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Posted: Aug 10, 2017

Grant County: Community college, first responders train for mass casualty event

Grant County has seen its share of mass casualty events: a school shooting, chemical releases in the 1980s and 1990s and one of the largest aviation disasters on record. On Tuesday, Big Bend Community College, first responders and other area partners came together for a Mass Casualty Incident exercise.
- PUB DATE: 8/10/2017 3:12:19 AM - SOURCE: iFiberOne
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Posted: Aug 10, 2017

Emergency responders, volunteers practice with sea plane in Jefferson County

Jefferson County officials, emergency responders and area volunteers came together for a drill Wednesday for using sea planes to transport people after a natural disaster. The exercise was based at the beach on Kala Point and included teams from the Navy, East Jefferson Fire-Rescue, the Jefferson County Department of Emergency Management and others.
- PUB DATE: 8/10/2017 2:59:42 AM - SOURCE: Port Angeles Peninsula Daily News
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Posted: Aug 10, 2017

Cle Elum, South Cle Elum reach emergency services agreement

The Cle Elum City Council authorized Mayor Jay McGowan to sign an inter-local agreement with the town of South Cle Elum for emergency services (fire and medical) at a council meeting on Tuesday. The resolution reestablishes an agreement the two departments had prior to June 15, 2009, in which both departments responded to each other’s emergency calls.
- PUB DATE: 8/10/2017 1:53:04 AM - SOURCE: Ellensburg Daily Record
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Posted: Aug 10, 2017

Tennessee wildfire records tell story of chaos, confusion

Everything failed in an instant. Severed lines snuffed out power to the command center directing the emergency response to the deadly Gatlinburg wildfires the night of Nov. 28 and plunged firefighting and rescue efforts into darkness and chaos. Sevier County began releasing records Wednesday documenting the confusion caused by the collapse of communications systems as fire swept into the city.
- PUB DATE: 8/10/2017 12:00:00 AM - SOURCE: Knoxville News Sentinel
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Posted: Aug 10, 2017

Florida firefighters sue siren-maker over hearing loss

Nearly two dozen Palm Beach County firefighters are suing a publicly-traded company claiming a siren it produces for emergency vehicles robbed them of their hearing. In the lawsuit filed this week in Palm Beach County Circuit Court, current and former firefighters for Palm Beach County Fire Rescue and West Palm Beach and Boca Raton fire departments say Federal Signal Corp.
- PUB DATE: 8/10/2017 12:00:00 AM - SOURCE: Palm Beach Post
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