Menu

WFC News

Posted: Jun 26, 2018

Fire Truck Photo of the Day-Sutphen Pumper

Angola (IN) Fire Department pumper. Monarch cab and chassis; Cummins ISL 450-hp engine; Hale Qmax 1,500-gpm pump; Pro Poly 750-gallon polypropylene tank.

Read more
Posted: Jun 25, 2018

Safety concerns prompt Seattle Fire to increase staffing for calls at homeless shelters

Citing concerns about firefighter safety, the Seattle Fire Department has doubled the number of people who will respond to calls at homeless shelters in Pioneer Square. Capt. Shata Stephenson said in a statement that the department has gone from having two or four firefighters respond to “certain locations within Pioneer Square” to “at least six.
- PUB DATE: 6/25/2018 7:51:12 PM - SOURCE: KOMO-TV ABC 4 and Radio 1000
Read more
Posted: Jun 25, 2018

Death of California firefighter starts safety conversation at Spokane Fire

When battalion chief David Heizer first started with Spokane Fire 25 years ago, he never thought he'd have to face gunfire on the job -- as crews in Long Beach did Monday morning. Heizer told KXLY times have changed and along with that, comes a change in conversation about the way the department trains its crews.
- PUB DATE: 6/25/2018 7:42:43 PM - SOURCE: KXLY-TV ABC 4
Read more
Posted: Jun 25, 2018

DNR tracking areas vulnerable to wildfires with new technology

Local firefighters are now using new technology to track which areas of the state are especially vulnerable to wildfires. It's called aerial mapping and it's been used to map the nearly 20 million acres of forests in Washington state since the 1940s. But now workers with the Department of Natural Resources are putting that mapping technology to use during wildfire season.
- PUB DATE: 6/25/2018 6:47:56 PM - SOURCE: KHQ-TV NBC 6
Read more
Posted: Jun 25, 2018

Fire scorches acreage near Yakima’s Rotary Lake

A fire near Yakima’s Rotary Lake on Sunday afternoon sent up a plume of smoke and water vapor that could be seen – and smelled – from several parts of the Upper Yakima Valley. The fire was first reported around 3:30 p.m., and it took firefighters from the Yakima Fire Department and four county fire districts about an hour to bring it under control, said Rich Elliott, with Kittitas Valley Fire and Rescue.
- PUB DATE: 6/25/2018 10:35:33 AM - SOURCE: Spokane Spokesman-Review
Read more
RSS
First46824683468446854687468946904691Last

Theme picker

Search News Articles