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Posted: Nov 2, 2022

Maugansville (MD) Walk-In Rescue Is Built on a Mack by 4 Guys

Apparatus ideas

The Maugansville (MD) Goodwill Volunteer Fire Company was formed in the late 1920s. It started operation with a 1928 Ford Model AA truck with a front-mounted pump.

BOB VACCAROBob Vaccaro

Later, it operated with a 1980 GMC step van for rescue operations, which was replaced in 1999 with a Pierce Arrow walk-around rescue with a 16-foot box.

The fire company’s first-due response area consists of 25 square miles that has a railroad line, an airport, an interstate, feed mills, warehousing for Amazon and other businesses, farms, and single-family dwellings. The department is also second due for Hagerstown, MD; Greencastle, PA; and a mountainous region in the area.

Maugansville Chief Mark Miller says the latest squad apparatus took about five years from inception to delivery.

“Prior to my becoming fire chief, the past chief and apparatus committee presented a squad specification to our membership,” Miller says. “Then, when I became chief, we met with the various fire apparatus builders just to research what was out there. We then made changes and presented them to our membership.”

 A compartment for a battery-powered tool.

The first consi

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Posted: Nov 2, 2022

Photo Apparatus of the Day: November 2, 2022

Midwest Fire—Roxbury (NY) Fire Department mini pumper. Ford F-550 crew cab and chassis; Ford Power Stroke 6.7L diesel 330-hp engine; Hale DSD 1,250-gpm pump; APR polypropylene 300-gallon water tank; 12-gallon foam cell; All-Poly™ construction; Hale SmartFOAM 2.1A single-agent foam system; Elkhart Sidewinder EXM remote monitor. Dealer: Brett Jensen, Midwest Fire, Luverne, MN.


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Posted: Nov 2, 2022

VIDEO: Fire Truck Swerves Around Train Crossing Arms in Schuylkill County (PA)

The driver of a fire engine took a chance on the way to a fire scene Saturday afternoon in Tamaqua (PA), WNEP.com reported

It was caught on video. The fire truck drove around railroad crossing arms just seconds before a passenger train rolled through, the video shows.

The fire chief of Tamaqua acknowledged that the decision to go over the railroad crossing was the wrong one, the report said. 

He said the situation has been addressed and that they are lucky no one was hurt, according to the report.

The driver of the engine will not face any charges, the report said.

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Posted: Nov 2, 2022

Officials Investigating ‘Provocative’ Halloween Video Appearing to Be Filmed at DC Fire Station

DC Fire officials are investigating a provocative video that appears to have been filmed both inside and outside a Southwest D.C. fire station for Halloween, Fox5DC.com reported

It’s not clear whether any DCFEMS members were involved. How this was allowed to happen is another question FOX 5 is told is still under investigation.

For more on this story, please go to Fox5DC.com.

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Posted: Nov 2, 2022

Colorado Springs (CO) Fire Department Opens New Station in SE Region

O’Dell Isaac

The Gazette (Colorado Springs, Colo.)

(MCT)

Nov. 1—Citing a need to expand the city’s emergency infrastructure, the Colorado Springs Fire Department officially opened its newest station, Fire Station 23, in a brief ceremony on Tuesday afternoon.

Members of the City Council, Colorado Springs Police Department, El Paso County Sheriff’s Office and other local leaders were on hand for the ribbon cutting outside the new depot at 393 Printers Parkway, near the Fire Department’s headquarters.

The city broke ground on Station 23 in August 2021 and the department had hoped to open the building in July of this year, but supply chain issues slowed the process, Fire Chief Randy Royal said.

The station will double as a radio shop, which should help streamline communications and reduce response times, officials said. The department’s goal is to reach any location in the city in eight minutes or less at least 90% of the time, City Council President Tom Strand said.

The presence of an additional station southeast of downtown should lessen the burden on neighboring fire crews and help the department meet the increasing needs of a growing city, station Capt. Juliet Draper said.

“Colorado Springs is growing, and the population is getting more dense,” Draper said. “Station 23 was created to take some of the slack off our busier stations.”

As the city has grown, so has the Fire Department’s capabilities, Draper said.

“We don’t just fight structure fires anymore,” she said. “We’ve got specialized response teams like Hazmat, Tactical Medical, Wildland — we’ve taken on so many different arms, we’re like an octopus.”

The new radio shop will be a critical part of the city’s firefighting apparatus, Mayor John Suthers said.

“Clear communication is very critical to public safety,” the mayor said. “This new shop will be an important communications hub for the department.”

The southeast region is one of the city’s busiest areas for emergency calls, Royal said, and Station 23 is expected to hit the ground running.

“We’ll probably be the fourth or fifth busiest station in the city, right away,” he said.

The city does not plan to stop with Station 23, Suthers said. Officials plan to add two more depots — stations 24 and 25 — at some point in 2024.

“Service calls have progressively increased over the years,” Suthers said. “Our public safety infrastructure will need to keep pace with the city’s growth.”

After the speeches concluded, the Fire Department’s color guard raised the station’s flag; Suthers, Royal and other officials cut the ceremonial ribbon; and Station 23 was officially in service.

“We’re looking forward to joining the other 22 stations in serving the community of Colorado Springs,” Draper said. “Station 23 is ready.”

___

(c)2022 The Gazette (Colorado Springs, Colo.)

Visit The Gazette (Colorado Springs, Colo.) at www.gazette.com

Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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