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Posted: Jul 25, 2017

Kansas Woman Tries to Kill Bug with Lighter

A woman in Topeka, Kan. tried to kill a bug with a cigarette lighter. She wound up setting her apartment on fire, forcing an evacuation of the building and causing extensive damage. Topeka Fire Marshal Mike Martin confirmed that the blaze, which caused $140,000 in damages and the displacement of 17 people, resulted from an "occupant trying to kill a bug with a lighter."
Topeka Fire Marshal Mike Martin confirmed that the fire, which caused $140,000 in damages and the displacement of 17 people, resulted from an “occupant trying to kill a bug with a lighter.”

Monique Quarles told the Topeka Capital-Journal that shortly before 3:45 Monday morning, her daughter Ausha Scott and 2-year-old granddaughter were on the third floor of their Fairlawn Green apartment complex.

In a video interview with the Capital-Journal, Quarles said her daughter alerted her to the bug. “I found the bug, picked the bug up and I put it in my hand and lit it on fire,” Quarles said.

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Posted: Jul 25, 2017

$60M to Repair Pittsburgh's Fire, Police and Medic Stations

Pittsburgh would need $60 million to repair rundown police, fire and Emergency Medical Services stations, public works facilities, recreation centers and other buildings, according to a report the Mayor's Office released Tuesday. Mayor Bill Peduto's office in 2015 commissioned Massaro Construction Management Services for $1 million to assess all buildings owned by the city.
Massaro assessed about 300 structures and identified six buildings in need of immediate attention because they operate 24 hours per day: station No. 24 in the South Side, Zone 4 police station and fire station No. 18 in Squirrel Hill, station No. 7 in Stanton Heights, station No. 17 in Homewood, and the Medic 8 station in Allentown.

Peduto spokesman Tim McNulty said the city would focus on those six buildings, because they are critical to public safety.

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Posted: Jul 25, 2017

Henderson (NV) Fire Department Uses Open House Events to Push Safety

The Henderson Fire Department held an open house July 14 at Station 86, where parents and children got safety advice from firefighters. "We don't want the first time (kids) meet our firefighters to be when that disaster happens," said Henderson public information officer Kathleen Richards.
Fire Department partners, such as Get Ready Stay Ready and Check Your Seats in the Heat, set up booths to offer safety tips to families exploring the station. Kids could have their photos take in firefighter uniforms and in the station’s pumper engine truck while firefighters milled around and answered questions.

Fire Station 86, 1996 E. Galleria Drive, is one of nine stations at which the Fire Department holds monthly open houses January through September. Station 86 serves an area of Henderson covering about 9.8 square miles and more than 6,478 residents as of 2016, making it one of the slower stations.

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Posted: Jul 25, 2017

Floating Fire Station Considered for San Francisco Pier

In December of 2016, the San Francisco Chronicle reported that the city may build a two-story firehouse on a floating platform off of Pier 22.5, a climate-change proof expansion of the historic but aging and inadequate Fire Station 35 nearby.
"It would be the only fire station on the shoreline, and is seen as an essential piece of the city's response to a major earthquake," notes the paper.

A June presentation to the San Francisco Department of Public Works reveals some preliminary designs for the 16,300-square-foot bayfaring base, which would house three fireboats on top of rescue watercraft and jet skis for delivering emergency personnel to waterfront hot spots in a hurry. The station's single fire engine would remain on land.

The existing 1915 building measures just a little over 6,000 feet, with only two boats complementing the one engine. Public Works calls the facilities "grossly undersized" and notes that “costly repairs continue to mount” keeping the centenarian structure in working order.

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Posted: Jul 25, 2017

Bella Vista (AR) to Order Custom Fire Apparatus

The Bella Vista City Council approved a measure Monday, July 24 to set aside nearly $500,000 for a new custom-built fire truck.
Deputy Fire Chief Bryan Wolfgang said the new truck represents an investment that will be well worth it in the long run.

"The truck that's out at station three that this truck will be replacing is an '05, it's been a maintenance nightmare, costing the city a lot of money," Wolfgang said. "The dependability is just not there."

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