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Posted: Oct 18, 2018

Western Nebraska Regional Airport Staff Looking Forward to New Fire Apparatus

Four months ago, Airport Director Raul Aguallo placed an order for a new fire truck. The bid gives the manufacturer 365 days to build the truck. They notified airport staff that the truck is done.

 

The entire project cost just under $900,000 and includes self-contained breathing apparatus, bunker gear and loose tools for the truck. Once the truck arrives, staff will train on the use of all the equipment. The airport is responsible for 10 percent of the costs. It will also keep its other two fire trucks.

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Posted: Oct 18, 2018

Springfield (FL) Firefighters Sought Shelter in Fire Apparatus During Hurricane Michael

"Once the roof started coming up, our chief told us to get in the truck and we had to ride out the rest of the storm inside the trucks," said Springfield Fire Department's engineer, Jeremy Clark.  

All of the firefighters we're unharmed in the trucks.

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Posted: Oct 18, 2018

Camas leaders say firefighter hires critical

A long, contentious debate — filled with passions, twists and finances — over hiring new firefighters at the Camas-Washougal Fire Department hit a conversation-stopper this week, after the majority of Camas City Council members agreed the hires are necessary and the city will have to find funding, even without Washougal’s 40 percent buy-in.
- PUB DATE: 10/18/2018 1:03:56 PM - SOURCE: Camas-Washougal Post-Record
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Posted: Oct 18, 2018

Puget Sound Fire warns about misleading solicitation calls

The Puget Sound Regional Fire Authority has received an increasing number of calls recently from concerned residents who have been contacted by phone solicitors asking for donations that they say support local fire departments, including Puget Sound Fire. These calls often come from a 253 area code, making them appear to be local.
- PUB DATE: 10/18/2018 1:01:19 PM - SOURCE: Covington & Maple Valley Reporter
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Posted: Oct 18, 2018

U.S. Forest Service ecologist says mega wildfires require more than suppression, urging 3-step solution

Hotter, dryer summers have led to increased megafires and Paul Hessburg, a research landscape ecologist with the U.S. Forest Service, said he fears our wildfire seasons will get much worse. A megafire is a fire that grows larger than 100,000 acres, and Washington and the western United States in general have seen a lot of them.
- PUB DATE: 10/18/2018 6:27:57 AM - SOURCE: Spokane Spokesman-Review
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