San Miguel Community Foundation Donates New Rescue Truck to the Bomberos: Meet our Heroes.

San Miguel Community Foundation Donates New Rescue Truck to the Bomberos: Meet Our Heroes
by Mittie Roger
An efficient and fail proof fire department is something that US citizens may take for granted. Fully funded by the government, they avail the public of a multitude of emergency services – from fires to accidents to kitties in trees. But do the fire fighters in Mexico provide the same services? Are they funded in the same way? It may come as a great surprise to visitors and locals alike that the San Miguel fire fighting team has very few resources with which to save lives and property.
San Miguel boasts of a robust firefighting team – including 45 members, 20 of them women. Of those 45 firefighters, only 5 are paid staff while the rest are volunteers. With expenses around 100,000 MXN a month and a monthly stipend of slightly over half of that sum (56,000 MXN) from the municipal government, it’s easy to imagine how difficult it must be to meet the needs of the people of San Miguel de Allende.
Relying on a network of sister cities and community efforts to acquire used equipment, the fire fighters often have outdated materials, which can mean a significant increase in risk. From heavier air tanks to respirator gauges with fewer safety measures, these volunteer fire fighters put themselves in harm’s way to help the people of San Miguel anyway.
Just how much do they do? Let’s put this in perspective: SMCF donated a new truck to the fire fighting team at the end of August and since then the truck has made 193 rescues and saved 47 lives. It is currently the most active vehicle in the fleet. They spend 8 months training to serve the community despite being mostly comprised of volunteers, and all of the services that they provide are free to the public. They even offer free training to fire fighters in other cities in Mexico to improve the quality of nationwide services.
After the donation of the truck, they needed to pay the 80,000 MXN insurance, requiring the fire fighters to turn to the Patronato Board which helps them locate and administer funds. Despite being under-funded and running unnecessary risks due to outdated equipment, when we ask Juan Anotnio Perez Solis, President of the Bombero’s Patronato Board, he said, “helping people is what matters.”
What exactly do the Bomberos need? A new first-response truck, 60 new fire hoses top their list at approximately 140 USD per hose. Self-contained breathing apparatuses, air tanks, and ventilating equipment rank high on their list of needs as well. Currently, they have 25 to serve the 45 fire fighters, and many are old making them exceptionally heavy and hard to carry while in the field. Additionally, the team needs new mouthpieces, Hailgan bars and hatchets. While they would love to update their firefighting suits, the cost of buying new ones if prohibitive; they would, however, happily update their suits to newer used models.
Wondering what you can do to help? Contact Juan Antonio Pérez Solís at caballos5000@hotmail.com or 415-119-4978 for more information on donations and additional ways to assist this noble and important cause.

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Sociedad Protectora de Animales de San Miguel de Allende, A.C.

Thank you, San Miguel Community Foundation, for the extremely generous grant which funded our new gas anesthesia machine. We are very pleased that this anesthesia system is now available for surgeries performed at the S.P.A.

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Addie Coral Romero Joins San Miguel Community Foundation

Addie Coral Romero becomes the newest member to join the eight-person Board of Directors for the nonprofit San Miguel Community Foundation.

Addie Coral Romero becomes the newest member to join the eight-person Board of Directors for the nonprofit San Miguel Community Foundation.

Addie Coral Romero Joins San Miguel Community Foundation Board
By Gregory Gunter

The San Miguel Community Foundation boasts the tag line “We Live Here, We Give Here,” and in keeping with that tradition, the foundation constantly strives to expand its Board with active, bicultural local full-time residents of San Miguel.

Their newest addition to theBoard of Directors, Addie Coral Romero, proves a perfect match for all those qualifications! Originally from Puerto Rico and clearly fluent in Spanish, Addie has been a proven businesswoman and resident of San Miguel for nearly eight years.

For 30 years, Addie proved her mettle as the hugely successful publisher of Puerto Rico’s Hotel & Tourism Association hardcover tourism book titled Bienvenidos, with 200,000 copies placed in over 12,000 hotel rooms throughout Puerto Rico. She then started the softcover pocket guide Places to Go, publishing 300,000 copies annually of this guide that promoted all the islands of Puerto Rico.

Addie’s 30-year run as a Puerto Rico publisher ended with a successful sale to Verizon, who then bought out her publishing company and allowed her to follow her dream: a move to San Miguel de Allende. Soon after her arrival, Addie realized that San Miguel—like Puerto Rico-was bilingual tourism destination ripe for a guide to the local communities, events, cultural, history and shopping.

In 2011, Addie began publishing the local hardcover hotel book La Magia de Mexico, a bilingual guide to the region, focusing heavily on San Miguel de Allende, Queretaro and Guanajuato. It was with this book that your author first met Addie, serving as the lead writer for the book’s content focused on San Miguel. It was truly a labor of love for us both, writing and publishing about the pueblo we both called our new home!

Addie published La Magia de Mexico for three years before realizing that retirement was far more fun than meeting deadlines. She now enjoys investing time in entertaining and cooking—ask for her piñon recipe, the only one in San Miguel—and expanding her culinary horizons with additional cooking classes. Raised on the water, boating has always been a hobby but one she gladly forsake to enjoy the lifestyle of San Miguel.

Addie becomes the 8th member of SMCF’s Board of Directors, who includeDr. Salvador Eduardo Quiroz Saenz, Ma. Guadalupe Alvarez Brunel, Lic. Maria Teresa Garcia Dobarganes Barlow, Lic. Mary Ann Amparo Ramirez Garcia, Kathleen Mann, and Freddy Sargent York.It was an introduction by a friend of SMCF President Donna Foudray that led to Addie joining the board. As Addie admits, she likes the transparency of the SMCF financials and quickly agreed to support the organization

SMCF recently issued their fall grants—issued twice a year—to nonprofit organizations that submitted grant applications, and the SMCF board continues its mission of giving grants to those in need in our community. Their stories are heartwarming—I’ve experienced several personally—and to learn more about their mission, visit their web site at SanMiguelCommunityFoundation.org.

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