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Posted: Mar 22, 2023

Broken South Station Fire Pump Requires Around the Clock Attention from Boston (MA) Fire Department

Boston’s South Station, 700 Atlantic Avenue. (Source: Facebook)

A Boston Fire Department truck is parked outside of transit hub South Station, hose out and ready to connect to the fire hydrant in case of an emergency, wcvb.com reported. It’s a fire department detail, 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

The reason? The fire pump motor at South Station burned out and isn’t working, the report said.

It started back in January at a cost of $4,800 per day, and has totaled more than $300,000 spent so far, with more to come, the report said.

The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority said a new fire pump is on order, but it is a custom order and will take a while to arrive, according to the report. A temporary pump will eventually replace the fire detail, the report said.

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

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Posted: Mar 22, 2023

New York City Man Cited for Striking McAdoo (PA) Fire Truck

A Queens (NY) man is facing traffic citations for striking a McAdoo brush truck earlier this month, shensentinel.com reported.

The crash happened around 6 p.m. on Interstate 81 South near McAdoo on March 10, during a snow storm.

State Police at Frackville said the crash happened while McAdoo firefighters were handling another incident on the highway.

Troopers said the 2009 Ford brush truck was parked in a safe location off the right travel lane and had its emergency lights activated, providing traffic control for a different vehicle accident, the report said.

M Viloriazorrilla, 55, of the Ridgewood section of Queens, New York, was headed south in a 2008 Dodge Caravan in the left lane and driving too fast for conditions, troopers said, according to the report.

As traffic ahead of the man slowed, he attempted to enter the right lane, lost control, and struck the brush truck, the report said.

No injuries were reported.

Viloriazorrilla was cited for speeding, duty of a driver in an emergency response area, careless driving, and following too closely, the report said.

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Posted: Mar 22, 2023

Riverside (TX) VFD Receives $100K Grant for Small Brush Truck

The Riverside Volunteer Fire Department received a $100,000 grant through the Texas A&M Forest Service Rural Volunteer Fire Department Assistance Program to purchase a small brush truck, itemonline.com reported

The truck will be used to fight wildland fires and respond to water rescues, the report said. The truck, outfitted with foam and a skid unit, is fully equipped to be an initial attack response vehicle, according to the report. 

The Rural Volunteer Fire Department Assistance Program is funded by the Texas Legislature and provides cost-share funding to rural volunteer fire departments for the acquisition of firefighting vehicles, fire and rescue equipment, protective clothing, dry hydrants, computer systems and firefighter training, the report said. 

For more information on programs offered by Texas A&M Forest Service, visit texasfd.com

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Posted: Mar 22, 2023

Truxton (NY) Fire Department Adds Demo Truck to Fleet

PRESS RELEASE

In 2021, the Truxton Fire Department was awarded a sizable grant from FEMA to upgrade a 1975 engine, the department said in a Facebook post March 12.

After considerable discussion, working with the FEMA requirements, prudent money management and finally what makes the most sense for our town, this truck, No. 904, became a reality. With the grant funds and previously saved monies there was no additional borrowing or cost to the taxpayers of Truxton.

No. 904, a demo 2022 Ford F-550, has a 1250-gpm pump, a 300-gallon water tank, a 25-gallon foam tank with three SCBA seats. For accessing our rural areas it has 4-wheel drive, a shorter wheel base and a significant amount of 4” LDH.

Our thanks to all the companies, organizations and people that made this truck possible.

FEMA, Toyne, J.P.B. Fire Services, McKee Equipment, TenKate Grant Services, truck committee members, previous donors to the Truxton Fire Department, the Truxton Fire District, and the taxpayers of Truxton.

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Posted: Mar 22, 2023

Traverse City (MI) Seeks Fire Station Designs for Two Buildings

Jordan Travis
The Record-Eagle, Traverse City, Mich.
(TNS)

Mar. 21—TRAVERSE CITY — Both Traverse City Fire Department stations need work, and now the city commission wants architectural services for plans to replace the buildings.

Commissioners voted unanimously Monday to move ahead with a request for proposals for those services. They acted on recommendations from a subcommittee examining how and if the fire department could become the city’s primary ambulance transport provider.

Those recommendations in turn stem from an architect’s assessment after examining how to add gender-neutral personnel quarters to both stations, according to a memo from Mayor Richard Lewis.

He pointed to Environment Architects noting it would cost an estimated $321,000 to add 420 square feet to Station 1 and 295 square feet to Station 2. But the firm recommended a larger overhaul for both stations given the condition of both.

Station 1 is on West Front Street and a block east of Division Street, and Station 2 is on East Eighth Street across from Oakwood Cemetery, maps show.

Fire Chief Jim Tuller said his research showed fire stations are typically built with a 50- to 75-year design life, and both stations are past or near the 50-year mark. Station 2 was built in 1968 and Station 1 in 1974.

“They’re still here due largely to the work of the personnel that have worked there for many, many years taking care of the little things,” he said.

City Manager Marty Colburn echoed Lewis, saying that months of investigations into how the stations could be added to or improved ended with the conclusion that it would be better to start new.

A draft request for proposals would seek architectural services to build a new Station 1 that can house eight 24-hour personnel and eight personnel working 40 hours per week. The current building has space for four and four. A new station would also have room for 11 vehicles as opposed to 5.

At Station 2, the current building houses two 24-hour personnel and three vehicles, while the request for proposals contemplates a replacement that would house six 24-hour personnel and four vehicles, plus four equipment trailers.

That’ll allow the department to have enough firefighter paramedics available to respond to the kind of fires they more commonly handle, Tuller said. It would also shrink the reliance on neighboring fire departments to provide mutual aid.

Plus, larger stations would give the department the room it would need should city leaders decide to take over as primary transporter for ambulance services, Lewis said.

Currently, city firefighter paramedics respond to all medical calls in city limits and, if first on scene, work to stabilize a patient until current primary transporter Mobile Medical Response arrives, as previously reported. The Saginaw-based provider takes anyone needing hospitalization where city ambulances serve as backup unless MMR is not available or waiting is not an option.

Commissioner Tim Werner wanted to be sure any fire station designs would be for electrified buildings — no fossil fuel-powered heat, for example. Colburn took the board through a draft electrification policy for city owned- and -controlled buildings that would require all-electric heating, ventilation and air conditioning, among other things.

That policy might not be ready for a vote but Werner said he wanted to be sure the city’s working on building designs that follow the idea.

Colburn responded the plan is to find out how much electrified fire stations would cost, including adding solar to the designs.

Lewis said he hoped to have a better understanding of how much the stations would cost — a feasibility study completed for

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