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Posted: Oct 4, 2016

Medway (MA) Fire department Gets New Fire Apparatus

There's a new fire truck rolling around the streets of town after the fire department used funds provided by Exelon to purchase the vehicle last month. Town officials recently announced the purchase of the $100,000 "dry chemical truck," which they say the department acquired in early September.The vehicle packs 500 pounds of an extinguishing, dry chemical known as "Purple K," and will be utilized mainly to combat large electrical and flammable liquid fires.
Essentially, the truck will provide the fire department with the resources needed to battle a fire at Exelon’s Medway plant should it need to do so though the device can be used for other emergency situations as well, he said.

In January 2014 firefighters responded to a electrical fire at Eversource Energy’s switch facility in Medway and was unable to combat the flames using traditional methods, according to Lynch. The department needed to call in a dry chemical truck from Boston's Logan International Airport to battle the fire.

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Posted: Oct 4, 2016

Six Hospitalized After Ambulance, Two Cars Crash in Providence (RI)

Police in Providence are investigating after a multivehicle crash involving an ambulance sent four adults and two children to the hospital. Officers responded to the scene just after 5:30 p.m. Monday. Police say an ambulance responding to a call was going through a red light when another car failed to yield and hit the vehicle.
A third car involved had been traveling the opposite direction of the rescue vehicle.

Fire officials say no one was badly hurt. Four adults were taken to Rhode Island Hospital and two children were transported to Hasbro Hospital. The youngest victim was a six-month-old.

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Posted: Oct 4, 2016

City of Cullman (AL) Approves Bid for New Fire Station

It's taken the better part of a decade, but the City of Cullman has approved a bid for a new fire station on the north side of the city. The city has approved a $5.2 million bid from Cullman-based Eidson and Associates to build the station, though city officials are working with the contractor to "value engineer" that price down.
The city council had budgeted a little over $4 million for the project, and bids came back higher than expected.

The project is set to move forward soon, as the City of Cullman has already purchased land to build on. In January, the city agreed to purchase 3.97 acres from Merchant's Bank, at a cost of $325,000. The property is located on Alabama Highway 157, beside the Merchant's Bank branch at 4855 Alabama Highway 157, just east of Piggly Wiggly. Officials have been eyeing the highway corridor due to its easy access and close proximity to the new retail and industrial growth on the north side of the city.

Earlier this year, the city set aside $163,000 to finalize a design for the station, and engineers worked with Cullman Fire Rescue to ensure the final plans fit the needs of the growing department. The new station will feature additional bays for vehicles, and officials believe the location is an optimum base to serve the economic and construction growth on the north side of the city.

The award of a new $1.1 million grant set to fund a dozen new fire fighters served as a major catalyst to get the project off the ground. The Staffing for Adequate Fire and Emergency Response (SAFER) Grant will be used to hire a total of 12 new firefighters, and the grant will fund those new hires for two years.

Cullman Mayor Max Townson said the project is a long time coming, and though construction is in north Cullman, noted it will improve response time across the city.

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Posted: Oct 4, 2016

Winthrop (ME) Could Receive Grant Money for New Fire Station

The Winthrop Town Council hasn't decided if it will approve the construction of a new fire station on U.S. Route 202, but if it does, the Winthrop Fire Department is slated to receive $450,000 in grant funding for the project over the next three years.
That's buoyed Winthrop Fire Chief Dan Brooks, who has been paying close attention to engineering work currently underway at the location where the new station would be built. If the council green lights the project for the 2017-2018 year, Brooks explained, it would unlock that large sum of money.

The council, which received an update about the fire station project from Brooks at its Monday night meeting, probably won't make any final decisions about the project until at least the winter, when it begins putting together next year's budget.

In the budget it approved last spring, the council declined to approve a $127,000 down payment on a roughly $2.2. million fire station, which has been under discussion for almost a decade, but set aside the same amount for design and construction work for the station. That work is now underway at a town-owned lot on U.S. Route 202, next to the former Carleton Woolen Mills building, which is the department's preference for a new site.

That amount, $127,000, was equal to the annual payments the town had been making on an unrelated 10-year loan, which was repaid last year. Because that $127,000 was freed up, Brooks has argued the project would not increase the town budget.

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Posted: Oct 4, 2016

Cleveland (MN) Council Approves New Fire Apparatus

The Cleveland City Council needs to come up with about $200,000 in additional funding after approving a new truck for the city's fire department. Cleveland Fire Chief Jon Schabert attended the City Council's Oct. 3 meeting to ask to purchase a new fire truck for his department.
Cleveland Fire Chief Jon Schabert attended the City Council's Oct. 3 meeting to ask to purchase a new fire truck for his department. Schabert said he wanted to replace a truck that the city has owned since 1996.

"I got a quote for $428,000," Schabert said. "Typically we replace our trucks every 15 years but we've let it go a little longer in the past. This one is 20 years-old."

The city has $176,000 saved for a new fire truck so far, and will add another $20,000 to the fund before the end of the year. Revenue from the city's gambling fund has also gone toward new fire trucks in the past, and usually has about $40,000 available each year.

Schabert said that the contract for the new fire truck must be signed by Oct. 25 and paid for within four months, giving the city until this winter to come up with the remaining $196,000. Schabert said he might be able to get another $30,000 by selling the old truck.

The council discussed waiting a few more years to raise more money before replacing the fire truck, but McCabe pointed out that the interest from a bank would be cheaper than the rising costs of a new truck. Schabert said truck prices could go up between 11 to 13 percent by next year, whereas the bank has a 3 percent interest rate.

Council member Tyler Miller asked how much the fire department spends for repairs each year. Schabert said it was about $15,000, but that money is budgeted separately from the funds for a new truck.

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