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Posted: Oct 24, 2016

Fire Truck, Car Collide in Buffalo (NY)

BUFFALO, N.Y. (WIVB) - A fire truck collided with another vehicle at Delaware Ave. and Bryant St. The crash happened at 9:50 a.m. Friday. Before the collision, the fire truck had been responding to a call. Its lights were on and its sirens were sounding.

The truck had a green light when it struck the other vehicle.

After the crash, the driver of the other vehicle had to be extricated from their car.

The driver, a male, had non-life threatening injuries. No firefighters have reported any injuries.

Both vehicles had extensive damage.

The crash is being investigated by authorities.

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Posted: Oct 24, 2016

Escanaba Township (MI) Receives New Firetruck

The Escanaba Township Fire Department has reached new heights, literally. A demonstration of the department's new ladder truck took place on Friday. A 2015 Spartan Gladiator ladder truck was on display at the Island Resort and Casino. Capable of reaching a height of 94 feet vertically, the truck can pump up to 2,000 gallons per minute from the bucket.

"The truck itself was paid for with a grant from the John and Melissa Besse Foundation. We were very fortunate to have those folks do that," said Tom Sealander, ladder captain with the Escanaba Township Fire Department. "The Hannahville Indian Community has been very generous with our fire department and we're appreciative of the fact that they contributed towards the equipment that is hauled on there."

The truck will be stationed out of the Besse Fire Hall in Gladstone.

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Posted: Oct 24, 2016

South Metro Firefighter Buys Fire Truck He First Sat in As a Child

LITTLETON (CO) - You haven't had a childhood if you haven't at least just once - sat in the seat of a firetruck. It inspires kids everywhere to be firefighters. That dream doesn't come true too often - but it did for one firefighter and he owes it all to that truck.

Eric Hurst, the public information officer for South Metro Fire Rescue Authority, says since he can remember, he's always wanted to be a firefighter.

"I was infatuated with the fire department, Castlewood was always the trucks that I had seen so I visited the fire station a lot with my parents," Hurst said. 

If you're not from around here, Castlewood is now South Metro Fire Rescue.For a kid growing up in Littleton, there was just something about those trucks, but the bright-red one always stood out.

"I remember how big the steering wheel felt and how the front-seat kind of felt like a couch because it was so big," Hurst said. "It was one of the unique ones because it was specifically designed to respond to airline crashes at the airport so it's very much a one of a kind."

The 1970's Imperial was taken out of service in 2000. In that time, Hurst started working for South Metro and he lost track of his favorite truck.

Then one day - more than two decades after he first sat in it he saw the truck for sale online.

"Immediately I had a flash back, back to when I was a kid on the front seat of that and I can't, you know, explain how big the steering wheel felt as a child looking at it," said Hurst. "It didn't have the labels on it, it didn't have the old lights on it, but I could identify it immediately.

"So I called the dealership and told them that I needed to get it," he said.

And he did for the 13,000 dollars. Hurst had the old Castlewood Fire Department decals made for it and he slapped them back on.

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Posted: Oct 24, 2016

Suspected Drunk Driver Crashes Into Fire Truck, Medical Helicopter

Published: GALLUP, NM ( KRQE) - McKinley County Sheriffs Office deputies responded to a crash early Sunday morning after a suspected drunk driver went crashing into a medical helicopter and fire truck on Highway 566 near Gallup, New Mexico.

Deputies say a landing zone for a medical transport helicopter had been set up by the fire department for transport of a patient from a separate crash on Navajo route 1149, when the reported drunk driver went around the barricade on Highway 566 crashing into the helicopter and fire truck.

The helicopter was unoccupied, not running and rotors were not spinning, according to McKinely County Sheriff’s Office.

McKinley County sheriff’s say the suspected drunk driver, now identified as 26-year-old Glenn Livingston of Gallup, has been arrested and is charged with aggravated DWI, resisting, evading and or obstructing an officer among other charges.

No injuries were reported at the time of the crash.

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Posted: Oct 24, 2016

Menlo Park (CA): Downtown Fire Station Closing for Rebuild

A 63-year-old fire station in downtown Menlo Park is about to be razed. Fire Station 6, at 700 Oak Grove Ave., is set to be torn down and a larger station will be built to allow for more firefighters and fire vehicles. Work is to begin before the year ends, according to the Menlo Park Fire Protection District.

It is one of seven stations the district operates in its coverage area, which includes Menlo Park, Atherton, East Palo Alto and unincorporated portions of San Mateo County.

The station’s current firefighters have already moved out of the station and into a residence behind the station on Hoover Street. That residential property is part of the expansion and will give the district “the ability to build a two-story, partial drive-through station that would be able to accommodate its largest piece of fire equipment with the ability to add additional apparatus and personnel,” according to a news release.

Fire Chief Harold Schapelhouman said the expansion is needed to deal with all the potential development in the Downtown Specific Plan, which was approved in June 2012 and allows for new development of 680 housing units and 474,000 square feet of nonresidential space.

“The fact that (Station) 6 was the second busiest amongst all emergency units in the entire district last year and based upon increased roadway congestion, it’s a no-brainer to rebuild in this location,” Schapelhouman said in the release.

The project has been in the works since 2007, the chief said, but he said the plan was left out of the city’s Specific Plan, though the district requested it, which caused delays and additional environmental analysis costs.

“I’ll be happy to see us tear down the old station and start construction by the end of the year,” he said. “It’s been a long, rough road to get to this point.”

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