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Posted: Feb 8, 2018

NVFC, Josh Cellars Announce Two Recipients of Josh Cellars Training Grants

The National Volunteer Fire Council

Josh Cellars and the National Volunteer Fire Council (NVFC) have partnered to provide 10 volunteer fire departments with $5,000 each to help provide training to their members. The latest two recipients of the Josh Cellars training grants are the Cannon County (TN) Fire Department and W.R. Castle (KY) Volunteer Fire & Rescue.

RELATED: Josh Cellars and NVFC Announce First Two $5,000 Training Grant Recipients

“Training is essential to ensure our firefighters can do their job safely and effectively,” said NVFC chair Kevin D. Quinn. “Many departments struggle to find funding to provide this critical training. We appreciate the support of Josh Cellars, who has not only recognized this need, but has taken action to ensure our men and women in the field are properly prepared and ready to respond.”

Joseph Carr, founder of Josh Cellars wine, created the Josh Cellars brand in honor of his father – a volunteer firefighter and U.S. Army veteran. To be eligible to apply for the grant, departments had to be over 50 percent volunteer, serve a population of 25,000 or less, be located in the U.S., and be a member of the NVFC.

Cannon County Fire Department

The Cannon County Fire Department (CCFD) is located in rural Tennessee along the western edge of the Appalachian Mountains. The department was established in 1978 and expanded from one station to seven in 1994 to provide better protection to the nearly 14,000 residents and 6,500 homes and business over 265 square miles. CCFD has roughly 100 volunteers on their roster; each is required to take the initial 16 hour training in firefighting procedures and techniques, which is mandatory in Tennessee.

The CCFD recognizes that training is the essential key element for firefighters to function safely while responding to, at the scene of, or returning from motor vehicle collisions, emergencies, fires, and/or disasters. The goal is to increase the established minimum requirements so that every firefighter is certified at Firefighter I within the next three years. However, budget restrictions have left the department to seek out external funding sources to support this initiative. The grant will help the CCFD to furnish each student with the necessary training aids, books, and other materials and also complete a live burn training at the State Fire Training Academy.

"I and the other 100 volunteer firefighters of the Cannon County Fire Department are very appreciative for this grant,” said Station Assistant Chief Larry Powell. “As Training Officer of the CCFD, I look forward to improving our training programs by incorporating more hands-on training. We plan to purchase and/or fabricate a fire behavior prop, a forcible entry simulator, a sprinkler simulator, and a vertical ventilation prop. We appreciate the support from Josh Cellars for making this possible.”

County Fire Chief Michael Underhill added, “We really appreciate receiving this grant. This funding will allow us to train more members in lifesaving skills. Increased training will help protect the citizens in our community and surrounding areas. Thank you!”

W.R. Castle Volunteer Fire & Rescue

W.R. Castle Volunteer Fire & Rescue is located in Wittensville, Kentucky. The department’s 35 volunteers protect 3,700 residents in a 42 square mile response area. With a growing roster, the department is in great need of hands-on, structural firefighting training for its crews.

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Posted: Feb 8, 2018

Rome Township Gets $350,000 Grant For New Fire Truck

The township has received about $200,000 for fire equipment and gear over the last 15 years through the Assistance to Firefighters federal grant program. But the department’s January 2016 application and award was by far the biggest, and marks the first time the department was approved to purchase a new vehicle, he said.

“I’m absolutely pleased,” he said Wednesday. “These grants do have strict guidelines and they’re very competitive. ... It’s a lengthy process, but it will pay off.”

The township put up a little more than $18,000 to round out the $366,000 used to purchase the

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Posted: Feb 8, 2018

Tiny house burns in Port Townsend

An early morning blaze left a transient woman without shelter after it destroyed the tiny house in which she was staying Wednesday. Firefighters quickly knocked down the fire at one of the model homes at GreenPod Development, 1531 W. Sims Way, said Bill Beezley, spokesperson for East Jefferson Fire-Rescue.
- PUB DATE: 2/8/2018 2:34:57 AM - SOURCE: Port Angeles Peninsula Daily News
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Posted: Feb 8, 2018

Fire Museum hosts big "reveal" of restored fire engine at fundraiser

A 1949 Mack fire truck, Engine 9 (NOT the train from the song) worked in Milwaukee area firehouses for more than three decades – into the 1970s – and now it has been returned to its former glory and will reside at the society's museum, 1615 W. Oklahoma Ave.

"We got Engine 9 about three years ago," says former firefighter and MFHS treasurer and newsletter editor Randy Leach. "We got it from Paul Conway, who is a former assistant chief. He donated it."

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Posted: Feb 8, 2018

Online petition makes second bid to save Roanoke's Fire Station No. 7

In the petition, Ferguson wrote that the city is “taking a wrecking ball” to the station after a “cursory review” that didn’t seriously consider alternatives like other sites or renovating and expanding the existing station. The petition calls on the Roanoke City Council to reconsider the demolition and come up with two alternatives.

Roanoke Fire Chief David Hoback called those claims “false,” and said the decision to replace the station was arrived at following a study by Roanoke’s Spectrum Design that found no other viable sites in the area that would allow necessary response times. The building itself, built in the 1920s, isn’t adequate for modern equipment and a staff of both men and women, he said.
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