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Posted: Sep 17, 2017

Woodway (TX) Raising Money to Buy New Fire Apparatus

The Woodway Public Safety Department is hoping you can help them raise enough money to buy a new fire truck. They held the 44th annual barbecue fundraiser at Woodway Elementary School Saturday. The city manager and public safety director Yost Zakhary said their goal is to raise $45,000 within the next three years.
The truck costs about $500,000, but the director said city council will pay for 80 percent of it.

"It's all about service. What we do is service the community. We try to get 20 to 25 years out of each equipment, and we want to pay cash for it. When we get the truck, hopefully in two years, it'll be paid for in cash," Zakhary said.

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Posted: Sep 17, 2017

South Pittsburg Board Approves Emergency Repairs for Fire Apparatus

When the South Pittsburg Fire Department's ladder truck failed two tests on a recent inspection, officials scrambled to find a way to fix the problems. Fire Chief Corey Comstock said he got two estimates for the needed repairs. "There's two different jobs to be done on the ladder truck," he said.
Mayor Virgil Holder questioned whether the town should go through a published bidding process since the price was so high.

City leaders could declare the cost an "emergency repair" and forgo the bidding process, City Attorney Billy Gouger said, and he recommended the town do that if the funds were available.

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Posted: Sep 16, 2017

Wilkesboro (NC) Debates Sale of Fire Truck

According to Town Manager Ken Noland, the town received two bids for the surplus ladder fire truck: $3,001 from Ronda and $5,252 from Phillips. "I think the chief would like to encourage you to maybe not go with the high bid," said Noland during a work session.  “But I’m the town manager, and I tell you to go to the high bid because that makes the most money.”

“The high bid is certainly much higher,” Wilkesboro Fire Chief Jason Smithey said. “But if [neighboring fire department] Ronda was to get it and we ever needed the fire truck for some reason, we could call them and have them bring it to us in the event of a major catastrophe.”

Wilkesboro Fire Department currently operates one ladder truck within its 6.3 square mile district. Millers Creek and North Wilkesboro fire departments each maintain one ladder-equipped fire truck as well.

One North Carolina community is dealing with the decision of whether to sell their old fire apparatus to another department or to a private auto business.
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Posted: Sep 16, 2017

Elgin Fire Department Celebrates 150th Anniversary

Three-year-old Shirma Stevenson wasn't aware of the history surrounding Saturday's Fire Barn No. 5 Museum open house. She just wanted to have fun and drive the 1920s-era fire engine on display on the front lawn. "Do you want to be a girl firefighter?" her grandmother, Wanda Stevenson, asked. "Yeah," the toddler said.
The Chicago Tribune looked at the city of Elgin (IL) celebrating its fire department's 150th anniversary with an open house and showcase of memorabilia, including antique fire apparatus.
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Posted: Sep 16, 2017

IN Firefighter Training Facility Offers Variety of Evolutions

By Rick Markley

Bring together a group of fire service professionals and the term “public- private partnership” is not one you are likely to hear tossed around. The concept is often reserved for infrastructure projects like detention centers, highways, and the occasional fire station.

Yet in a small town about 50 miles east of Chicago, public-private partnerships are being talked about a lot in connection with the fire service, and more specifically, firefighter training. That’s because the brand-spanking new Multi Agency Academic Cooperative — a regional emergency responder training center — is open for business. Known locally as the MAAC, the complex is the brainchild of Stewart McMillan and is a partnership between private industry, nonprofit foundations and state and local governments. The 4.5-acre facility sits on a 12-acre plot about 1,000 feet from the Task Force Tips headquarters, of which McMillan is CEO and his father was the founder.

In fact, McMillan dedicated the site to his father by laboring over how to name it so the acronym spelled “Mac”, his father’s nickname. McMillan not only followed his father into the family business, he followed him into volunteer firefighting. And if you spend any time with McMillan, you’ll understand that his relationships with his father and firefighting deeply informs his personal and professional life; for more on that, you can watch his Ted Talk below.

Like his father was, McMillan is a firefighter training evangelist. And he’s been dreaming of building a training facility since 1998 when Task Force Tips moved to its current location. But building it there would have been an eyesore, he says. And so he waited.

That wait came to an end when “we very serendipitously came upon this property, which was way off my radar. We had 12 acres here that was all stoned and driven on with 50-ton forklifts,” McMillan says. “The minute I saw it, (I knew) this would support fire trucks and this is the place for a training academy — it’s industrial, it’s secluded, it’s in the center of the district, it’s perfect.”

Groundbreaking occurred at the site in September 2016, and in a year’s time a fully functional fire, police and EMS training facility was built and put into operation. In fact, long before it’s September ribbon-cutting ceremony, the MAAC has hosted various training classes including a driver/operator, Firefighter I and II and police tactical training. Weekend and evening classes began in May so the facility could be used without upsetting the on-going construction work.

Exterior training props and tower

So what does MAAC have to offer students? Actually, quite a bit given its relatively small footprint.

The 7,200-square- foot main building houses offices and two classrooms. The lion’s share of that building, 6,000 square feet, is a large apparatus bay where indoor training takes place. That area has a two-story structure for bail-out and ladder training; the bail-out area has built-in fall protection. There are also downed firefighter rescue props, as well as space for storage and class instruction.

Outside along the Eastern perimeter are several propane-fed firefighting props. One is a fire extinguisher training area where Class A, B and C fires can be simulated. Other props include live-fir

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