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Wilson's fire science grads saturate KC area
By ALAN HOSKINS, Kansan Contributor
Kansas City Kansan - May 21, 2010
Check the rosters of just about any fire department in the
greater Kansas City metro area and in all likelihood you'll find
a graduate of Kansas City Kansas Community College - all
products of Mike Wilson's Fire Science program.
"Shawnee Mission, Leavenworth, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas City,
Mo., it doesn't matter, just about every department has one of
our graduates," says Wilson, who retired after 32 years as
coordinator and instructor of the Fire Science program at the
end of the Spring Semester.
Instruction has not stopped at fire science, however. Training
in Hazardous Material was added in 1998 and the role of fire
services in Homeland Security in 2006.
A leader in Hazardous Material training, Wilson's program
reached far out into the community.
"We did a lot of work in business and industry when haz mat came
into law," says Wilson. "We were teaching it almost around the
clock to companies like GM, Colgate, Proctor & Gamble and
others. Also, the EPA has used our facilities and so has the Gas
Service Co. in fighting propane fires."
Growing up in Gladstone, Mo., Wilson's interest in fire fighting
started when he joined the Gladstone volunteer fire department
while a junior at Oak Park High School.
"They didn't know I was in high school, they thought I was 18,"
says Wilson.
Drafted in 1968, he spent two years in the infantry including a
year of combat duty in Vietnam where he awarded three bronze
stars including two with 'V' (valor) devices; two Purple Hearts
and an Air Medal with 'V' devise.
Although remaining in the Army Reserves for 19 years, Wilson
left active duty in 1970, joining the Public Safety Department
in Maryville, Mo., for three years and then moving up to
Director of Public Safety for the five-county Northwest Missouri
Regional Planning Commission in Maryville.
While in Maryville, he earned a BS in Industrial Business in
1973 and a Masters in Business Administration from Northwest
Missouri in 1979.
Since then, he's added a second Masters in Curriculum and
Instruction and an Ed Specialists in Higher Education
Administration from UMKC.
Wilson joined the corporate world with Union Carbide's safety
program in Red Oak, Iowa, in 1978 but only for a year.
"I didn't particularly like the corporate world and saw an
opening in the paper for an instructor and coordinator at the
college," says Wilson, who started in the fall of 1979.
During his 32 years, change has been the norm starting with the
objectives of firemen going to college.
"When I started, firemen didn't go to college. Now it's almost a
necessity for employment. Actually, the clientele has changed
four times during my time here. First, we were educating people
already in fire service; then those wanting into fire service.
Then they had to have training before they could get an
application to get into fire service and now on-line service has
mushroomed. We're educating service men in Iraq and Afghanistan
and as far away as Japan."
Wilson won't be putting his feet up in retirement, already
securing a position editing books for Wiley & Sons Publishing. A
member of the Coast Guard Auxiliary where his expertise in
hazardous materials is a most welcome asset, he has a HAM
license and will continue weather spotting in Clay County.
A federal appointee by President Bush to the board of the U.S.
Selective Service Commission in 2005, he also continues in that
position.
He and his wife of 40 years, Mary Georginia, have three
children, Kimberly, a pharmacist in Campbell, Mo., with three
children; Michael Dustin, a member of the Missouri National
Guard who is currently serving his second term of active duty in
Iraq and has three adopted children; and Kristin, who works for
Red Bull in Kansas City. Michael D. attended KCKCC for two years
and all three are college graduates.
He leaves KCKCC with no regrets.
"Never any obstacles, they let me run the program," he says. "I
had worked with some great deans, Al Andrews, Brian Emerton, Sue
Courtney. And we had some great students who as I said are
everywhere now."
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