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Posted: Sep 14, 2016

Lynden Fire Chief to retire next April

Fire Chief Gary Baar will retire next April, councilor Dave Burns reported at the Sept. 6 City Council meeting. By then, Baar, 65, will have 35 years of fire service with the Lynden Fire Department, six of those as assistant chief before becoming chief in 2006. He took some time off last year after having heart valve surgery.
- PUB DATE: 9/14/2016 6:14:34 PM - SOURCE: Lyndentribune
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Posted: Sep 14, 2016

Woman brandishes fake shotgun at firefighters in Thurston County

A 68-year-old Thurston County woman was arrested Wednesday after she allegedly brandished a replica shotgun at firefighters who had responded to a medical alarm at her mobile home. Neither the woman nor the firefighters was injured, and the woman will be booked into the Thurston County jail on suspicion of second-degree assault, said Chief Deputy Brad Watkins of the Thurston County Sheriff’s Office.
- PUB DATE: 9/14/2016 4:03:05 PM - SOURCE: Olympian
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Posted: Sep 14, 2016

Firefighting Foam Linked to Water Contamination, Injuries Under Fire

A fire suppressant foam linked to the shutdown of two drinking water wells at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base injured a firefighter during a training incident and the Defense Department has launched an investigation to determine how widespread the problem is across the nation.
The firefighter, Michael R. Strouse, was injured when piping inside a fire cab ruptured and shot the chemical at high pressure into his eyes, he said.

"My face was chemically burned and my eyes were really blood shot and they were sore," Strouse said in an interview with this newspaper. "Then the next day I was actually taken off the job."

Strouse, 38, a veteran firefighter for more than a decade at Wright-Patterson, was reassigned to administrative duties. But his condition gradually worsened, he said. He's now been off work for more than three months.

The injury to Strouse comes as concerns over aqueous film forming foam, or AFFF, have soared in recent years.

AFFF has been used in training by the military since the 1970s and is considered more effective than water to extinguish petroleum-based fires.

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Posted: Sep 14, 2016

Fairfield (MT) Fire Apparatus Arrives on 9/11

Fairfield Volunteer Fire Department Chief Ben Rhodes watches as Kendall Weaver backs the newly acquired structure truck into the Fairfield fire hall.
A reflection on the significance of the date on the arrival of a new fire truck 
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Posted: Sep 14, 2016

Houston Firefighters Claim Broken Fire Apparatus Risk Lives

Houston firefighters say they are being forced to use broken equipment while fighting fires in our city and it is endangering lives. Alvin White, the president of the Houston Professional Firefighters Union, made the statement to Channel 2 Investigates on Tuesday. "This is not acceptable. We do not like it,” White said.
A fire truck at station 74 has water leaking from it at about a gallon a minute and requires a hose to be connected when the engine isn’t in use, White said. The engine, which Channel 2 observed leaking, could be out of water when it is needed for a fire if the hose wasn’t connected except during runs, he said.

In another example, firefighters snapped a photo of a 2x4 being used at an angle to keep an overhead radio in place.

A photo given to Channel 2 shows how firefighters used duct tape to fix an air-conditioning problem overhead in a different truck. Tape goes for several feet overhead around air-conditioning vents.

“They had the duct tape around there to hold those vents in place and to cut down on the water condensation from the units,” White said.

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