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Posted: Apr 2, 2018

National Fallen Firefighters Foundation Welcomes Chief John Tippett

The National Fallen Firefighters Foundation (NFFF) is pleased to announce the selection of Chief John Tippett to serve as the Foundation’s Director of Fire Service Programs. The position is responsible for execution and oversight of all Foundation outreach programs in support of the national fire service community related to line-of-duty death prevention, firefighter survivability and efforts to support departments should a line-of-duty death occur. Included in these duties is the management of the Foundation’s Everyone Goes Home Program®, the 16 Firefighter Life Safety Initiatives and the Local Assistance State Team. 

“We are very pleased to have Chief Tippett join the Foundation team and we look forward to the knowledge, insights and experiences he will be bringing with him. Chief Tippett has served the citizens of Montgomery County and Charleston in an outstanding fashion and we are excited that he is committed to addressing firefighter safety on the national level,” says Chief Ron Siarnicki, NFFF’s Executive Director.

Chief Tippett has a Master’s Degree in Emergency Services Management, from Columbia Southern University, and served 35 years with the Montgomery County, Maryland, Fire and Rescue Services, working his way up through the ranks from Firefighter to Battalion Chief.  In 2009, Chief Tippett retired from Montgomery County and went to Charleston (SC) Fire Department, to serve as the Deputy Chief of Operations for eight years.  For the past year, he has served as their Interim Fire Chief.

The United States Congress created the NFFF to lead a nationwide effort to remember America's fallen firefighters. Since 1992, the non-profit foundation has developed and expanded programs to honor fallen fire heroes and assist their families and co-workers.  The NFFF also works closely with the U.S. Fire Administration to help prevent and reduce line-of-duty deaths and injuries.  For more information on the Foundation and its programs visit www.firehero.org.

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Posted: Apr 2, 2018

6 displaced in Kent apartment fire

A fire in a Kent apartment building Thursday displaced six people, emergency officials said. Crews responded to the scene, an apartment building in the 10600 block of Southeast 264th Street, about 9 a.m. after receiving reports of smoke and flames there. Firefighters found that flames had engulfed the two-story apartment building.
- PUB DATE: 4/2/2018 11:08:01 AM - SOURCE: KOMO-TV ABC 4 and Radio 1000
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Posted: Apr 2, 2018

1 injured in early-morning trailer fire near Elma

Two people evacuated a trailer that was fully engulfed in flames early Monday morning in East Grays Harbor. A 40-year-old Satsop woman was treated for facial burns at the scene, according to a release from Grays Harbor Fire District 5. Her male companion was not injured. Multiple agencies were dispatched to the fire just after on the 200 block of South Fifth Street just after 2 a.
- PUB DATE: 4/2/2018 9:12:32 AM - SOURCE: Olympian
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Posted: Apr 2, 2018

Cantankerous Wisdom: Arguing and Drafting

By Bill Adams

The Raisin Squad has been known to argue and turn against their own for no apparent reason except for having nothing better to do. At morning coffee, a couple of geezers, who could still remember stuff, started arguing about something I had written about backup lines. I had mentioned a pump operator could’ve flaked one out “on the front lawn and charged it.” "That ain't right—you know better than that." Say what? "We were always taught not to charge a deuce-and-a-half until it was in place." I know that. "Well, that's not what you said. What if that line had to go in the back door? The front lawn coulda been the wrong place." I said I was merely using it as an example. "But, that's not what you said. You know how much that charged line weighs? I countered that some backup lines are two-inch and it weighs less. "Two-inch? I never heard of two-inch. Is that another gimmick you salesmen use?" I said I’m retired. Besides, I said it didn't matter because the heaviest thing you guys have picked up in 10 years is a plate of food at the seniors’ all-you-can-eat buffet. “You shoulda been more specific.” The white hairs were right but I wasn't going to admit it.

The other week, I mentioned I was working on a piece about drafting. That started a two-day marathon on drafting and drafting drills. The truth be told, the geezers at coffee couldn't remember the last time they drafted at a fire or even how times they drafted in the last 20 years. But, they and myself collectively became instant experts on the best ways to draft and the best equipment to use to do it. One them said drafting "Is just like sucking water through a straw." No, I said. God pushes water up the suction hose. Atmospheric pressure pushes down on the water after you remove the air in the hose with the primer. "That's BS. God ain’t got nothing to do with it. Besides we ain't supposed to promote religion in the fire station." I went home.

A couple of mornings later, I brought in some photos of a timed "engine company efficiency" contest for antique fire trucks I had participated in sometime in the 1970s. (I can't remember the exact year—it’s the age thing.) It included drafting. It was set up like this: Four guys—and it was all guys back then—sat in chairs 25 feet behind the pumper. When the whistle blew, they got up and ran to the rig and put their full gear on. The rig was started and drove 50 feet to a portable pond where two of the crew set it up to draft, removing a hard sleeve and a loose strainer that was mounted on the running board. The other two pulled off three lengths of 2½-inch hose from a static bed, removed a nozzle from a running board mount and attached it, then hooked the hose to a discharge. They stretched the line about 100 feet away from the rig toward a target. The rig was primed, the line charged, and the time stopped when the target was hit.

 

I mentioned the evolution could be used with today's newer rigs. Well, the raisin squad kicked that around for a couple of cups of coffee. “Nah, that’s stupid. People around here don’t draft anymore.” The next day, one of the devious white hairs said he noticed the pumper in the 1970s contest pulled up so the portable pond

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Posted: Apr 2, 2018

3 Dead In Bellwood Ambulance Crash

The ambulance was transporting 48-year-old Larry Marshall Jr. home from dialysis treatment when police say the driver apparently lost control of the ambulance around 3:45 p.m. Saturday and slammed into a building at 28th Avenue and Washington Boulevard. Witnesses told police there were no other vehicles involved in the crash. Marshall was pronounced dead shortly after the crash. His mother, Minnie Marshall, said he had no children but was engaged to be married. The 51-year-old driver was killed instantly. Bellwood authorities said an ambulance attendant who was critically injured died Sunday.
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