Posted: Sep 6, 2019
The Board of Fire Commissioners for Benton County Fire District #1 have placed a capital improvement bond on the November 5 ballot.
This bond would last for 20 years and be an estimated 10-cents per $1,000 of assessed property value (AV). This is one cent less than the two bonds that were recently paid off.
- PUB DATE: 9/6/2019 2:32:13 PM - SOURCE: NBC KNDO 23
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Posted: Sep 6, 2019
An Okanogan Assistant Fire Chief has been receiving overwhelming support from the community and from fellow firefighters after being badly burned fighting the Spring Coulee Fire last weekend.
The Washington State Council of Fire Fighters Burn Foundation has been supporting Christian Johnson and his family as he undergoes treatment and recovery from the second and third-degree burns he sustained on over 60 percent of his body.
- PUB DATE: 9/6/2019 10:46:28 AM - SOURCE: KAYU-TV MyFox Spokane
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Posted: Sep 6, 2019
Washington has seen fewer wildfires this year than expected, according to officials at the Pullman fire department.
Pullman Fire Chief Mike Heston said this wildfire season in Pullman was predicted to be similar to 2015, with lots of fires and smoke.
This year, the wildfire season is slower because there are better resources like aerial firefighters, and the department has been extinguishing fires more quickly.
- PUB DATE: 9/6/2019 12:35:38 AM - SOURCE: Daily Evergreen
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Posted: Sep 6, 2019
Baltimore City Fire Department is in its first week of a scaled-back response policy.
Baltimore City’s Fire Department’s new police now sends two fewer engines to every fire — from five currently — down to three.
Its policy change cuts short ladder trucks and battalion chiefs from two down to one.
The City’s Firefighter Union said the new policy jeopardized someone’s life Sunday, on the first day it was implemented.
- PUB DATE: 9/6/2019 12:00:00 AM - SOURCE: WJZ-TV CBS 13 Baltimore
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Posted: Sep 6, 2019
Pennsylvania’s auditor general wants to reduce restrictions on how firefighters can spend state aid, but Western Pennsylvania fire departments have mixed feelings over whether change is needed.
“The law has not kept pace with changing times and, in my view, puts too many restrictions on how relief associations can spend the state aid they receive,” Auditor General Eugene DePasquale said at a news conference Thursday.
- PUB DATE: 9/6/2019 12:00:00 AM - SOURCE: TRIBLive
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