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Posted: Nov 16, 2016

Everett’s new fire chief faces the challenges of a growing city

As Everett’s next fire chief, Eric Hicks wants to embrace change and innovation while also keeping close the department’s rich history and traditions. It was announced Wednesday that Hicks, a longtime Everett firefighter, will succeed Chief Murray Gordon who is set to retire in January. Hicks will lead the department as more people are moving to the city, and developers are building higher.
- PUB DATE: 11/16/2016 8:05:24 PM - SOURCE: Everett Herald
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Posted: Nov 16, 2016

Prosecutor: Woman who set fire to Dollar Tree Store in Kent was upset there were no shopping carts

A 64-year-old woman was charged Wednesday with first-degree arson in connection with a fire that destroyed several businesses in a Kent strip mall Sunday. The King County Prosecutor’s Office charged Linda Katherine Poplawski with first-degree arson. Bail was set at $225,000. Several businesses in the strip mall at 23406 Pacific Highway S.
- PUB DATE: 11/16/2016 7:39:51 PM - SOURCE: KCPQ-TV FOX 13
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Posted: Nov 16, 2016

Horrific Everett fire death sheds light on dangerous door locks

This tragedy is tough to forget; a tiny coffee stand in Everett was consumed by flames last January. 26-year-old Courtney Campbell got out of the stand alive by throwing herself through a window. She told investigators she had been trapped for eight grueling seconds. Courtney died four days later with burns covering 90-percent of her body.
- PUB DATE: 11/16/2016 5:47:07 PM - SOURCE: KIRO-TV CBS 7
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Posted: Nov 16, 2016

Community Mulls Possible Expansion of Bernardston (MA) Fire Station

Residents got a chance to see a few possible designs for a new or expanded fire station Tuesday night, but seemed to agree they’d need to strike a balance between going big enough to meet the department’s needs while keeping a tax increase within reason.
Jonathan Saccoccio, a project architect, and Cory Frehsee, a civil engineer and partner, both of Steven & Associates, presented four proposed designs to about 40 town residents in the elementary school’s cafeteria Tuesday. Before the meeting, residents squeezed themselves between engines and trucks during an open house for the current station on Church Street.

The four proposals range in estimated cost from between $1.85 million to about $4 million. Saccoccio said those numbers represent a wide range to encompass all the eventualities, but the true cost won’t be known until the design process proceeds.

The current 40-year-old building lacks adequate space for vehicle maintenance and storage, and could hamper a quicker response to an emergency, Saccoccio said.

The first design would be the most expensive, but Saccoccio said it represents the ideal modern fire station. Located on the same site, it would have four bays that could fit two trucks stacked one behind the other each, plus office and training space around the perimeter.

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Posted: Nov 16, 2016

Gwinnett (GA) County Officially Opens Two New Fire Stations

Gwinnett County officially opened two new fire stations Tuesday, including one near a local college's rapidly growing campus. Both Fire Station 31 and Fire Station 10 — the latter of which already existed but relocated to a new facility — have been up and running since Nov. 8, but officials held ribbon-cutting ceremonies this week.
Station 31 is new altogether and is located at 1061 Collins Hill Road in Lawrenceville, across from the campus of Georgia Gwinnett College.

"The strategic location of the fire station will provide quick access to the Highway 316 corridor and puts fire and emergency medical personnel close to the college and surrounding neighborhoods and businesses," Gwinnett fire Capt. Tommy Rutledge said in a news release.

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