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Posted: Aug 31, 2015

Sunnyside fire in Skokomish Valley 100 percent contained

Fire officials say the Sunnyside Fire in the Skokomish Valley is 100 percent contained. The fire burned 59 acres on a power line corridor and heavy timber. There are no reports of damage to structures in the area, but the fire damaged several wooden power poles. Crews from DNR, the Forest Service, local fire districts, and the Skokomish Tribe are working to manage the fire.
- PUB DATE: 8/31/2015 5:36:30 PM - SOURCE: KING-TV NBC 5
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Posted: Aug 31, 2015

Sunnyside fire in Skokomish Valley 100 percent contained

Fire officials say the Sunnyside Fire in the Skokomish Valley is 100 percent contained. The fire burned 59 acres on a power line corridor and heavy timber. There are no reports of damage to structures in the area, but the fire damaged several wooden power poles. Crews from DNR, the Forest Service, local fire districts, and the Skokomish Tribe are working to manage the fire.
- PUB DATE: 8/31/2015 5:36:30 PM - SOURCE: KING-TV NBC 5
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Posted: Aug 31, 2015

Drone tracks fire hot spots in successful Olympic forest test

Officials fighting a forest fire in Olympic National Park say they successfully used a drone last week to get overhead, infrared video to steer water-dropping helicopters to their target. “They were watching a live feed and were able to direct helicopter bucket drops to heat,” said Brentwood Reid, fire-information officer for the Paradise fire.
- PUB DATE: 8/31/2015 12:00:00 AM - SOURCE: Seattle Times
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Posted: Aug 31, 2015

Los Angeles County demands end to program that replaced paramedics with EMTs on ambulances

Los Angeles County authorities have demanded the end of a controversial program that reduced the number of paramedics on Long Beach ambulances by half, saying it compromised public safety. In July 2014, the so-called “rapid medic deployment” moved one paramedic from each of the eight city ambulances to work on Long Beach Fire Department fire engines.
- PUB DATE: 8/31/2015 12:00:00 AM - SOURCE: press-telegram
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Posted: Aug 31, 2015

Despite Dangers, New York City’s Romance With Fire Escapes Endures

The romance was born of necessity. Before air-conditioning, fire escapes offered New Yorkers a refuge from tenements in the summer heat. They read there. They drank there. At night, they slept there. Introduced in the mid-1800s, the iron Z’s that still cling to thousands of city apartment buildings became so synonymous with New York life that they made cameos in “West Side Story,” “Rear Window” and “Breakfast at Tiffany’s.
- PUB DATE: 8/31/2015 12:00:00 AM - SOURCE: new york times
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