in this one. john: it s a lion s roar. noah: i mean, that is ridiculous. mary: yeah. i have to applaud. he gave him the angle and zverev found the reply. noah: missed that one. noah: right back to his bread and butter, zverev gets the insurance rate, and he ll serve for a spot in the finals when we come back. welcome to roland-garros. ( ) ( ) (luke) this will be a gold mine of local intel. (marci) so, tell us about this corn festival. ( ) (stylist) oooh you got your corn pudding. (marci) so.is it safe around here? (stylist) sometimes. [luke gasping] (marci) no eyebrows? (luke) think of how light it ll feel in the summer. we gotta run. eleven thousand more neighborhoods to go! (vo) ding dong! homes-dot-com. noah: sascha zverev trying to reach second grand slam final, lost in 2020 at the u.s. open. he is one game away, has been serving almost like a cyborg from his second set on. john: what a bummer for casper ruud, though. trying to make the breakthrough,
protection association continue to be written in a way that favor the use of pfas chemicals by including certain requirements that can t easily be met using other materials. the nfpa tells us it doesn t create or dictate standards, but instead relies on expert volunteers, including many representatives of the firefighting community. the nfpa and the firefighters union remain locked in a heated lawsuit about what the standards should say. we contacted some of the largest manufacturers of firefighter gear to understand why pfas continues to be used. only viking responded, telling us there s been a lack of pfas-free fabrics approved by the nfpa, but says it s now testing alternative materials and plans to release a new line of gear by the end of the year, manufactured without pfas. at least two other companies, fire dex and lion, are already advertising pfas-free uniforms that are now being tested at
FRANKLIN CO., Wash. Franklin County Fire District 3 has surpassed 2022 call volume records by a 22% increase. The district is asking for a fire levy lid lift to
House Enrolled Act 1341 mandates all firefighting gear purchased in Indiana beginning July 1, 2024, include a permanent label indicating whether it contains PFAS.
Firefighters participating in the program will have their blood tested for PFAS to determine whether, and to what extent, elevated PFAS levels have negative health implications.