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Posted: Sep 21, 2022

Kuna (ID) Fire Requests New Station, Firefighters to Keep Pace with Rising Calls

The Kuna Rural Fire District is asking for a new station and six permanent firefighters to keep up with increased demand, KTVB.com reported.

The additions will be up for vote in November’s general election through a levy increase and a bond, the report said.

The fire district’s population, which covers some areas outside of Kuna, is projected to increase 74% in the next 10 years, according to the report.

Kuna Fire has one fire station and 15 firefighters, five per shift. The station serves 34,000 residents and 110 square miles. Recommendations say that communities should have one fire station for every 10,000 people, the report said.

With the booming population, emergency call volumes to the Kuna Rural Fire District have increased 72% in the past decade, the report said. The station sees about 2,000 emergency calls per year. Almost a quarter of those calls are overlapping, where multiple emergency calls come in at the same time. 

 

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Posted: Sep 21, 2022

Shortage of Working Vehicles Could Spread Dallas (TX) Fire-Rescue Even Thinner

Nine of Dallas Fire-Rescue’s 23 frontline fire trucks have mechanical issues and are out of service. All of the department’s backup trucks are in use, leaving it two short of being fully operational, DallasObserver.com reported.

It could take two weeks to bring the trucks back into service, which is why the city is working on an emergency rental agreement to cover the shortage, a fire official said, according to the report. These rented trucks could be available as early as this week.

Another fire official said the shortage could translate into more calls for specific fire stations and spread department resources even thinner, the report said.

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Posted: Sep 21, 2022

Several businesses damaged in fire at Lynnwood strip mall

Emergency crews are battling a fire at a Lynnwood strip mall early Wednesday morning that has shut down a portion of the highway nearby. The fire was reported just before 3:30 a.m. at Highway 99 and 156th St SW in Lynnwood. There have been no injuries reported, authorities said. Highway 99 was fully reopened at about 7 a.
- PUB DATE: 9/21/2022 6:47:00 AM - SOURCE: KING-TV NBC 5 Seattle
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Posted: Sep 21, 2022

Athens (OH) May Pay Significantly Less Than Initial Estimate for New Fire Station Property

The price the city of Athens (OH) pays for the land to build a new fire station on may be significantly less than an initial estimate, WOUB.org reported.

The 10.6 acre lot along Stimson Avenue just past the roundabout appraised for about $202,000, a city official told the city council at its meeting Monday, the report said.

A preliminary appraisal had put the value at $350,000 to $550,000, but that did not factor in the restrictions Ohio University, which owns the land, is placing on its use after the sale, according to the report.

The university’s board of trustees agreed to sell the property to the city with the following conditions: the city can develop up to three acres; about six acres must be maintained as green space; and the university can lease back up to one acre at a cost of $1 per year to build a police station if it desires to at some point, the report said.

A city official said these restrictions of the property’s use decreased its value. The appraisal must be reviewed before the price is final, the report said.

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Posted: Sep 21, 2022

Pierce’s Frontline Communications Builds Three Disaster Response Vehicles for Gulf Coast State (FL) College

By Alan M. Petrillo

Frontline Communications, a division of Pierce Manufacturing Inc. and a subsidiary of Oshkosh Corp., has vast experience in building custom vehicles for its customers, but when Gulf Coast State (FL) College came to it with a problem to be solved, it was what a Frontline regional vice president calls “a whole lot more custom.”

Andy Callaway, Southern U.S. regional vice president of Frontline, says Gulf Coast State College came to Frontline with a big problem to be solved. “Trying to operate in a post-disaster environment like a hurricane meant they had great difficulty in getting large amounts of data from point A to point B, like to an Emergency Operations Center (EOC),” Callaway points out.

Melanie Boyd, chair of Gulf Coast State’s business and technical division, says after Category 5 hurricane Michael came through the area in 2018, resulting in extensive damage and communications challenges, the college determined to be prepared for the next big weather event to hit the area. “Through a Triumph Grant, we purchased one C-33 Mobile Command Center and two C-25 Mobile Command Vehicles, with some of the most advance features we’ve built into specialty vehicles to date,” she says.

Boyd notes that the Gulf Coast State’s Tempest program has two electro-mechanical technician/BLOS pilot/radar operators, Fred Stevenson and Kevin Ward. Stevenson is a retired U.S. Air Force veteran; Ward, a U.S. Navy vet.  Boyd says, ” They also are graduates of the Unmanned Vehicle Systems associate’s degree program at Gulf Coast State College.

Rob McAtee, sales representative for Ten-8 Fire & Safety, who sold the vehicles to Gulf Coast State College, says the C-34 Mobile Command Unit is on an Acela 6×6 chassis with a 113-gallon extended range fuel tank, custom entry steps to the rear, a perimeter camera system, a roof mounted hoist system for mast top antennas, a 42-inch Will-Burt mast, and a 20-foot electric awning. The rig also has Whelen LED emergency lighting, a 43-inch exterior monitor with a fold-down work station, custom aluminum storage cabinets, and a galley with a refrigerator, microwave and coffee maker.

Gulf Coast State also had Frontline build these two C-25 Mobile Command Vehicles on Ford F-550 4×4 chassis and four-door cabs.

Boyd points out that the units carry unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV), as well as a terrestrial Guardian S robot that is able to enter buildings and capture video for incident commanders. “We also have an EMILY robotic vehicle for water rescue,” she says, “and are able to respond to any of the eight neighboring counties, and other areas of Florida through mutual aid.”

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