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Posted: Sep 18, 2017

1931 Peoria (IL) Fire Department Ahrens-Fox

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Posted: Sep 18, 2017

Retired Angier Fire Truck Continues To Serve - The Daily Record

Donated to schools' public safety academy. By TOM WOERNER Of The Record Staff A fire truck that has served the Angier community for years started a new life Thursday night when it was donated to a local school's fire safety education program.

The truck, engine 942, is still in good working condition and served the community for many years until it was retired.


The truck sits comfortably in a garage on the the school’s back side waiting to be a major educational tool.


Harnett Central High School Public Safety Academy Chief Reggie Hocutt said he appreciated the gesture of the fire department.


“From the bottom of my heart I say thank you for this donation,” Mr. Hocutt said. “We have worked hard in this program and we are one of the premiere programs in the state. We could not do that without the support of the community.”


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Posted: Sep 18, 2017

Erie (PA) Fire Truck Damaged in Crash

Police said the rig was responding to a call when it was struck by a car at East 26th and French streets late Sunday afternoon. An Erie Bureau of Fire rig was damaged when it collided with a car at an eastside intersection late Sunday afternoon. The crew aboard Erie Engine Co.

The crew aboard Erie Engine Co. 6 was traveling east on East 26th Street at about 5:45 p.m. Sunday, responding to a call with lights and siren activated, when it was struck by a Honda that was traveling south on French Street, according to Erie police at the scene.


The Honda received heavy front-end damage but the driver remained at the scene and did not receive medical treatment. The fire engine received some damage but was still able to be driven, Fire Chief Guy Santone said. No firefighters were reported injured in the crash.


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Posted: Sep 18, 2017

Chief: Increase in Calls Putting a Strain on Epping Fire Department

Union Leader Correspondent September 17. 2017 8:32PM About 80 percent of the calls to the Epping Fire Department are for ambulance service. JASON SCHREIBER/UNION LEADER CORRESPONDENT EPPING - With the number of fire and emergency calls continuing to rise, Fire Chief Don DeAngelis told selectmen this week that the days of trying to rely on part-time call firefighters to cover evening shifts are numbered.
Ed. Note: Interesting note here about younger volunteer firefighters coming into the fire service with a different level of commitment. is your department experiencing something similar? Is it a generational difference or is it that it is genuinely harder to commit the time?

DeAngelis warned that after this year the department may have to hire full-time firefighters to handle nights.


“For seven years we’ve been able to do it long after other departments went to full-time, and generally it’s about 1,000 runs a year (before) a department starts to have problems,” DeAngelis said.

The department logged about 1,200 calls in 2015 and 2016, but DeAngelis said that number is expected to surpass 1,300 this year.

About 80 percent of the calls are for the ambulance service, he said.

“Our older members are leaving. The younger members are a different generation. We don’t get the commitment we used to have. The members that are on work their full hours. We have very few exceptions to that … and we just can’t seem to maintain the amount of people we need to staff properly,” DeAngelis said.
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Posted: Sep 18, 2017

Lovingly Restored 1919 pumper Returns to Fire Department

The Modesto Fire Department's first motorized pumper truck, a 1919 Seagrave, is back home and will be the showpiece of a historical display being assembled for the MFD's original station on 11th Street. The truck was brought to Station 1 on Thursday, after long-retired Modesto Junior College counselor Bill Spidell spent 12 years or more restoring it.

Ed. Note: Preserving the history of our fire departments is critical. We learn from the past and gain a greater appreciation for what the founders of our fire deprtments sacrificed to bring them into service.

The truck was brought to Station 1 on Thursday, after long-retired Modesto Junior College counselor Bill Spidell spent 12 years or more restoring it. Spidell and his wife, Alma, bought the old engine in 2002 for $3,500, and MFD Interim Chief Alan Ernst said it cost them thousands more to bring it back to its original condition.


The restoration was largely complete in 2014, but the Spidells held onto it until a secure place to house and display it could be found.


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