The Fireman’s Daughter
This article appeared in the Winter 2008 issue of Texoma Living!.
by Nancy Bush Shirley
My dad, J.D. Bush, was a civilian firefighter, Crew Chief, at Perrin Air Force Base for 28 years. He retired when the base closed in 1971. I started to work for Chief Bill Palya in November 2001. When he told me that he was trying to get possession of the old fire station, I was thrilled. The building has basically remained empty for over 30 years. Tenants came and went, but the site deteriorated over time without constant upkeep. It took 14 years of wrangling with the powers that be at Grayson County Airport (now North Texas Regional Airport), but Bill finally found himself the owner of a shabby, gutted, broken-down building. The remodeling project was probably even more than anyone imagined, but it finally came together, and Haz-Co has its new home. Walking inside the building for the first time in many years, the memories flooded over me. When my sister, Jane, and I would visit Dad at work, he would let us sit in the fire truck and hit the button to blow the siren—what a thrill that was! As Haz-Co took ownership of the building’s structure—and spirit—I thought to myself how proud my Dad would be if he were alive to see all of the care and love put into the remodeling project. After being vacant for 30 years the old fire station has come back to life. The training center is still a work in progress—it probably will always be changed and adapted. Recruits will pass through the doors—some will make it, others will not. Those that do graduate can feel proud that they have been a part of a proud history of firefighting and a continuing tradition of saving property and lives. From my office in the facility I watch the men and women file into the classroom, and then out into the truck bays. It feel good knowing that I’m sitting in the very same office my Dad occupied so many years ago.
Featured Archive Story

Lightning Bugs
Running through the dusk with an empty jar, trying to catch a fleck of living light has long been a part of summer memories for children enchanted by the light show that goes on in the countryside at twilight. Called lightning bugs in the South, fireflies in the North, luciérnagas in Spanish, and mouches à feu in Cajun, the beetles of the lamprydae family are complex creatures worthy of investigation.
Category: FOB

B&B for Birds
By Gene Lenore
While much of the wildlife of North Texas is slowing the pace of their activities in anticipation of the onset of winter, at Hagerman National Wildlife Refuge along Lake Texoma and Big Mineral Creek, the waterfowl are about to reach the peak of their seasonal cycle.
Category: FOB

Brad Underwood: The Right Person in the Right Seat
There is a wire-mesh business-card holder on Brad Underwood’s desk in his office at the TAPS headquarters in Sherman. The cards in the holder face Underwood’s chair. “Most of the people who come in here already know who I am,” he said. The real purpose of the holder is to support a button attached to the back, facing the visitor. It reads, “But we’ve always done it this way,” in the middle of a circle with a slash, the international shorthand for “don’t.”
Category: People
North Texas Regional Airport, TX
Last Updated on May 21 2012, 2:15 am CDT
Weather by NOAA
Current Conditions: Fair
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Wind: North at 0mph
Humidity: 88%
Dewpoint: 59.0°F
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