60 Firefighters Receive Free Cancer Screens Through DFS Program

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BRIDGEWATER, Mass. — Firefighter interest in last week's free ultrasound cancer screenings was so high that the Department of Fire Services extended the event by a full day to meet the demand, State Fire Marshal Jon M. Davine said.
 
"Firefighters are more likely to develop cancer than the public they protect," State Fire Marshal Davine said. "They're more likely to develop it earlier in life and receive a later diagnosis. Our cancer programs provide awareness, prevention, and early detection resources to help firefighters understand the risks, protect their health, and enjoy long, healthy retirements."
 
The Massachusetts Firefighting Academy contracts with volunteers and vendors to deliver cancer screenings on behalf of DFS. The program offers skin cancer screenings, chest CT scans, PSA blood tests, mammograms, and ultrasounds to eligible call, volunteer, career, and retired firefighters. Most screenings are performed at area hospitals, but last week's screenings were conducted at the DFS campus in Bridgewater.
 
Initially scheduled to run from March 4-6, the sessions quickly exceeded capacity and an extra day was added on March 3. In all, 60 firefighters received the ultrasound screening, which is a non-invasive technique that uses sound waves to reveal areas of concern in the thyroid, spleen, gall bladder, kidneys, bladder, testes, or pelvis that could be cancerous.
 
"These screenings are confidential and there is no cost to firefighters or their departments," said Abby Baker of the Massachusetts Firefighting Academy, who coordinates the DFS firefighter cancer program. "We want to screen as many firefighters as possible, and we want to make it as easy as possible."
 
The number of firefighter cancer screenings provided through the program nearly doubled from 2024 to 2025. Skin cancer screenings, which have been offered since 2018, rose from 612 to 785. Newer programs saw sharper increases: CT scans increased from 99 to 168; PSA blood tests from 44 to 160; ultrasounds from 91 to 255; and mammograms from two to nine.
 
Also in 2025, the Massachusetts Firefighting Academy rolled out a new instructor-led cancer awareness presentation in partnership with the Firefighter Cancer Support Network. The new presentation, "Doing it Right: Reducing Cancer in the Fire Service," updates an earlier cancer prevention program and highlights cancer prevention best practices on and off the job.  It also promotes the benefits of early detection through screenings and awareness of baseline health. So far this year, the Massachusetts Firefighting Academy has delivered it to about 600 new recruits, about 50 chiefs and senior officers, and about 230 firefighters at various ranks in between. Another 25 firefighters have taken a train-the-trainer course that empowers them to deliver the presentation effectively at local and regional fire departments.
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Congressman Neal Talks With Reid Middle School Students

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

Congressman Neal answered questions from students as part of their civics projects. 

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — U.S. Rep. Richard Neal answered questions from an eighth-grade class at Reid Middle School on Thursday. 

Students in Susan Mooney's class prepared questions related to their civics projects, ranging from government transparency and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to sports to mental health.  

"Be discerning, be fact-driven, and you know what? As I say to my own children, resist emotional decision making," Neal told the class. 

"You generally will come up with the wrong decision if it's very emotional, and the other part I can give you, an important part of my career: you're always going to give a better answer tomorrow." 

In Massachusetts, eighth-grade students are required to complete a civics project focusing on community issues, research, and action.

Students focusing their project on ICE said they found that the U.S. Department of Homeland Security is tasked with protecting citizens. They asked Neal why ICE is controlling DHS when agents "do the opposite." 

"ICE needs to be reformed and restrained, but a lot of it has much to do with the president's position on it," he said, adding that the fundamental job of the federal government is to protect its people. 

"We just need to know who's in the country for a variety of reasons. When the president says he's rooting out the criminals, nobody disagrees with that, but that's not what's happening, is it? It's now people that are just showing up in the courthouse to do what we call 'regularizing their status' that are being apprehended." 

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