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Posted: May 3, 2016

Mount Olive (NC) Fire Apparatus Has New Signage

The Town of Mount Olive Board of Commissioners and Mayor, along with the town manager, fire chief, and local firefighters have all agreed that "In God We Trust" should be on the town's fire trucks' windshields.
Further, the inscription could be added to other emergency vehicles in town too, if requested.

Wayne County and Duplin County Firemen Associations had already voted and approved putting the inscription on trucks throughout the two-county area. Rural departments across the two counties have approved the action.

However, since Mount Olive was an official municipality, Chief Gregg Wiggins put it to a vote for his personnel. They quickly asked that it be done.

Brown was asked if the inscription might be put on police vehicles, and said, "I am sure if police made such a request, our board and the mayor would not hesitate to approve it."

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Posted: May 3, 2016

Turbo Design Streamlines Process For Improving Communities ISO® Rating

Turbo Design

When Turbo Design owner Paul Tooley, a veteran firefighter and computer consultant, set out to improve his volunteer fire department’s Insurance Services Office Inc. (ISO®) rating, he first had to familiarize himself with the complex Fire Suppression Rating Schedule designed by ISO®.

The Fire Suppression Rating Schedule (FSRS) is a manual containing the criteria ISO® uses in reviewing the fire prevention and fire suppression capabilities of individual communities or fire protection areas. The schedule measures the major elements of a community’s fire protection system and develops a numerical grading called a Public Protection Classification (PPC™) on a scale of 1 to 10, with 1 representing the highest standard.

As chief of the Truth or Consequences Volunteer Fire Department, Tooley spent three years, compiling countless amounts of data related to the fire department’s operations and resources, and on April 1, 2014, his efforts paid off.

DO YOU KNOW YOUR ISO RATING?

The fire department, located in one of the smaller towns in the American Southwest, became the first volunteer fire department in the state of New Mexico to obtain an ISO® Class 2 rating, from a previous rating of Class 5.

Along the way, Tooley employed his 30-plus years’ experience as a firefighter, including eight years as fire chief, and his extensive background in computer programming and consulting to develop his own software designed to simplify the process for other communities looking to improve their own ISO® rating.

That resulted in the launching of an exclusive consulting service with information available nationwide at www.isorating.com

Tooley designed his software around ISO®’s FSRS, coming up with a tool that allows him to evaluate a community’s communication systems, fire department, water system and risk reduction, showing them where and how they can improve their ISO® rating, all in accordance with ISO®’s rigid structure.

“When you look through the Fire Suppression Rating Schedule and what ISO® does, it’s very complicated,” Tooley says. “When you mention ISO® around the fire service, everybody’s kind of, oh my gosh, I don’t want them here, because there is so much that has to be done, especially for small, rural volunteer fire departments with limited personnel and resources. However, if you apply the schedule the proper way, you will become a better fire department.”

“When ISO® comes in, they collect the data, plug it into the software and out comes a number,” Tooley says. “The Fire Suppression Rating Schedule is available to the public for a fee. So I came up with a solution, basically the same solution they have. Turbo Design can be reached at (575) 740-1640; ptooley@isorating.com or www.isorating.com.

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Posted: May 3, 2016

King County aims to teach tactics to reduce risk of wildfires

May is Wildfire Awareness Month, and King County's Forestry Program is working with area fire districts and state officials to raise awareness and promote actions that keep communities safe in the event of fire. "Wildfire is a natural part of the Pacific Northwest's environment, and plays an important role in maintaining a healthy ecosystem," according to a press release.
- PUB DATE: 5/3/2016 1:09:13 PM - SOURCE: Issaquah & Summamish Reporter
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Posted: May 3, 2016

King County aims to teach tactics to reduce risk of wildfires

May is Wildfire Awareness Month, and King County's Forestry Program is working with area fire districts and state officials to raise awareness and promote actions that keep communities safe in the event of fire. "Wildfire is a natural part of the Pacific Northwest's environment, and plays an important role in maintaining a healthy ecosystem," according to a press release.
- PUB DATE: 5/3/2016 1:09:13 PM - SOURCE: Issaquah & Summamish Reporter
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Posted: May 3, 2016

Firefighters help rescue ferret, other pets from Vancouver house fire

Firefighters helped get a family's pets out of a burning home in Vancouver, Wash., on Tuesday morning. There are no reports of human injuries, however a ferret needed some oxygen after inhaling some smoke. One cat went missing in the fire, but the family's other pets are all accounted for. The homeowners awoke to find their living room and kitchen full of smoke just before 6 a.
- PUB DATE: 5/3/2016 10:50:26 AM - SOURCE: KOMO-TV ABC 4 and Radio 1000
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