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Posted: Apr 13, 2016

28-year Portland fire veteran to take over as Clark County fire chief

A 28-year Portland fire veteran will soon take over as chief of Clark County Fire & Rescue. John Nohr, chief of the emergency operations division for Portland Fire & Rescue, starts his new job on May 1, according to Clark County's interim chief, Ron Oliver. Nohr was one of five finalists for the job, which will pay him about $133,000 a year, Oliver said.
- PUB DATE: 4/13/2016 12:00:00 AM - SOURCE: oregonian
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Posted: Apr 12, 2016

Objections to New Mansfield (MA) Fire Station Complex

A new $34.9 million municipal complex including a police and fire station and highway garage apparently will get clear sailing to proceed without the possibility of a town meeting vote to quash the project. Ron Webster, who had opposed the project and filed a town meeting article to reverse last year's vote authorizing the construction, has withdrawn the request.
Webster said he made the decision to withdraw following a conversation with Fire Chief Neal Boldrighini in which he said he received reassurances about some of the spending involved in the project. "I know Neal, we've been friends a long time," Webster said. "I trust him."

Webster says he wants to see follow-through from town officials to make sure the project is completed at reasonable cost.

Webster filed his proposal as a petition signed by a minimum of 10 qualified voters, qualifying it for automatic inclusion on the agenda for the May 3 town meeting.

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Posted: Apr 12, 2016

Park County Fire Protection District Votes to Silence Night Air Raid Sirens

Last month, the Park County Fire Protection District No. 1 Board of Directors voted to silence the sirens nightly from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m.
However, one fly in the clamorous ointment necessitated adjustments to the plan at the directors’ monthly meeting April 5.

“It’s not a matter of flipping the switch,” said Monte McClain, Park County communications supervisor.

Park County Sheriff’s Office dispatch pages the Powell Volunteer Fire Department to fires, car wrecks and other emergencies. Pagers packed by firefighters notify them of the type of incident and its location, more or less simultaneously with the siren sounding mostly to notify motorists and pedestrians to be on the look out for fire trucks.

Dispatchers can be instructed to not activate the siren, but must remember not to, McClain said. And, if the siren doesn’t sound for months, and the dispatcher accidentally triggers the alarm, the Sheriff’s Office will receive numerous complaints.

The only infallible solution is to install a timer on the two working sirens in Powell. Pete DeHaan of Pete DeHaan Electronics in Powell said he could install timers. The cost would be $5 for each timer and 15 minutes of labor per siren, McClain said.

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Posted: Apr 12, 2016

Lakeland (NY) Fire Department Rebuilds Vintage Fire Apparatus

A guttural growl erupted from the Lakeland Fire Department's 1938 Pirsch Fire Engine as it leapt to life for the first time in more than 30 years. The engine, affectionately known as Leaping Lena, is the department's oldest apparatus, and Jonathan Beale made it his personal goal to make sure she wasn't just a part of the department's past but in its future as well.
Of the 1,000 1938 Pirsch 750-gallon pumpers made, Beale said, he found one in a museum and another with the original engine taken out of it. Leaping Lena is the only one he knows of that's up and running.

Lena was delivered to the department Aug. 28, 1938, and Beale said she was on the front lines fighting fires until the late 1960s. Then Lena was used for training until the late 1970s when her pistons blew and she was decommissioned.

Beale said she was painted and reupholstered in the late 1980s, but she was forgotten about and spent years in storage. Rick Hartzog, LFD's assistant chief of administration, said Lena has been sitting underneath a tarp for his entire 25-year career.

Janel Vasallo, LFD's spokeswoman, said the department knew it couldn't just ask the city for more money or take away from another service LFD provides, so they got creative in finding ways to fund Lena's restoration. A couple of old staff vehicles that could no longer be used were sent to auction, and the money was set aside for Len

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Posted: Apr 12, 2016

Strathmere Firefighter Brings Needed Donated Equipment to North Carolina Station

Strathmere Volunteer Fire Company donated old equipment, gear, and nozzles, to another volunteer station in North Carolina. 
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