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Posted: Aug 15, 2016

Uxbridge Fire Station Groundbreaking Held

UXBRIDGE - The town's new central fire station on South Main Street is one step closer to reality. The groundbreaking ceremony for the new station took place Tuesday morning with state Sen. Ryan Fattman, Massachusetts Fire Marshal Peter J. Ostroskey, Uxbridge Fire Chief William T. Kessler, Uxbridge Police Chief Jeffrey A.

“It’s been a long time coming to get to this point, but we did it thanks to the support of our Building Committee and town leaders and the residents of Uxbridge,” Kessler said in his remarks.


 

Genereux said it was Kessler and Ostroskey, the town’s former fire chief, who began promoting the need for a new station more than 10 years ago.


“Their vision was that this would take place at some point and here we are 10 years later and its happening,” he said.


The 14,365-square-foot fire station is being built on the reconfigured current site next to Town Hall on South Main Street. The expansion will allow for two-way vehicle flow out of the five bays as well as parking for the public and for firefighters.


The proposed construction site has been a beehive of activity over the past four months, including the demolition in May of the old post office adjacent to the current station to make way for site work.


The project will include the eventual razing of the existing fire station and construction of an entirely new building, complete with five drive-thru bays.


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Posted: Aug 15, 2016

Several People Hurt in Pileup Involving Car, Truck Ambulance in Carlstadt

CARLSTADT, N.J. (CBSNewYork) - A semi-trailer truck, an ambulance and a car were involved in a monumental crash in Carlstadt, New Jersey Friday evening. Carlstadt police said the accident happened in front of 3167 Washington Ave. in the Bergen County municipality.
Carlstadt police said a minivan or taxi attempting to make a left turn into a gas station caused an ambulance to swerve into oncoming  traffic  and strike the car and the truck.

Police said at least four or five people were injured. The extent of their injuries was not immediately learned, but their injuries were not life-threatening, police said.


The ambulance was from Moonachie and was headed to Meadowlands Hospital Medical Center in Secaucus, police said. It was not clear whether there was a patient in the ambulance.


New Jersey State Police also responded.


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Posted: Aug 15, 2016

Community Volunteers Build Fire Station in Dolph

Susan Varno Published August 14, 2016 at 12:00 a.m. - In 1815, the first settlers arrived in what is now Dolph, Arkansas. Two-hundred and one years later, in April 2016, Dolph officially opened its first fire station. Dolph has never been incorporated.

“The Pineville Volunteer Fire Department was organized in 1975,” Fire Chief Mike Stephen said. “About that time, Hale Gene Moody and others in Dolph bought a Jeep from the U.S. Forest Service. They put a tank on it and parked it there. We needed a second station so we could respond faster to calls in Dolph.”


Planning for Station No. 2 began after March 23, 2011, when a brush fire burned more than 900 acres in Dolph. The Pineville, Rodney and Calico Rock fire departments fought the blaze.


“It was dry and windy,” Stephen said. “A fire creates its own wind. Our duty is to save lives, prevent injuries and protect property in that order. For brush fires, we contact the


Arkansas Forestry Commission. They may ask us to take out a small line of fire so they can get their dozers in front of it. That night, Forestry was dumping water from planes and had dozers digging fire trenches. One small shed burned. The rest was undergrowth and dead trees.”


First, Stephen looked at possible locations for Station No. 2 along Sanders Lane, the only paved road in Dolph. His firefighters talked to landowners about selling their property.


“Someone talked to Carl Russell,” Stephen said. “Carl Russell offered to lease us the land at no charge for as long as we have an operating fire station in Dolph.”


Next, Stephen applied to the White River Planning and Development District for a grant, he said.


“This agency is a clearinghouse for rural-services funding. We put together a $100,000 turnkey plan,” Stephen said. “They gave us a grant of $15,000, so our plan changed. State Rep. Tommy Wren (D-Melbourne) helped us get a second grant. We ended up with $32,000, which we had to spend within two years.”


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Posted: Aug 15, 2016

Fall River Fire Department Gets Green Light for $4.9M in New Equipment

In the fall, the City Council approved a bond to purchase a new engine and breathing apparatus.

Lynch said custom construction of the new engine began last month in Louisiana by Ferrara Fire Apparatus and delivery of the approximatley $500,000 vehicle could be by December.

The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development has approved a federal loan application of $4.9 million to purchase fire equipment, including six new fire trucks, to update the Fall River Fire Department’s aging fleet.


Community Development Agency Director Michael Dion applied for the Section 108 Loan Guarantee Program at the administration’s request in April and will be underwritten and paid back with annual CDA funding.


“This loan guarantee is one of the most successful investment tools that HUD offers to local governments,” said Jim Reed, HUD New England regional administrator. “We commend the city’s leadership for their commitment to public safety.”


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Posted: Aug 15, 2016

Firefighters Sport Purple Fire Trucks to Support Girl with Cancer

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Each of the three departments has wrapped a fire truck in purple in honor of little Chloe Clemens, who in June, at just 9 months of age, was diagnosed with Neuroblastoma, which is cancer of the nerve tissue.  Purple is the national color of support for people who are fighting that type of cancer.  The trucks also have gold ribbons, that show support for all children with cancer.


Chloe’s grandfather Mike is a retired member of the Orange Fire Department.  Her parents grew up in Orange and live in Woodbridge. 


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