Menu

WFC News

Posted: Oct 20, 2016

Seattle firefighters respond after truck tips while lifting dumpster with concrete on Capitol Hill

PHOTO: A truck tipped over on Capitol Hill Thursday morning while loading a dumpster filled with concrete and rebar. The yellow truck was on its side on Boylston Avenue, between Prospect and Aloha streets, as firefighters were sent to the scene just before 9 a.m. Eric Kaufman, who lives about 15 feet from where the truck flipped, said the truck had successfully loaded the dumpster but then it “swung off to the side and pulled the truck over.
- PUB DATE: 10/20/2016 10:47:16 AM - SOURCE: Seattle Times
Read more
Posted: Oct 20, 2016

App Helps Save Seattle Man In Cardiac Arrest

If your heart is going to stop, right outside a hospital is not a bad place for it. And if 41 people within a 330-yard radius have a cellphone app alerting them to your distress, so much the better. That’s what happened in Seattle last week when Stephen DeMont collapsed at a bus stop in front of University of Washington Medical Center.
- PUB DATE: 10/20/2016 10:41:49 AM - SOURCE: CBS Seattle KSTW-TV & KPTK-AM
Read more
Posted: Oct 20, 2016

Thalacker Presents DMACC Fire Truck to Public

Tim Thalacker knows there are many components needed for quality firefighter training he's receiving at DMACC's Fire Science Academy is the best he can receive. He also knows some equipment is tough to obtain.

Thalacker spoke at a recent press conference where DMACC officials unveiled a fire truck, announcing the college had obtained the truck to use at the fire academy, with grant money, along with an ambulance.

“Not many firefighter training centers can claim to have their very own fire trucks,” said Thalacker, who is a second-year student in DMACC’s Fire Science Technology program and a volunteer firefighter with the Baxter Fire Department. “The fire truck will help the fire science program tremendously. In the fire industry, we can learn a lot in the classroom, but almost everything we learn has to be applied hands-on, at some point.” 

Thalacker said DMACC classes and hands-on training, historically, have not generally taken place at the same site.

“All our hands-on things we did was out at Urbandale Fire Department, including live burns in their burn tower, extrication practice, testing, etc.,” Thalacker said. “We always used one of their fire engines and we are grateful for that equipment. But by having this truck, we can literally go through a lecture (on a DMACC campus) and walk 20 feet and have our own fire truck we can practice while it’s still fresh in our minds.”

The purchase was made possible by a $113,000 grant from Prairie Meadows. The grant covered the truck, equipment and some minor repairs.

Read more
Posted: Oct 20, 2016

Chicago Stocking Narcan On Fire Trucks

By Bill Cameron, WLS-AM News (CHICAGO) In Chicago, there's some good news to report about the epidemic of heroin overdoses. Narcan, the prescription drug that saves lives in the many cases of heroin overdose, is now onboard all of the Chicago Fire Dept's trucks and paramedic units.

Narcan, the prescription drug that saves lives in the many cases of heroin overdose, is now onboard all of the Chicago Fire Dept’s trucks and paramedic units.

Fire Commissioner Jose Santiago says it’s a big deal because time is of the essence in these emergencies.

“It is a big deal. There is an epidemic in the country with heroin overdoses,” Santiago said. “It’ll bring them down off that high and then you can see what you have. As you bring this person down, if anything starts to go wrong, you can go ahead and address that [because] we have paramedics on there.”

Read more
Posted: Oct 20, 2016

Chippewa Falls (WI) Fire Station Construction on Schedule, Under Budget

CHIPPEWA FALLS - Chippewa Falls fire Chief Mike Hepfler could barely contain his excitement Wednesday as he gave a tour of the new fire station in the city's southeast corner. "I still pinch myself every once in a while, just to make sure I'm not dreaming," Hepfler said as he stepped through the construction area.

Groundbreaking on the $5 million fire station was May 16. Exterior work should be finished in the next two to three weeks, then the interior will be completed over the winter. Hepfler said the goal is to move in during March and be fully operational by April 1.

“We are staying on — and under — that budget,” Hepfler said. “We’re very fortunate; we’ve been moving right along.”

The station features six large vehicle bays, with a 22-foot ceiling and 14-foot-tall doors. It offers far more room than the existing downtown headquarters.

“We shouldn’t have any problems backing any equipment in here,” he said. “And it’s big enough it allows us to store everything inside.”

The building at 1301 Chippewa Crossing Blvd. sits on a 3-acre parcel, with plenty of additional space outside for possible expansion.

“Everything has been planned for the future — we’ve built for our needs for 25 years,” he said.

Mayor Greg Hoffman shares Hepfler’s enthusiasm for the project.

Read more

RSS
First68536854685568566858686068616862Last

Theme picker

Search News Articles