Menu

WFC News

Posted: Apr 29, 2025

Two Sunbathing Teens Injured After Being Run Over by Sarasota County (FL) FD Lifeguard Truck

Two teenage girls were hospitalized with severe injuries after they were allegedly run over by a Sarasota County Fire Department lifeguard truck recently, wltx.com reported.

The truck, a Ford F-150, was being driven by a Sarasota County Fire Department lifeguard, the report said.

The victims, 14 and 15 years old, were reportedly lying behind a berm and the lifeguard didn’t see them, the report said.

The Sarasota County Sheriff’s Office, which is investigating the incident, said the lifeguard was slowly leaving the beach to enter a closed-off parking area when he hit the teens, according to the report.

The post Two Sunbathing Teens Injured After Being Run Over by Sarasota County (FL) FD Lifeguard Truck appeared first on Fire Apparatus: Fire trucks, fire engines, emergency vehicles, and firefighting equipment.

Read more
Posted: Apr 28, 2025

Orange County (CA) Fire Authority Selects MSA Safety’s G1 Breathing Apparatus to Help Protect Firefighters

PITTSBURGH (April 28, 2025) – Global safety equipment manufacturer MSA Safety, Inc. (NYSE: MSA) today announced it has secured a $10 million contract to provide respiratory protective equipment to the Orange County Fire Authority in Southern California.  With this order, MSA continues to strengthen its breathing apparatus market presence in the Southern California region.  Over the past two years, MSA Safety has secured similar breathing apparatus contracts with both the Los Angeles County and the Los Angeles City Fire Departments. 

The decision to upgrade Orange County Fire Authority’s self-contained breathing apparatus (SCBA) technology was made after a comprehensive evaluation process. Factors that influenced the department’s selection of the G1 SCBA were its advanced technology and connectivity features, as well as the ability to upgrade the breathing apparatus with new technologies as they become available.

With 15 U.S. patents, the G1 SCBA is the centerpiece of the MSA Connected Firefighter platform – a suite of safety technologies that work in concert to significantly improve firefighter monitoring, accountability and communication.  The SCBA utilizes embedded technology to transmit important data, including cylinder air pressure, battery status and various alarm indicators, to incident commanders via MSA’s FireGrid® system. The FireGrid system is a software service that gives incident commanders the ability to evaluate and manage on-scene fire crews in real time.

(more)

“When it comes to protecting first responders, our vision at MSA Safety is to provide fire departments with the most advanced and versatile safety solutions available today,” said Bob Apel, MSA Safety Executive Director, Global Fire Service and Digital Experience.  “Our G1 breathing apparatus is a fitting example of that vision. The platform provides ongoing value to fire departments because it enables us to continuously add new technologies to the SCBA that enhance firefighter health and safety.  That vision is consistent with our growth strategy to be the leading innovator in head-to-toe protection for the fire service.”

Also included among the G1 SCBA’s advanced features is an integrated thermal imaging camera (iTIC).  The iTIC places thermal imaging capability into the hands of individual firefighters, as opposed to sharing a handheld device among multiple firefighters.  The camera is part of the SCBA control module that houses a video screen and other electronics that enable many G1 features.

Founded in 1995, the Orange County Fire Authority (OCFA) is a regional fire service agency that serves 23 cities and all unincorporated areas within Orange County.  With 78 fire stations, the OCFA protects nearly two million residents.  It is a premier public safety agency providing superior fire protection and medical emergency services to its communities.

“We are incredibly proud to establish this new partnership with the Orange County Fire Authority,” said Joann Serakowski, MSA Safety Vice President, Fire Service – U.S. and Canada.  “Most importantly, we’re honored the department has entrusted MSA with the responsibility of protecting the men and women who help keep the residents of Orange County safe each day.”

(more)

Delivery of the new SCBA units is expected to be completed in 2025.

About MSA Safety

MSA Safety Incorporated (NYSE: MSA) is the global leader in advanced safety products, technologies and solutions. Driven by its singular mission of safety, the company has been at the forefront of safety innovation since 1914, protecting workers and facility infrastructure around the world across a broad range of diverse end markets while creating sustainable value for shareholders. With 2024 revenues of $1.8 billion, MSA Safety is headqua

Read more
Posted: Apr 28, 2025

Woman Charged with Murder in Fatal Stabbing of Kansas City (MO) Firefighter-Medic

Robert A. Cronkleton – The Kansas City Star

A Northland woman is facing a murder charge after she allegedly fatally stabbed a Kansas City firefighter-paramedic who was trying to help her, court records show.

Clay County Prosecutor Zachary Thompson has charged Shanetta Bossell with first-degree murder, armed criminal action, third-degree assault of a law enforcement officer and resisting arrest in the death of 29-year-old Graham Hoffman.

Bossell was booked overnight into Clay County jail and was being held on a $1 million bond.

Initially, callers phoned police just after 12:30 a.m. Sunday, asking officers to check the welfare of a woman who was walking on Missouri 152 near North Oak Trafficway, said Capt. Jake Becchina, a police spokesman.

