MONROE COUNTY — If you don't live in or near a big city, volunteer firefighters will likely respond to your emergencies. However, volunteer departments need to find more people to take those calls.

The Indiana Fire Chiefs Association assembled a website to recruit new volunteers and retain their current first responders thanks to a grant from the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
More than 80 percent of Indiana's first responders are volunteers. That includes Joe McWhorter, who still volunteers with the Monroe Fire Protection District at age 78.

"I started when I was 23 and helped organize this department back in 1969," McWhorter said, "I'm not quite as fast as I was, but other than that, I'm ready to go."
Other firefighters in Monroe County such as Jaydon Hoffman start as volunteers and work their way to paid status.

"When I was 16, my mom and dad took me up to the local fire department and said, 'Go ask them,'" Hoffman said. "When someone calls 911 and dispatch doesn't know who to send, they send the fire department."
Monroe County has a mix of paid and volunteer firefighters, but McWhorter worries that it is becoming harder to find people who could replace him.

"It's so much different because you have to have more time," McWhorter said. "It takes so much time to get the schooling in and everybody is busier now. It's hard to do it."
The new website hopes to attract new firefighters who would not be able to physically stop and apply at a volunteer fire department.
-
Colts' Sauce Gardner leaves with calf injury but thinks Achilles tendon is OK
Indianapolis Colts cornerback Sauce Gardner left Sunday's 20-16 loss to the Houston Texans with a left calf injury and did not return.
Texans corral high-scoring Colts, narrow AFC South race with 20-16 win at Indy
The Houston Texans have narrowed the AFC South race with a 20-16 win over the slumping Indianapolis Colts.
Indiana State Police investigate death of Marion Health police officer
Indiana State Police are investigating the death of a 25-year-old Marion Health police officer following an incident Sunday morning at Marion Health Hospital.
No pump, no problem: Local mobile gas delivery service expands
A Hoosier startup highlighted on Small Business Saturday has grown significantly and now helps drivers fuel up without visiting gas stations.