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Wildfires Remain a Concern in California Despite Wet, Cold Start to Winter
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Drought, wildfire conditions evolving at unprecedented pace
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By City News Service
Photo: California Governor s Office of Emergency Services
LOS ANGELES (CNS) - The California Governor s Office of Emergency Services announced today that seven new fire engines were transferred to agencies across the Southland.
The Type VI fire engines were transferred to Los Angeles and Orange County fire jurisdictions as part of the California Fire and Rescue Mutual Aid System, according to a Cal OES statement. The engines are used in wildland and urban fire responses due to their versatility, maneuverability, off-road abilities and firefighting capabilities.
The engines were transferred to the Anaheim Fire & Rescue Department, Costa Mesa Fire & Rescue Department, Orange City Fire Department, West Covina Fire Department, La Habra Heights Fire Department, Arcadia Fire Department and Sierra Madre Fire Department, according to Cal OES.
Speeding car goes airborne, launches into roof of Manatee County fire station, FHP says Ryan Ballogg, The Bradenton Herald
Dec. 21 A Sarasota man was critically injured after his speeding car launched into the air, hit a tree and crashed into the roof of a fire station in the University Park area of Manatee County, according to the Florida Highway Patrol.
The accident happened just before 6 a.m. Sunday. Troopers say that a 41-year-old Sarasota man was speeding north on Honore Avenue in a 2011 Kia Optima. As the sedan approached a curve, it left the roadway and hit a concrete culvert.
Wednesday, December 16, 2020 |
08:00am
NASHVILLE â While winter brings traditional holiday festivities such as Christmas and New Yearâs Eve, the seasonâs cold weather also poses enhanced fire-related risks to Tennessee homeowners.
During winter, fire deaths increase by almost
75 percent across the Volunteer State, according to state fire data. Heating equipment is the leading cause of home fire deaths nationally and the second leading known cause in Tennessee.
Ahead of the first day of winter (Dec. 21) and Christmas (Dec. 25), the Tennessee Department of Commerce & Insurance (TDCI) and the Tennessee State Fire Marshalâs Office (SFMO) remind Tennesseans to focus on fire safety in order to help reduce home fires and save lives this winter.Â
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