Officers found the woman, later identified as Bossell, on the side of the highway, and they eventually requested a medical crew to respond to provide further treatment, Becchina said.

Hoffman and his partner responded to the medical call about 1 a.m. and were on the way to a hospital when Bossell allegedly stabbed Hoffman with an “edged weapon,” Becchina said.

Hoffman was stabbed in the chest, piercing his heart, Kansas City Fire Chief Ross Grundyson said in a statement.

Hoffman’s partner stopped the ambulance at Missouri 152 and Platte Purchase Road and signaled to a police officer who had been following that they needed help, Becchina said. The officer took Bossell into custody.

Hoffman’s partner also declared a crew emergency, asking for extra medical help. Fellow firefighters responded and worked to save Hoffman’s life as they took him to North Kansas City Hospital.

Hospital staff treated Hoffman in the emergency room before taking him into surgery, Grundyson said. After surgery, Hoffman was placed in the intensive care unit, where he died.

A community grieves

Hoffman had been a member of the fire department for three years, Grundyson said.

“Graham was a vibrant individual who loved life and loved serving his community,” Grundyson said. “He was an excellent paramedic who treated his patients with the highest level of skill and compassion.”

Hoffman’s courage, compassion and commitment to the community will never be forgotten, Grundyson said.

Grundyson added that the fire department grieves with Hoffman’s family, friends and loved ones. He also thanked KCFD members and staff at North Kansas City Hospital for their efforts to save Hoffman’s life, as well as the Kansas City Police Department for quickly apprehending Bossell.

“This is a senseless act that has taken a great young man from his family, friends, and coworkers, and deprived our city of a dedicated firefighter and a leader on and off the job who only wanted to serve and protect those in his community,” Grundyson said.

Mayor Quinton Lucas said he was heartbroken by the loss of Hoffman and that the “senseless act” is a reminder of the dangers the city’s first responders face daily.

“At just 29, Graham embodied Kansas City’s finest quality — selfless service for others,” Lucas said in a statement. “That he was taken from us while working to save lives makes this loss all the more painful.”

The killing of the firefighter-paramedic comes less than a week after Bossell was charged with allegedly biting an off-duty Platte City police officer in Kansas City’s Northland.

The officer had returned home from work Wednesday morning and saw

Read more
Posted: Apr 28, 2025

Vancouver (BC) Fire Hall Earns LEED Gold, Passive House, and ZCB – Design Certification

Fire Hall No. 17, of Vancouver (BC) Fire and Rescue Services (VFRS), designed by HCMA Architecture + Design, is the first fire hall in Canada to earn CaGBC’s Zero Carbon Building (ZCB) – Design certification and Passive House certification, as well as being LEED Gold certified.

Jay Lin, senior director and project architect at HCMA Architecture + Design, says the building has reduced operational carbon emissions by 99% compared with its predecessor.

Fire Hall No. 17 has four double-deep, drive-through apparatus bays.

The low-carbon, all-electric station is the second-largest training facility for VFRS, and aims to cater to modern firefighting needs and training for the next 80 years, Lin points out. He adds that the fire hall also serves as a post-disaster citywide emergency hub in the event of an information technology (IT) network breakdown. As a post-disaster facility, it is fitted with IT, radio, supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA), and traffic control equipment.

“It’s designed so that any firefighter in the building can get to a fire truck in 60 seconds,” Lin notes. The new facility has four double-deep, drive-through apparatus bays, a full-size hose/training tower, a training yard, and accommodation for two full crews.

The new station includes a training tower, which includes a hose tower, and a training yard.

The first level of the three-level structure holds the apparatus bays, an extractor room, a decontamination bathroom, turnout gear storage room, a training area, a captain’s office, training offices, a study, the hose tower, training storage, and an electric meter closet.

There are two sets of fire poles; one set at each end of the station.

The second level has fire poles, a communications room, mechanical room, IT room, electrical room, kitchen and dining area, day room, a patio, generator, and training roof. Level three has fire poles, 10 firefighter dorm rooms, three officer dorm rooms, five unisex toilet/shower rooms, a sauna, fitness room, and both a flat roof and sloped roof training area.

Read more
Posted: Apr 28, 2025

Sarasota County (FL) FD Gets State Grant for Video Laryngoscopes

The Sarasota County Fire Department (SCFD) received cutting-edge technology through a state of Florida EMS grant to place video laryngoscopes on every ambulance, the department said in a Facebook post recently.

The video laryngoscope allows the medic to see the patient’s trachea through a video feed on a screen instead of looking directly in their mouth during a difficult patient airway situation, the post said.

SCFD’s Assistant Chief of EMS Brian Nadler demonstrates the use of this innovative technology in the video above.

Out of 23,000 licensed EMS agencies in the country, SCFD is one of 238 agencies utilizing this technology.

The post Sarasota County (FL) FD Gets State Grant for Video Laryngoscopes appeared first on Fire Apparatus: Fire trucks, fire engines, emergency vehicles, and firefighting equipment.

Read more
RSS
First4344454648505152Last

Theme picker

Search News Articles