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Posted: Feb 8, 2019

LED Bay Light

LEXINGTON, KY—With more LEDs than any Big Ass Light before and a module that directs light where it’s needed, the LED Bay Light will transform the way you see your space. Productivity and visual appeal a concern?

Durable and sleek, the LED Bay Light keeps the light bright and the heat away. Offering a variety of outputs (six lumen options ranging from 12,000 to 36,000), the LED Bay Light can brighten any space. With three mounting options (aircraft cable, conduit and flush), a rotatable module providing various angles of distribution and five interchangeable lens options to shape and direct light where it needs to go, the LED Bay Light is simple to install, alter and optimize.

Rated up to 187 lumens per watt, the LED Bay Light maintains output for 150,000 hours (that’s 17 years of 24/7 operation). With a rugged, thermodynamic design for dissipating heat, the LED

Bay Light won’t break, flicker, or overheat (max temperature rating of 149℉).

The LED Bay Light isn’t built to just last, it’s built to outlast. It is backed by a 10-year full warranty (including the driver).

For more information, visit www.bigassfans.com.

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Posted: Feb 8, 2019

Serving Those Who Serve

Every volunteer fire department becomes a second family for its members, and Chief Andy Webster will tell you that the Cool Springs (NC) Volunteer Fire Department, just outside Statesville.

If anyone should know, it’s Webster. Back in 1960, his father was a charter member of the department. Eight years later, Webster came along, and before he mastered a tricycle he was hanging out at the station. Over time he learned the building’s hiding places and learned the trick to opening the front door when it was locked. “I like to tell people it’s where I first saw Santa Claus,” he says—the man in red never missed a Christmas party at the firehouse.

When Webster turned 16, he officially joined the department. That was 34 years ago, years punctuated by tragedy but also filled with good times. So when the time came to think about building a new station with all-new bells and whistles, it was bittersweet. But, the chief and his fellow firefighters were not about to let nostalgia get in the way of progress, especially when the community’s safety was at stake.

In 2013, they set about planning for a new firehouse, and one thing they decided it needed were some Big Ass Fans. Webster had seen his first Big Ass Fan years before in Florida, at a factory that builds fire trucks. He’d walked inside to do a final inspection of a new tanker truck and was surprised at how cool the building felt despite the Florida heat. Looking up at the biggest fan he’d ever seen, he naturally said, “That’s a big-ass fan you got there,” little knowing how true that was. Back home, he saw more Big Ass Fans at a nearby factory and was convinced they were exactly what the department needed.

In 2017, Webster turned out the lights and closed the door for the last time at the old station, and the Cool Springs Volunteer Fire Department moved into its new 24,000-square-foot facility just across the road. The local newspaper ran a story, quoting Webster saying, “It’s a great day, the day we open our new firehouse. Some may say ‘station,’ but it’s a firehouse. It’s where people live, and where the community comes together.”

The building also houses Iredell County’s EMS Services and a satellite office of the county’s Sheriff’s Department. And, inside are three Big Ass Fans: two over the apparatus bay and one in the EMS department. Webster says everyone is “tickled pink” with the fans. “We get in the triple digits here in summer, and the humidity is miserable. With the fans, you don’t feel near as hot. You can be anywhere in the apparatus bay and feel the breeze,” he says. For all the memories he has from the old firehouse—of Christmas parties with Santa, annual Ham Dinners with his mother’s homemade biscuits, and just hanging out with his second family—he’ll tell you it was never as comfortable as the department’s beautiful new home.

As for that old firehouse across the road, well, it’s now a John Deere dealership. And, who knows? There might just be some Big Ass Fans in its future too. The building’s former residents would vouch for them.

Courtesy of Big Ass Fans

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Posted: Feb 8, 2019

Mount Vernon ambulance system prepares for upgrade

With the transition to city control behind them, stakeholders in the Skagit County ambulance system are looking forward to a technological transition. Emergency Medical Services Director Jeff Sargent said the county is about a year and a half away from implementing Quickest Route, a program that tracks ambulances in real time and dispatches them to the closest 911 calls.
- PUB DATE: 2/8/2019 6:41:39 AM - SOURCE: Skagit Valley Herald (GoSkagit.com)
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Posted: Feb 8, 2019

Ohio auditor again seeks tax break for spouses of first responders who die on the job

Outgoing Franklin County Auditor Clarence Mingo is renewing his call for a change in state law to provide a property tax break to the spouses of first responders who die in the line of duty. "These families still carry on, they still have to manage through life, and property tax relief is one form of comfort that the government can provide," Mingo said Wednesday, the same day a public memorial service was held for the three-person crew killed in a medical helicopter crash in southeastern Ohio.
- PUB DATE: 2/8/2019 12:00:00 AM - SOURCE: The Columbus Dispatch - Metered Site
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Posted: Feb 8, 2019

Crane used to bring down worker who injured back on 5th floor of Florida building

VIDEO: A crane was used Thursday morning to bring down a construction worker from the fifth floor of a building after he suffered a back injury, authorities said. Fort Lauderdale Fire Rescue Battalion Chief Stephen Gollan confirmed the incident occurred at a building under construction at 200 S. Federal Highway.
- PUB DATE: 2/8/2019 12:00:00 AM - SOURCE: WPLG-TV
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