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Posted: Apr 27, 2016

Kittitas Valley Fire and Rescue station getting close to opening

Fire crews are getting ready to move into the new Kittitas Valley Fire and Rescue station in Ellensburg. Firefighters say the new fire station is six blocks within 40 percent of the fire department's calls for emergencies. It'll be used for about 30 career firefighters, 100 volunteers, six college residents and more.
- PUB DATE: 4/27/2016 5:38:52 PM - SOURCE: KIMA-TV CBS 29 Yakima
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Posted: Apr 27, 2016

Odessa City Council Approves Multi-Million Dollar Deal for Fire Apparatus

At Tuesday's Odessa City Council meeting, members of the council approved a new fleet of fire trucks for the Odessa Fire and Rescue department, after a decade with the old ones the Chief Roger Boyd felt like it was time to get new ones.
Chief Roger Boyd of Odessa Fire & Rescue said, “Everyone of our trucks are getting pretty close to 100,000 miles, a couple’s got 100,000 already. Certainly the reliability and dependability is always in question for us.”

The cost to maintain the current fleet of trucks was getting too expensive with the new set of trucks it will actually save the taxpayers $1 million dollars.

Mayor David Turner said, “The way we’re able to do that is we allocate in the budget what they have to pay in the equipment fund every year and that’s part of their budget and they’ve paid in and we’ll be able to pay cash for them.”

Boyd said the department runs both Fire and EMS services and with the new equipment on the way it will only help serve the city better.

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Posted: Apr 27, 2016

Templeton Firefighting Equipment Stolen

Equipment was stolen from elementary school while firefighters were responding to a call -Firefighters from Templeton Fire and Emergency Services returned from a call last weekend to a training activity they were conducting at Vineyard Elementary School to find that $2,000 worth of firefighting equipment had been stolen, according to Templeton Community Services District.
On Saturday, April 23, at approximately 10:50 a.m. members from the Templeton Fire and Emergency Services were preparing to train on wildland firefighting techniques. Fire crews were utilizing vacant land adjacent to Vineyard Elementary School and had set out equipment for the training. The equipment included two hose packs which were filled with 400 feet of light weight wildland hose, nozzles and other firefighting equipment. Prior to commencing the training, the firefighters received a 911 call for a multiple vehicle accident near Vineyard Drive and Highway 101.
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Posted: Apr 27, 2016

Idaho Delivers Fire Equipment to Rangeland Fire Protection Associations

The Idaho Department of Lands delivered four wildland firefighting engines and five "slip-in" units to five of the state's six Rangeland Fire Protection Associations April 25. The type 6 engines are light, mobile four-wheel drive vehicles that can hold 300 gallons of water.
The slip-in units can be placed on a pickup or flatbed truck and consist of a water tank, pump and hose reel and hold 75-300 gallons of water.

Idaho's RFPAs were formed in 2013 by ranchers, who are trained by the BLM and assist federal and state agencies in fighting wildfires.

RFPA members use their own equipment, but the addition of these new engines and slip-in units will significantly boost their capacity, said Castleford rancher Michael Guerry, chairman of the Three Creek RFPA.

IDL purchased some of the equipment through with state general fund dollars and grant funding from the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, and acquired some through the Federal Excess Personal Property program.

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Posted: Apr 27, 2016

Owyhee County (ID) Fire Protection Group Gets Firefighting Equipment

Few will ever forget the devastation of last summer's Soda Fire in Southwest Idaho. The fire tore through hundreds of thousands of acres - mostly Bureau of Land Management space where local ranchers grazed their cattle. "It's helpless," Owyhee Rangelands Fire Protection Association (RFPA) Vice Chairman Todd Gluch said.
Rural Idahoans are coming together - developing a plan - to help stop small fires from becoming big ones. It's a plan they believe will save precious Idaho rangeland.

The Owyhee RFPA was given some new equipment to fight fires on both public and private grazing land. The association chairmen tell me they have been waiting on this equipment for years and they're relieved to finally have a new fleet to fight wildfires.

"The reason that we need all the equipment is so we can get to the fires faster," Owyhee RFPA Chairman Doug Rutan told KTVB. "If you can get to them while they're small you can put them out with water."

Modeled after Oregon's fire protection associations, they were established in Idaho in 2012: the first in Mountain Home, followed by the group in the Owyhee Rangelands.

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