowns that provide doctors and nurses with greater protection
against infection from blood and other biological agents;
and outerwear that helps safeguard HAZMAT workers from
dangerous chemical agents.
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s
Science and Technology division serves as the primary
research and development arm of the department, utilizing
our nation’s scientific and technological resources
to provide federal, state and local officials with the
technology and capabilities to protect the homeland.
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