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Posted: Oct 4, 2022

Southside (AL) to Build New $4.1 Million Fire Station

The Southside City Council last week finalized actions toward construction of a new fire station, approving building a facility that will move the city toward a combination paid and volunteer department, GadsdenTimes.com reported.

The council had previously awarded a bid for $3.9 million for a new station on Alabama Highway 77 across from New Seasons Church, the report said.

The loan with Metro Bank is a construction loan; a fire official said the city approved for a USDA loan of up to $4.1 million at an interest rate of 2.5% that will be used to pay off the Metro Bank loan, the report said. That loan, at that rate, will be paid out over 30-years.

A fire official said the plan for department’s future is to have two paid firefighters to man the station, and to ask volunteers to rotate staying at the station as well so that personnel and equipment will be in the same location, shortening response time to fire and medic calls, according to the report.

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Posted: Oct 4, 2022

Photo Apparatus of the Day: October 4, 2022

Pierce—York Center Fire Protection District, Lombard, IL, walk-around rescue. Enforcer cab and chassis; Detroit Diesel DD13 525-hp engine; 20.5-foot walk-around rescue body; Onan 30-kW generator. Dealer: Vince Baudek, MacQueen Emergency, Aurora, IL.

PREVIOUS PHOTO OF THE DAY >>

MORE FIRE APPARATUS ARTICLES >>

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Posted: Oct 4, 2022

Man Steals Jaws of Life Off Fire Truck in Clayton County (GA)

At Clayton County Fire Station 2 in Forest Park, you would typically see the fire engine out on the driveway, Fox 5 Atlanta reported. The fire chief said the department has canceled its open-door policy with the community after a thief stole the jaws of life off a fire truck.

Surveillance video from September 9 showed a black Dodge Challenger pull up to Fire Station No. 2. A man got out, walked to a storage compartment and removed the jaws of life, the report said.

The jaws of life is known as an extrication tool. Firefighters use it to force apart jammed car doors after an accident.

The jaws of life is valued at more than $20,000. One news story reported a man using it to open ATMs, according to the report.

Clayton County police have asked for the public’s help in identifying the man. You can leave an anonymous tip with Crime Stoppers by call 404-577-TIPS.

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Posted: Oct 4, 2022

Twin Lakes (OK) Fire Station Reopens After Devastating Fire Last Year

The Twin Lakes Fire Department opened its new fire station Sunday, a year after it burned to the ground, KFOR.com reported.

The department held a special ceremony and ribbon cutting ceremony outside the new fire station in Logan County, the report said.

The new building cost more than $430,000 and much of the equipment inside was donated from fellow fire stations and the community, according to the report.

Shortly after the station opened Sunday, the team was called out to help aid the Cashion Fire Department on a call, allowing the Twin Lakes Fire Department to get back to saving lives and its community under its new roof, the report said.

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Posted: Oct 4, 2022

Hoover (AL) Council Votes to Buy Land to Relocate Fire Station No. 1

The Hoover City Council on Monday night voted to pay $1.3 million for a former bank property on U.S. 31 in the Green Valley area so the Hoover Fire Department can relocate Fire Station No. 1 there, HooverSun.com reported.

The property, owned by Village Stations Inc., is between Salvatore’s Pizza & Pasta and the Stone Creek Dental Care building and has 120 feet of frontage along U.S. 31, a city official said.

For many years the city has been trying to find land to relocate Fire Station No. 1, the report said.

The existing station, which is behind the Hoover Court shopping center, is the oldest municipal building in the city. It was built by volunteer firefighters and used as both a fire station and meeting place even before the city incorporated, according to the report.

While it has been renovated and expanded over the years and functioned well for 50 to 60 years, it’s still old and not as functional, modern and visible as city officials would like it to be, the report said.

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