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Posted: Sep 21, 2024

Cedar Falls (IA) City Council Authorizes Aerial Platform Purchase for $2.1M

HOLLY HUDSON HILL
Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier, Iowa
(TNS)

CEDAR FALLS — The city is moving forward with the purchase of a new fire truck.

The City Council unanimously authorized the purchase at its Monday meeting.

The new truck will replace a 30-year-old vehicle and is scheduled for purchase in 2028. The item is being brought forward now because the bid and build process takes about three years to complete.

Brian Heath reviewed the process with the council.

“The build time for an apparatus like this is typically around three years,” he said. “This is a platform aerial (truck). It is a little more involved than a normal pumper.”

Bids were received from Toyne, Inc., for $2.23 million and Feld Fire Equipment for $2.11 million, however both dealers are offering discounts for early payment, bringing the Toyne bid down to $2.1 million and the Feld bid down to $1.95 million.

The Public Works Department recommended the city accept the Toyne bid, as Feld required the truck to be paid off within 90 days to receive the discount, which was not budgeted.

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(c)2024 Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier (Waterloo, Iowa)

Visit Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier (Waterloo, Iowa) at www.wcfcourier.com

Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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Posted: Sep 20, 2024

WATCH | Keyport (NJ) Boat Fire at Brown’s Point Marina

Lincoln Hose 2273 (Keyport, NJ) made the following Facebook post recently:

On Monday, Sept. 10, just before 3 p.m. Monmouth County communications started receiving calls for a boat fire at Brown’s Point Marina. Lincoln Hose 2273 responded first due with seven.

Upon arrival, the fire marshal confirmed three boats fully involved were docked on the far side of the marina. The wagon lay 700-feet of 5-inch supply hose, stretched a 400-foot pre-connect 1¾-inch handline and connected it to 300-feet of 2½-inch attack line. By the time members got the 700-foot line in place the chauffeur had the water supply established and watered the line.

The main fire was quickly knocked protecting the exposures. Once the fuel tanks let go our box alarm companies helped stretch an additional 2-inch attack line and held the fire until the fire boats could finish the job. Thank you to all agencies that assisted.

There were 1,550-feet of hose that came off the wagon in total.

Thank you to not only our box alarm companies but Hazlet Fire Department Marine 39-3, Perth Amboy Marine 5, FDNY Marine 8/9.


Two Firefighters Hurt, Three Boats Destroyed in Fire at NJ Marina, Officials say
Jeff Goldman
nj.com
(TNS)

Two firefighters suffered minor injuries battling a fire that destroyed three boats docked at a marina in Keyport on Monday, authorities said.

The fire broke out shortly before 3 p.m. at Brown’s Point Marina, Keyport police and the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office said.

One firefighter was treated at the scene while another was treated and released from an area hospital, a prosecutor’s office spokesman said. Firefighters cleared the scene at about 6:30 p.m.

The pier also was left with minor damage, officials said. The fire does not appear to be suspicious but remains under investigation.

The marina, located on West Front Street, sits on the Matawan Creek.

Our journalism needs your support. Please subscribe today to NJ.com.

Jeff Goldman may be reached at jeff_goldman@njadvancemedia.com.

©2024 Advance Local Media LLC. Visit nj.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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Posted: Sep 20, 2024

Apparatus Purchasing: NFPA and Direct Tank Fills

By Bill Adams

This article was originally intended to discuss the working ends of the mobile water supply apparatus (aka tankers and tenders) displayed at FDIC International 2024. After a postshow review of the many photographs I took during the hubbub of setup and the initial opening of the exhibit floor, I have made a revision.

The photos show more than a dozen apparatus by a like number of manufacturers featuring rear direct tank fills. There were many variations in their installations. Included are the types of apparatus on which they were provided, the number of fills provided, their physical locations, valve and piping sizes, as well as labeling or lack thereof. Those differences warranted further analysis and a later topic change.

The fireground tactics and strategies of individual fire departments are not debated or challenged—nor should they be. The accoutrements fire departments choose and where they are mounted on their apparatus are solely their decision as it should be. Why they did so might be interesting to readers. However, more noteworthy is what, if any, regulatory standards were, could have been, or should have been followed.

stacked hose
1 Three stacked hose connections are on the rear right side of this Fort Garry pumper. An LDH direct tank fill is on top, a 2.50-inch discharge is in the middle, and a 6-inch steamer is on the bottom. NFPA 1900 does not require a direct tank fill on pumpers. (Photos by author.)
courtesy of authors
2 This tanker by Midwest has a nondirectional rear dump valve, an LDH direct tank fill, and a 3-inch direct tank fill reduced to 2.50-inch Storz. All are reachable from ground level. If it sports a dump valve on each side, it will be NFPA 1900 compliant.

TANKS AND NFPA 1900

Years ago, most apparatus manufacturers fabricated many of the major component parts on their apparatus in-house, including the water (booster) tank. With the acceptance of nonmetallic water tanks today, many apparatus manufacturers outsource tanks to manufacturers specializing in using the tank material chosen. Regardless of how important it is to end users whether tanks are built in-house or outsourced, the type of material used and the advantages or disadvantages are irrelevant for this discussion. Ascertaining the requirements for direct tank fills is.

Most queries about direct tank fills led back to National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) 1900, Standard for Aircraft Rescue and Firefighting Vehicles, Automotive Fire Apparatus, Wildland Fire Apparatus, and Automotive Ambulances. The requirements of its Chapter 17 Fire Apparatus-Water Tanks (NFPA 1901/1906) and, in particular, Section 17.5.1-External Fill appear to be confusing and are ambiguous to me. More questions were raised than answers found.

