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Posted: Aug 20, 2018

Fire Truck Photo of the Day-Pierce PUC Pumper

The pumper is built on a Pierce Impel® cab and chassis. It features a Pierce PUC 1,500-gpm pump, a Husky™ 12 foam syatem, a 740-gallon water tank, and a 30-gallon foam tank. 

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Posted: Aug 18, 2018

Firefighting base at White Pass ski resort becomes 332-person village as bill for Miriam Fire passes $7.5 million

Fighting a wildfire like the 2,680-acre Miriam Fire near White Pass requires a lot of firefighters — and a lot of trucks and planes and helicopters — but it also requires a lot of cooks, a lot of portable toilets, a lot of medical personnel and a whole finance department. The White Pass Ski Area, from which the Miriam firefighting effort is coordinated, is closed for the summer, but it’s been abuzz with activity since a Type 2 fire incident management team was called in Aug.
- PUB DATE: 8/17/2018 10:13:21 PM - SOURCE: Yakima Herald-Republic
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Posted: Aug 18, 2018

Injured Okanogan County firefighter: Wildfire ‘stood up and made a huge run … flames were licking under my face’

A firefighter is recovering at Harborview Medical Center after getting severe burns on his body while fighting wildfires in the state. Brett Read is many things. He is a husband. He is a father. He’s also a firefighter. He had risked his life to protect others for seven years. Recently, that risk of losing his life was closer than he’s ever experienced.
- PUB DATE: 8/17/2018 9:24:50 PM - SOURCE: KCPQ-TV FOX 13
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Posted: Aug 17, 2018

Firefighters called to blaze near Yakima Training Center

Firefighters from Kittitas Valley Fire and Rescue, Yakima Fire, Naches Fire and the training center are fighting a blaze north of Cold Creek. It started Thursday night and last reports say it is around 8,000 acres. According to a Facebook post on Washington State Fire Wire, it is burning on the south side section of the Yakima Training Center and no structures are threatened.
- PUB DATE: 8/17/2018 9:34:01 AM - SOURCE: NBCRightNow.com
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Posted: Aug 17, 2018

New Rig Helps Texas Fire Department Reach High-Rises

WOODLANDS, Texas (Houston Chronicle) - The Woodlands Fire Department’s newest truck has not been put into use yet as department staff learn how to drive the double-cabbed vehicle, but Fire Chief Alan Benson said he and other leaders at the department are excited to have the new truck added to their fleet.

The new truck, a Pierce Ascendant 107-foot Tiller fire truck built on top of a Velocity chassis, holds 300 gallons of water and is equipped with a 1,250 gallon per minute water pump and is equipped with a heavy-duty, steel Ascendant ladder with reach measuring 107 feet vertically and 100 feet horizontally.

The truck cost about $1.4 million and was approved for purchase by the township board in December 2016. The truck was delivered to the township in January. The truck was customized by township officials, including purchasing the largest motor available for any fire truck. The department traded in another vehicle in order to reduce the cost, Benson noted.

The truck is not in service yet as firefighters are learning how to operate the various components and also how to drive it. The new truck has a second steering apparatus in the rear cab, which is called in fire department language a “tiller.”

“We’re getting ready to put it into service, it is not here now,” Benson said. “It’s one of those ‘old-style’ trucks. We’ve been doing extensive (training). The tiller is very important — the coordination between the tiller and the (front driver). It actually has a 22-degree swing on the back end. You better know what you’re doing or you’re going to take out a lot of mailboxes.”

Benson also said that for the last four months, department officials have been doing extensive driver training and qualifying for both the rear cab, or tiller, drivers and our regular drivers on the vehicle.

“We’re not going to put it until we have the adequate training and expertise to do it right,” Benson added.

Deputy Fire Chief Doug Adams, of The Woodlands Fire Department, said the vehicle is also called a tractor-drawn aerial fire truck and is more than 61 feet long and has a capacity to hold up to seven firefighters, but normally a crew of four is on the vehicle for fire calls.

“You have a steering wheel in the front and the back,” Adams said of the new truck. “It is our tallest ladder (now). Despite the length of the truck, it’s maneuverability is comparable or exceeds that of our smaller engines because you’re able to articulate into tighter spaces. It really increases what we call the ‘scrub area’ and how much of the area of the building where we can actually get the ladder to.”

Adams said the new truck is a major upgrade for the department that can be used for fighting fires at homes, businesses and for other high-rise incidents at some of the towers across the township.

“It improves our capabilities. It improves our ‘scrub angle,’ improves our access, and it really improves our reach, not only vertically, but horizontally,” Adams said. “We may have a house with a big set back, that extra 7 feet (of ladder length) can make a huge difference.”

Benson said the larger ‘scrub area,’ defined as where water can be sprayed by firefighters, helps if an incident happens at the 30-story Anadarko Tower or other high rise buildings in the township.

“It increases the distance and height of areas where you can access areas of the building. The closer you are to the building, the more height you can get,” Benson explained.

As The Woodlands continues to grow and taller structures are possibly constructed, the fire department has continued to add vehicles and equipment like the new “tiller” fire truck helps fight fires anywhere in the township, Benson explained.

“It’ll go

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