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Posted: Jun 15, 2021

Dover-Foxcroft (ME) Fire Department to Acquire Pumper Fire Apparatus

The Dover-Foxcroft Fire Department will upgrade a 1999 pumper truck for a new model in 2022, reports Piscataquis Observer.

Fire department officials began working with three companies to replicate the pumper truck that will be replaced. Allegiance Fire & Rescue will manufacture a Pierce Enforcer 1500 GPM Top Mount Pumper for $702,965.

The fire department has been working on upgrades. A ladder truck was recently delivered and is now being readied for use. The second piece is the pumper truck and the third component is airpacks. The next month the town should learn if its airpack grant is successful. Seventeen airpacks are 29 years old and are not as safety compliant as current models.

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Posted: Jun 15, 2021

Civilian Rescue: The Reason We Exist

SPONSORS: Columbia Southern University Education Program

DATE: July 27, 2021 | 1 PM EDT

DURATION: 1 Hour.

CEU: A certificate of attendance will be offered.

PRESENTED BY: Anthony Kastros, Brian Brush

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This webcast emphasizes the need to refocus the fire service on civilian rescue. The fire service has done a great job of emphasizing the need for firefighter safety, especially over the past 25 years. Rapid intervention, two out, the 16 Firefighter Life Safety Initiatives, Project Mayday, and many other efforts have been a critical part of the overall firefighter safety enterprise. These groundbreaking efforts have undoubtedly saved firefighter lives.

The time has come to place an equal emphasis on civilian rescue, including quantitative and qualitative data collection, tactical considerations, and command techniques that can increase our success rate toward civilian rescue. We will look at the latest statistical data regarding civilian rescue and how this awareness may increase emphasis and training culture toward the civilian victim. 

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Presented By:

Anthony Kastros, a 33-year veteran of the fire service, is a retired battalion chief with the Sacramento (CA) Metro Fire Department and the owner of Trainfirefighters.com. He is the author of Mastering the Fire Service Assessment Center , 2nd Edition; the video series Mastering Fireground Command-Calming the Chaos ! and the video Mastering Unified Command (Fire Engineering). He was the keynote speaker for FDIC 2013 and the 2019 George D. Post Instructor of the Year. He teaches command, tactics, leadership, promotion, and officer development to fire departments throughout America.

Brian Brush, a 20-year veteran of the fire service, is a Training Division sergeant at Edmond (OK) Fire Rescue. He has a bachelor’s degree in fire and emergency services administration and a Fire Officer designation from CPSE. He instructs on a national level and writes for Fire Engineering.

Sponsored By: Columbia Southern University Education Program

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Posted: Jun 15, 2021

Meet Squad 6: Salem (OH) Fire Department’s 2022 Ford E-450 Super Duty Osage

The Salem (OH) Fire Department recently added Squad 6—a 2022 Ford E-450 Super Duty Osage ambulance—to its fleet, reports morningjournalnews.com, and expects to put it into service Wednesday afternoon.

The city spent $135,000 from Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act funds to purchase the apparatus from Myers Equipment in Canfield. It cost an additional $8,700 for the sirens, extra equipment wiring, paint, and graphics. The digital mobile radio still needs to be installed at an estimated cost of $2,500 to $2,800.

The department had been responding via engine to all medical calls, but now, with the ambulance, crews will have the option to transport a victim instead of waiting for an ambulance.

KLG and EMT are the two private ambulance companies located in the city. They respond to emergencies but are sometimes unavailable. Now when there’s a medical call, if one private company isn’t available, then dispatch will call the second private company. If neither is available, Squad 6 will transport.

The department already had a cot, and all the medical equipment and supplies on Engine 2 will be moved into Squad 6. All firefighters in the department have EMT certification, with 13 EMTs and three certified as both EMTs and medics.

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Posted: Jun 15, 2021

Junction City (KY) Fire Department Moves into New Station

The Junction City (KY) Fire Department recently moved into its new station at the city’s municipal building on Shelby Street, reports amnews.com.

