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Posted: May 5, 2016

Punkin-Evergreen VFD Receives Grant for Rescue Equipment

Punkin-Evergreen Volunteer Fire Department increased their rescue and firefighting capabilities with a $14,777 grant provided by Texas A&M Forest Service through the Rural Volunteer Fire Department Assistance Program. The department used the grant to purchase new rescue equipment such as a thermal imaging camera, a hydraulic compressor, Jaws of Life, swift water rescue gear, and more.
Texas A&M Forest Service Resource Specialist Jason Calvet said the equipment is a huge benefit to the department, their community and surrounding area.

"The jaws unit is replacing an old 1994 unit," Punkin-Evergreen VFD Chief Rick Stevens said. "Highway 150 is our main source of accidents because it gets a lot of traffic. We also mutual aid with other departments for 18-wheeler accidents."

The new Jaws of Life has already been used four times since being put into service.

Chief Stevens is glad to have these increased capabilities for his department. "We have responded to a variety of critical calls in our community including swift water rescue, aircraft crash, fires and vehicle accidents," Chief Stevens said. "In 2017 the Boy Scouts of America will be opening a 4,000-acre camp with a large lake in our service area. We want to be prepared with training and equipment, should the need arise."

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Posted: May 5, 2016

A Look at Fighting Fire with Fire Trains

Specialized equipment and training help protect assets from wildfire damage. Every summer, particularly in the Western U.S. and Canada, fires triggered by lightning or human activity are an ordinary occurrence. During recent summers, however, wildfires have put railroads increasingly in the crosshairs.
In 2014 and 2015, fires that spread to roughly 300,000 acres in north-central Washington broke previously held records for that state. The blaze in 2014 destroyed several communities and caused trestle and track damage to short line Cascade & Columbia River Railroad. Other fires have led to closures of BNSF and Union Pacific main lines in Washington, Idaho and Montana, and prompted the deployment of firefighting resources throughout the region.

Measured individually, these recent wildfires were smaller than some recorded in prior decades. Burn complexes of 3 million acres or more struck the mountains of British Columbia and Alberta in 1950, Idaho and Montana in 1910, and New Brunswick in 1825. A cross section taken from an ancient Ponderosa pine in western Montana revealed scars from no less than 20 fires dating clear back to 1612, all but one of them occurring prior to 1892. The potential for wildfires to damage railway property and disrupt service has been around since the first locomotives breathed steam.

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Posted: May 5, 2016

Montana and Federal Officials Make Deal on Firefighting Helicopters

Montana and federal officials have made a deal that will allow the state's five firefighting helicopters to respond to some blazes on federal lands, after they were barred from doing so last year as fires raging across the West led to equipment shortages.
The agreement allows the retrofitted Vietnam-era helicopters to be used when lives are at risk or when the governor declares a state of emergency, Montana Department of Natural Resources and Conservation spokesman John Grassy said Thursday.

Additional details about the deal, which was finalized this week, will be released during Gov. Steve Bullock's fire briefing in Butte Friday.

The helicopters were barred last year from responding to fires in national forests and U.S. Bureau of Land Management land because federal standards require they use smaller buckets to scoop water. The issue sparked tension between state and federal officials with a shortage of resources available to fight blazes during an active fire season last year across the West.

The five modified Bell UH-1H helicopters have increased power that enables them to carry 324-gallon buckets. However, U.S. Forest Service policy, developed after helicopter crashes in the past, requires aircraft of that type to carry water-scooping buckets 100 gallons smaller.

The issue is specific to Montana's helicopters and not any other state's aircraft of equipment, Forest Service officials previously said.

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Posted: May 5, 2016

Scott & White EMS (TX) Unveils New Ambulances

Scott & White EMS unveiled its newest ambulances that will be serving the Central Texas area.
This ambulance is one of three that will be put into service in the area. The new 2016 Dodge Ram 3500 with a Frazer 12-foot ambulance box will be the first vehicle to display a new design reflecting the Baylor Scott & White Health brand.

This ambulance is painted different, following the Baylor Scott &White scheme of blue and yellow. Chuck Pearson, director of Scott & White Emergency Medical Services, said the box is a little bit larger than current vehicles and allows 360-degree access to the patient.

Scott & White is moving toward this style of ambulance and has two others on order that will arrive in June, he said. Two or three more will likely be ordered in July to arrive in December.

These ambulances can be remounted where the box is taken off and placed on a new chassis.

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Posted: May 5, 2016

Driver Slams into Rear of Oklahoma City Ambulance

A driver was taken to an area hospital early Thursday morning after crashing into the back of an ambulance. The ambulance was traveling west shortly before 5:10 a.m. near North Portland Avenue and Northwest Expressway when a sport utility vehicle rear-ended it, officials said.
The SUV rolled over several times, crossed the median and came to a stop in the eastbound lanes.

The driver suffered minor injuries and was taken to an area hospital. That person is expected to be OK.

No one was in the ambulance at the time of the crash, officials said.

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