Frustrating was trying to determine which portions of Chapter 17 were applicable to the various types of appa-ratus recognized by the standard. This was compounded by features found on the undefined but very popular tanker-pumpers and pumper-tankers, which NFPA 1900 does not recognize. There is no intent to disparage the NFPA for not addressing every concern and question raised herein. Perhaps no one has inquired previously.

ANNEX A

In the past, condemnatory comments have been made about the scope and amount of material in prior NFPA fire apparatus standards’ appendice

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Posted: Sep 20, 2024

Manhattan (NY) Emergency Response Times at Record Highs as Congestion Worsens: Report

Evan Simko-Bednarski
New York Daily News
(TNS)

In their most dire moments — waiting for an ambulance, a fire truck or the police — Manhattanites are caught in a literal jam.

That’s the conclusion of a report expected Friday from State Sen. Brad Hoylman-Sigal and former city Traffic Commissioner “Gridlock” Sam Schwartz, who found that vehicle speeds in Midtown and lower Manhattan are slower than they’ve ever been — and that’s causing emergency response times across all agencies to rise to record levels.

Using GPS data from taxicabs and other for-hire vehicles, Schwartz estimates the average speed of vehicular traffic in Midtown to be just 4.8 mph. The average speed of traffic in all of Manhattan south of 60th St. is slightly faster, but not by much — vehicles average 6.9 mph.

“Since 1971 we started regularly collecting [traffic speed] data,” Schwartz told the Daily News. “These are astoundingly low speeds — and they’re dangerous.”

Hoylman-Sigal — who represents Manhattan’s West Side — told the News that he became concerned about emergency response time after he happened upon a man “writhing in pain” on W. 28th St. on June 25.

“We dialed 911 repeatedly,” he said of himself and a group of bystanders. “We tried to flag down a private vehicle, and ran to different corners of the block hoping to see an emergency vehicle appear.

“And one didn’t until 37 minutes later,” he said. “I just find it unacceptable.”

Hoylman-Sigal said he’s since checked up on the man, who has recovered.

Citywide, crawling traffic has crippled response times over the past decade, Schwartz and Hoylman-Sigal said.

EMS average response times to life-threatening situations has climbed from roughly 9 minutes and 40 seconds in 2014 to 12 minutes and 26 seconds this year, a 29 percent increase, according to the report. City data show increased travel time is responsible for a minute and a half of the added delay.

The NYPD’s responses to so-called “critical” incidents — like shootings, robberies or burglaries — has gone up 23 percent over the same period, from just under 8 minutes in 2014 to 9 minutes and 41 seconds in 2024. Most of that difference — 1 minute and 23 seconds — can be ascribed to increased travel time.

The FDNY’s medical emergency response time has soared in 10 years, up from 8 minutes and 19 seconds to 14 minutes and 16 seconds — a 72 percent climb. Increased travel time due to traffic accounts for 2 minutes of that 6-minute delay.

It was not immediately clear what other factors have contributed to the dramatic increase in the FDNY’s medical response time, but the mayor’s yearly management report said the department was currently working to reduce turnaround times while dropping patients off at local hospitals.

In emergencies, minutes matter, Schwartz and Hoylman-Sigal contend, citing multiple studies indicating that an extra minute or two in travel can be the difference between survival or recovery in strokes or cardiac arrest incidents.

“New Yorkers and visitors are at an increased risk every day due to worsening traffic congestion,” the report s

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Posted: Sep 20, 2024

Eight Firefighters Injured in Fire Truck Rollover on Southern CA Freeway

Andrea Klick
The Orange County Register
(TNS)

Eight Orange County firefighters returning from a long shift fighting the Airport fire on Thursday were injured after a fire utility truck rolled over on a toll road, officials said

Six of the Orange County Fire Authority firefighters were seriously hurt after their truck crashed and overturned, said Fire Chief Brian Fennessy. The crash was reported around 6:50 p.m. on the northbound 241 Toll Road just north of Portola Avenue.

A crew from OCFA arrived minutes after the crash and began medical treatment before requesting additional support. Nine paramedics units, 12 ambulances and three helicopters responded.

Seven firefighters were transported to several area hospitals by ambulance, and one was transported by an OCFA helicopter, officials said

Six firefighters were seriously hurt, and two had minor injuries, KCAL reported. CHP investigators told KCAL that the fire utility truck and a vehicle in front of it swerved because of a ladder in the road. The fire truck then collided with a nearby guard rail and overturned, KCAL reported.

The firefighters had just finished a 12-hour shift fighting the Airport fire, which has charred thousands of acres of wildland in Orange and Riverside counties over the last several days, when the crash occurred on the toll road, Fennessy said.

Fire crews who responded to the crash were participating in a critical incident stress debriefing at OCFA headquarters Thursday night, Fennessy said.

“You can only imagine how traumatic it is,” Fennessy said, “for their brother and sister firefighters to see them injured like that on the freeway.”

Fennessy asked that the public pray for the injured firefighters and their families.

Traffic on northbound State Route 133 was being diverted to exit to Irvine Boulevard, and onramps for northbound State Route 133 were  closed at Irvine Boulevard, the Irvine Police Department said.

The 241 also was closed in both directions Thursday night, KCAL reported.

©2024 MediaNews Group, Inc. Visit ocregister.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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