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Posted: Jan 11, 2018

Work On Fire Station Delayed Due To Money

Though designs for both a temporary station at the Teton County Fairgrounds and Station No. 1 are complete, initial bids for the temporary station were more than double previous estimates, throwing a half-million-dollar monkey wrench in the process.

“We did not envision the temporary fire station would need to be built to fire station specifications because it was a temporary building,” Chief Brady Hansen said. “We envisioned building it more for the end user.”

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Posted: Jan 11, 2018

Portsmouth Fire Department to purchase hundreds of turnout suits

 Forty more will be purchased with the help of a grant. 

The turnout gear will help firefighters improve self-decontamination after being exposed to carcinogens in the line of duty.

The fire department plans to purchase new second gear suits yearly so that each fire

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Posted: Jan 11, 2018

Ambulance districts add new equipment to increase employee safety

The board of directors in both districts approved the purchase of the Stryker Power Load system to outfit a total of seven ambulances, which came in at a total of $179,000 in Marion County and $40,000 in Ralls County.

According to John Nemes, chief/director of both districts, the purchase is an investment towards the safety of their employees and patients.Read more

Posted: Jan 11, 2018

New Fire Station in Katy, Texas, to Include Phoenix G2 Alerting System

The 12,999-square-foot station includes pods for each company within the fire department, explained David Slattery, of Slattery Tackett Architects, LLP, the architectural firm that designed the building. For example, emergency medical responders and the ladder company each would have a pod.

Brawner compared it to a college dorm room with a sitting area and then bedrooms in a suite. That will provide individual privacy, he added, noting the responders include men and women.

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Posted: Jan 11, 2018

Elkhart Fire Department Installs New Alerting System for More Efficient Response Times

Until now, dispatchers have dispatched a call to the fire department as they always have. The dispatcher receives a call about an emergency, once the call is completed the dispatcher then alerts the stations nearest the scene.  

It is expected that the new system could reduce the response time for firefighters anywhere from 25 seconds to a minute or more depending on the length of the call made by someone and the details they are providing.

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