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Posted: Aug 24, 2016

Classic Fire Truck to Be Auctioned Off in SD

An original 1953 International fire truck will be auctioned off at Kool Deadwood Nites on Friday, with the profits going to St. Jude's Children's Research Hospital. The auction will take place at 10 a.m. in front of the Deadwood Mountain Grand resort, 1906 Deadwood Mountain Drive.
A classic fire apparatus is set to be auctioned off in South Dakota, according to a news report.

The truck was purchased six months ago by Ray's Auto Body in Rapid City. The truck was originally purchased by the Douglas Volunteer Fire Department in 1953.

"It's got all of its original equipment and new hoses," said Larry Kuhn of Ray's Auto Body. "Everything runs perfectly, it's getting detailed and polished up and will be in Deadwood on Thursday."

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Posted: Aug 24, 2016

New Canaan (CT) Fire Commission Disposing of Apparatus

Seriously... would anyone in New Canaan be truly shocked to see kids playing on this in someone's driveway? On the agenda at the Board of Selectmen meeting of Tuesday, Aug. 23, was this: 'Approval of a request from the Fire Commission to dispose of a surplus 1996 Marion/Spartan pumper truck.'
A report from the New Canaan Advertiser looked at local officials efforts to get rid of a used rig.

First Selectman Rob Mallozzi III explained that funds were approved to replace the 1996 fire truck, and that such apparatus are sometimes sold to other departments as back-up units. The area doesn't need the truck because it has two front-line units.
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Posted: Aug 24, 2016

Mt. Pleasant (NY) Gets New Fire Truck

The Mt. Pleasant Fire Department has a new tool in its arsenal for the agency’s everlasting quest to keep residents and property safe.
The city of Mount Pleasant, Tennessee, has acquired a new fire apparatus: a 2004 Rosenbauer Spartan complete with a 60-foot extension ladder and remote controlled nozzle.

“The citizens of Mt. Pleasant should be glad we got this truck,” Fire Chief Tim Smith told The Daily Herald. “This is something we thought we would never see, but now that it has happened, we guarantee the City of Mt. Pleasant will make good use of it.”

Smith said the new truck and its 60-foot extendable ladder will give firefighters much needed access during emergency situations at the city’s public schools and other structures.

With the new nozzle, which can be used to direct water remotely using a small wireless controller, the new truck allows firefighters to work in a more secure environment for safer rescues and water drops, the report said.

The truck, which is usually priced at more than $500,000, was used by a fire department in Ohio until it was damaged in a collision. The refurbished truck was purchased from Lawrenceburg’s M3 Fire Apparatus for $139,000, according to the report.
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Posted: Aug 24, 2016

Wellesley Island (NY) Votes To Fund New Fire Station

Wellesley Island's fire station was destroyed in a fire on August 14, 2014. Two years later, the island is closer to getting a permanent home for its fire department.
Residents of Wellesley Island in New York state voted to approve a $1.3M bond to build a new firehouse after the local station was destroyed by fire.

"We need a new station to be able to hold the engine's tankers and pumpers and the ambulance," Wellesley Island resident Frank Beadel said.

The fire department has raised the rest of the funds to build the $1.6 million facility on Cross Island Road. Right now the fire department's equipment is scattered throughout various locations, according to a report, but the new building would put fire trucks and the island's ambulance all under one roof.

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Posted: Aug 24, 2016

Fires prompt emergency declaration for Washington counties

Several wildfires continued to burn in Eastern Washington Tuesday and Gov. Jay Inslee declared a state of emergency for 20 counties. Firefighters appeared to be gaining the upper hand against wildfires burning in the Spokane region, although heavy smoke blanketed the state's second-largest city. Inslee visited a fire command center on the Spokane County Fairgrounds on Tuesday morning, and blamed tree diseases and rising temperatures caused by climate change for the state's recent spate of record wildfire seasons.
- PUB DATE: 8/24/2016 6:24:02 AM - SOURCE: Longview Daily News
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