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Posted: Jan 17, 2019

New Ambulance on Oahu Eases Strain

 
 

The new Salt Lake ambulance started operating out of the Airport Industrial Park on Dec. 30. The ambulance has responded to 163 calls, including a few cardiac arrest saves.

There are now 19 full-time and two part-time ambulances to serve all of Oahu’s residents and visitors. Nakano said crews respond to about 90,000 calls annually, and that the number of calls is rising by about 5,000 each year.

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Posted: Jan 17, 2019

Project Nashville: A Look at Tennessee Fire Stations

 
 

Memphis has 90 fire halls, 49 more than Nashville and only a couple hundred thousand more people covering 785 square miles to our 526. Young points out the population of Nashville is increasing while the population of Memphis is decreasing.

Knoxville with 230,000 fewer people than Nashville has almost the same number of fire halls and covers the same square mileage. Young explains, “Our city is growing and neighborhoods are being built further away from a fire station, response times to that area is definitely delayed.”

Our previous Project Nashville investigation shows our firefighters are answering nearly triple the calls compared to two decades ago, but with fewer people.

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Posted: Jan 17, 2019

Dickinson (ND) Fire Department Welcomes Fire Apparatus

 
 
"She's a 2018 Rosenbauer Commander," said Hilary Hartman, Fire Engineer responsible for the Dickinson Fire Department's fleet. "It has a 450 horsepower Cummins engine, 1,500 gallon per minute pump and a 500 gallon water tank. She has the capability to put down foam with two foam cells at 30 gallons apiece." The capabilities of the $500,000 new engine are greatly improved over other vehicles in the fleet, according to Fire Chief Robert Sivak, and will allow the department to tackle the growing number and severity of fires that have plagued the city in recent years.
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Posted: Jan 17, 2019

No Injuries After St. Louis Fire Apparatus Hits Parked Car

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Posted: Jan 17, 2019

Government shutdown delays Southeast Thurston Fire Authority grant

Southeast Thurston Fire Authority commissioners authorized the transfer of about $114,000 of general funds to cover expenses within the authority’s SAFER volunteer grant that hasn’t received funding this year due to the partial government shutdown. SAFER, or Staffing for Adequate Fire and Emergency Response grants, are federally granted funds distributed by FEMA (Federal Emergency Management Agency) to fire departments and organizations to help them maintain firefighter training.
- PUB DATE: 1/17/2019 1:06:38 PM - SOURCE: Nisqually Valley News
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