It was fortuitous timing, as the next night the crew answered its first emergency call from the new digs.

Fire officials also asked city council to approve spending some of the department’s surplus state aid money on an electronic key-pad lock, e-dispatch computer program, and an emergency reporting system. The council unanimously approved the purchases.

The key-pad lock had already been bought; the e-dispatch costs $583 a year; and the emergency reporting system costs $958 a year.

Photo via Facebook
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Posted: Jun 15, 2021

First Three Recipients Announced in the Intelagard Macaw® CAFS Backpack Giveaway

The National Volunteer Fire Council (NVFC), Intelagard, and National Foam have united to support the volunteer fire service by awarding nine NVFC members with a Macaw® Backpack compressed air foam system (CAFS) and nozzle kit, five gallons of Knockdown® firefighting foam, and four gallons of EasyDECON® DF200. Each package is worth $6,500. Winners are being announced monthly from June through August.

The Intelagard Macaw® Backpack provides versatile power in a totally independent and portable CAF system. More powerful than standard fire extinguishers, the multipurpose Macaw® can be used for fire suppression, exposure protection, mop-up, hazardous materials cleanup, and decontamination. National Foam’s Knockdown® foam is a unique, environmentally responsible Class A foam concentrate that provides unmatched firefighting performance and flexibility. Knockdown® is specially designed for use in Class A/B foam systems and is excellent for use in CAFS.

The first three recipients of this award are the Deansboro (NY) Fire Department, Ottawa Lake (MI) Fire Department, and Seward (AK) Volunteer Fire Department.

Deansboro Fire Department
The Deansboro Fire Department (DFD) is a small, all-volunteer department located in rural upstate New York. DFD’s 40 volunteers protect approximately 60 square miles and 2,500 people, responding to around 130 calls annually. Furthermore, they provide mutual aid to three neighboring departments. Despite this, they face a manpower shortage, especially during the day when many of their volunteers are working their day jobs. Due to budgetary constraints, it would be difficult for DFD to purchase a CAFS backpack without outside help.

“I believe this backpack will only enhance our capabilities and strengthen our usefulness within our community,” said first assistant chief David Parda. “We don’t have fancy trucks or a new firehouse, but what we do have is a department that is capable of handling whatever comes our way. This product would only add to the level of great service we provide.”

Ottawa Lake Fire Department
Located in rural southeast Michigan, Ottawa Lake Fire Department’s 26 volunteers protect approximately 20 square miles and 2,300 people, answering an average of 200 calls annually. The department responds to a variety of fires at the different commercial and industrial areas in their district, including many that require the use of foam such as agricultural grain, liquid petroleum natural gas, and fertilizer fires.

“[We] have two grain elevators within our district with grain piles that are over 15 feet tall, and with the CAFS backpack, a firefighter can get to the top of a grain pile to knock fire down faster and safer instead of pulling a hose all the way to the top of the pile,” said department clerk and station radio operator Dennis Reitzel. “With CAFS backpacks, firefighters will be ready to fight a fire upon immediate arrival on scene while other firefighters are getting hoses pulled and charged with water and foam.”

Seward Volunteer Fire Department
The Seward Volunteer Fire Department is a small, mostly volunteer department located along the Alaskan coast. The department protects approximately 24 square miles and a population of 2,300, responding to an average of 300 calls annually, including many in hard-to-reach areas during famously tough Alaskan winters.

Despite having 25 registered members, only 10-12 firefighters can respond to calls at any given time. Due to the budgetary impact of COVID-19 and limited resources, purchasing a CAFS backpack on their own would be difficult. “A versatile one-person operation tool such as the Macaw® CAF backpack could save time and manpower while providing safety with reduced volunteers,” said executive assistant Janice Melvin.

The remaining six recipients of the Intelagard Macaw® CAFS Backpack Giveaway wil

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