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Posted: Apr 12, 2018

Washougal eyes fire sprinkler policy

Two years after the Camas City Council started requiring automatic fire sprinkler systems be installed in new homes, the Camas-Washougal Fire Marshal is advocating that Washougal councilors approve a similar ordinance. Fire Marshal Ron Schumacher said four Camas homes have been saved by the activation of sprinkler systems with minimal damage.
- PUB DATE: 4/12/2018 1:01:08 PM - SOURCE: Camas-Washougal Post-Record
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Posted: Apr 12, 2018

New Red Cross Survey Shows Many Americans Overconfident and Underprepared for Home Fires

Washington, D.C. — According to a new survey by the American Red Cross, many people overestimate their ability to react to a home fire and miss critical steps to keep their loved ones safe. 

In fact, 40 percent of people believe they are more likely to win the lottery or get struck by lightning than experience a home fire. Yet, home fires are the most common disaster people face in this country – the majority of the nearly 64,000 disasters the Red Cross responds to every year. 

“Every day seven people in this country die in a home fire and another 36 people are hurt,” reports Red Cross President and CEO Gail McGovern. “To address this crisis, we’re bringing together thousands of community partners and volunteers to Sound the Alarm about home fire safety and help save lives. We’ve already installed more than 1.1 million smoke alarms, but our work will continue across the country, because many families are still underprepared when it comes to home fire safety.”

This spring, the Red Cross will Sound the Alarm through a series of home fire safety and smoke alarm installation events in more than 100 high-risk communities in the United States. In just 16 days – from April 28 to May 13 – volunteers and partners will install 100,000 free smoke alarms across the country. Volunteers are needed, learn more by visiting SoundTheAlarm.org.

MANY PEOPLE MISTAKEN ABOUT HOME FIRE FACTS

The Red Cross survey found that many Americans have a false sense of security about their family’s ability to escape a home fire. More than three-fourths (80 percent) of people surveyed believe everyone in their household knows what to do when a smoke alarm goes off. But less than half of those surveyed have a home fire escape plan in place. And only half of the families that do have a plan have actually practiced it.

Home fire experts say that people have as little as two minutes to escape a burning home. However, the survey showed nearly 60 percent of people mistakenly believe they have much more time than is realistic.  

MORE SURVEY RESULTS

Even though many Americans admit to actions that could contribute to a home fire, only one out of four (27 percent) think that they are likely to experience a home fire in their lifetime. For example, about 40 percent of people have forgotten to turn off a stove or oven, even though cooking is the leading cause of home fires and home fire injuries. And, more than one-third (34 percent) of people have used a stove, kerosene lantern or space heater to warm their home. The fact is that heating equipment is involved in one of every five home fire deaths. 

The survey does show that some progress is being made. More people are replacing batteries (a 9 percent increase vs. 2015) and testing to make sure their smoke alarms are working (an 11 percent increase vs. 2015). But there is still have a long way to go to make sure everyone is prepared for home fires.

Americans overwhelmingly believe that smoke alarms can save lives, yet one out of ten (12 percent) people have had to give up buying other essentials for their families to purchase one. These findings highlight just how critical the Red Cross Home Fire Campaign is in communities across the country. Launched in 2014 to save lives and help end home fire tragedies, the Red Cross and its partners have already installed more than 1.1 million free smoke alarms and reached 1 million children through preparedness programs. These efforts are already credited with helping to save 381 lives. Learn more.

This work is made possible thanks to generous financial donations from national partners: Almost Family, Delta Air Lines and International Paper. The Red Cross has also received funding from FEMA through t

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Posted: Apr 12, 2018

Chehalis Fire Department Adds New Foam Capacity to Arsenal

Chehalis firefighters have a new weapon to fight fires involving combustible liquids — from the airport to Interstate 5 to the railway. Chief Ken Cardinale said the oldest rig in the department’s fleet has been outfitted with Class B foam, which puts a sealant over fuel to prevent it from releasing its vapors.
- PUB DATE: 4/12/2018 10:38:39 AM - SOURCE: Centralia Chronicle
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Posted: Apr 12, 2018

Why Can Uber Find Me and 911 Can't? Uber, RapidSOS Partner for Pilot Program

Uber and RapidSOS have announced a partnership to help rapildy address 911 location issues

Beginning with a pilot program in Denver, Colorado, when a driver/rider uses Uber’s new 911 Assistance feature, their precise location will be sent to 911 via the RapidSOS NG911 Clearinghouse. The result will be unprecedented location information shared with 911 in the event an Uber driver or passenger is in need of emergency assistance.

According to Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi, “We’re teaming up with RapidSOS to pilot 911 integration with local emergency authorities, starting in Denver. If a rider uses Uber’s emergency button in one of our pilot cities, their location and trip details will be automatically sent to the 911 dispatcher. We’ll be monitoring this pilot closely and evaluating further expansion.” More info available here.

Background:

Location is the most important piece of information needed to dispatch assistance during an emergency. The country’s 911 system was built more than 50 years ago, tailored for landline technology, and has been slow to adopt to ever-changing technology and data available via smartphones and other sources--making the already difficult job of 911 professionals even more burdensome.

Dispatchers frequently receive incomplete or inaccurate location descriptions from callers who are confused, in distress, or unable to verbally communicate. To date, 911 dispatchers have had to rely on network-based location information to locate wireless callers.

Applications like Uber, on the other hand, locate users with a device-based approach that relies on multiple sources of information available on a device (GPS, WiFi access points, etc). Corroborating location information across multiple sources increases accuracy, especially in environments where a single source may be compromised. While using the Uber app, this information is available immediately on the device, so that the location will be available to 911 even before the call is received – saving precious time that dispatchers need to send help.

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Posted: Apr 12, 2018

New fire station could be finished by year end

Since March 2016, the Warwick Fire Department has been working out of two buildings. The training room, communications room and office are in the old building on Hastings Pond Road that the Firemen’s Association built in 1952. But the department’s six fire trucks are housed in a new building on Orange Road, which the Firemen’s Association built in 2016. The old building can only fit two trucks.

The plan had been for the new building to house all of the Fire Department’s operations. But the Firemen’s Association only had enough money to build the “apparatus bay” where the trucks are stored. The foundation for the rest of the new building was poured last fall, and there are plans to pour the concrete floor within the next month. After that, the association will be “pretty much broke,” Gates said.

The problem is, the new building was built by the Warwick Firemen’s Association, not by the Warwick Fire Department. Almost all members of the association are members of the Warwick Fire Department (except for a few former firefighters who no longer work for the department), but technically the two groups are different legal entities. The association is not officially associated with the town of Warwick while the department is part of town government. But the association owns the new building.

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