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Posted: Jul 6, 2017

Sheffield Lake (OH) May Finance Refurbishment of 1996 Fire Apparatus

Sheffield Lake Finance Director Tamara Smith suggested that after paying down the existing note by $275,000, the city should add approximately $115,000 in new financing to the rolled-over note to refurbish the fire department’s backup fire engine, along with approximately $68,000 to purchase the service department’s skid-steer machine.
"Fire Chief Tim Card has obtained an estimate of $113,000 to refurbish engine 63, our 1996 fire engine, from a reputable company that we've used for repairs recently and that he knows well and trusts," Smith said. The firefighters say they prefer the older fire engine, saying it is better built than the newer fire engine the city obtained with grant money. The process would include refurbishment of the 21-year-old fire engine's pumps and repainting.

'The 21-year-old truck is simpler to use, and the repairs it needs are new brakes, replacement of hoses and other internal plastic parts," SLFD Lt. Brian Davis said Tuesday. "They'd overhaul the engine, which was built to go a million miles, replace all the leaky hoses and valves, and repaint it in about six weeks. When it comes back, it would be as if we have two new fire engines. Replacing Engine 63 with a new pumper truck would cost the city at least $400,000-$500,000. This would save the city a lot of money, and we could go another 21 years before we need to do anything again."

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Posted: Jul 6, 2017

Agencies retrieve 17 tubers from Snoqualmie River in two water rescues

Two water rescues and a motorcycle accident near Fall City made for an eventful evening for Fire District 27 emergency personnel, and surrounding agencies yesterday. None of the 17 people involved in the water incidents were injured during their adventures, but a motorcyclist who crashed after hitting a patch of gravel sustained a broken shoulder and some broken ribs, said FD 27’s acting Lieutenant Joe Springer.
- PUB DATE: 7/6/2017 1:18:19 PM - SOURCE: Snoqualmie Valley Record
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Posted: Jul 6, 2017

Multiple Purpose Storage Systems from Ready Rack

Store a wide variety of equipment in a very small footprint. Can store 24 SCBA units, up to 32 air cylinders, up to 1,400 feet of 2½-inch, or be set up as a combination storage system depending on your department’s needs.

The following Configurations are available:

  1. MPSS-H: Hose Configuration includes three Double Hose Ledges
  2. MPSS-S: SCBA Configuration includes 24 Air Pack L-Bracket with two Speed Clips* 
  3. MPSS-C: Cylinder Configuration storage includes eight V-Shelves for Cylinders and eight Air Pack L-Brackets with two Speed Clips*
  4. MPSS-HC: Hose and Cylinder Configuration includes two Single Hose Ledges and (4) V-Shelves for Cylinders
  5. MPSS-HSC: Hose/SCBA/Cylinder Configuration includes three V-Shelves for Cylinders, two Single Hose Ledges, (1) Double Hose Ledge, eight Air Pack L-Brackets with two Speed Clips*

*Specify bottle size - 5", 6" or 7"

To learn more about the five different configurations of the Multiple Purpose Storage Systems or to request a custom combination, visit www.readyrack.com.

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Posted: Jul 6, 2017

Yakima Crews battle Rattlesnake Ridge Fire South of Yakima

A major fire is burning south of Yakima on Rattlesnake Ridge. Firefighters estimate at least 4,000-5,000 acres have already burned. Many homes have been threatened and neighborhoods in the Thorpe Road area have been evacuated. Roosevelt Elementary School on 16th Avenue in Yakima has been opened for any who have fled their homes.
- PUB DATE: 7/6/2017 9:54:58 AM - SOURCE: KIMA-TV CBS 29 Yakima
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Posted: Jul 6, 2017

Dubuque is Fourth City in Iowa to Install USDD’s Alerting System

US Digital Designs (USDD) and its partners at Racom Corp. have recently completed the training and installation for a new Phoenix G2 Fire Station Alerting System in Dubuque, Iowa.

This is USDD’s fourth installation in Iowa, as the company also services the communities of Davenport, Urbandale, and Marion.

The six fire stations in Dubuque serve nearly 60,000 people, and the city is already seeing a decrease in response times—one of many benefits of an automated dispatch system.

As the KCRG-TV9 news reporter, Katie Wiedemann, discovered, Dubuque’s emergency team is seeing a decrease in response times of 30 to 60 seconds.

New ‘Voice’ Helping Dubuque Emergency Crews
A new “voice” in Dubuque is helping first responders get to emergencies faster. The Dubuque Emergency Communications Center is now using a recorded voice to make that initial call out to first responders.

When an emergency call comes in, Dubuque fire and rescue crews pride themselves on leaving the fire station in record speed. “The tone goes out, they have 60 seconds to be in the vehicle and out the door,” said Dubuque Fire Chief Rick Steines.

But, what they say they want to improve is the time between when someone first calls 911, and when the dispatcher sounds the alarm.

Enter Samantha. She’s the newest member of the Dubuque emergency communications dispatch team. Instead of placing a frantic 911 caller on hold while the dispatcher contacts the fire department, the dispatcher instead types a message while talking with the caller, hits send, and Samantha puts out the call to fire crews. “It takes all of that work off the dispatcher, sends the message actually quicker than the dispatcher can manually,” said Steines.

Fire officials say Samantha streamlines the process. “It always reads the message in the exact same order, all the time. It’s the exact same voice in the exact same cadence all the time,” said Steines.

The basic system cost the fire department $235,000. Steines says that’s an improvement worth the investment. “Between 30 and 60 seconds shortening of the time, so that’s significant,” said Steines.

For more information, visit www.stationalerting.com.

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