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Worker Rescued After Being Trapped Four Hours In 100-Degree Heat

  A federal safety agency is investigating after a worker was rescued near Keystone after he was buried in a trench collapse for four hours and in 100-degree heat.     The accident happened Monday afternoon while the man was working by himself on water pipes, according to Jerome Harvey, Pennington County fire administrator.     The man works for Alexander Drilling in Hill City, according to a spokeswoman with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration. She says the agency is investigating the incident.     Harvey said the man was working 10 to 12 feet underground when the narrow trench collapsed, burying and trapping him up to his waist.  The worker yelled for about an hour until someone found him around 2:16 p.m.  

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Pennington-county
Jerome-harvey
Health-administration
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Hill-city
Occupational-safety
Water-reclamation
விரைவான-நகரம்

More visitors in South Dakota could pose risk for more fires

More visitors in South Dakota could pose risk for more fires Scarlett Lisjak © Provided by Rapid City KOTA-TV KOTA RAPID CITY, S.D. (KOTA) - 90% of all wildland fires are human caused in the United States. Many times they are started by unsuspecting people doing everyday activities. Last year, almost 6 million acres were burned by human caused fires according to a National Interagency Fire Center Report. The risk of fire increases when hot and dry conditions are met with an ignition source, that could be as simple as throwing away a cigarette. Jerome Harvey is the Fire Administrator for the Pennington County Fire Service, he says the influx of people into South Dakota could pose a risk for more fires.

Rapid-city
South-dakota
United-states
Pennington-county
Jerome-harvey
National-interagency-fire-center
Fire-administrator
Pennington-county-fire-service
National-interagency-fire
விரைவான-நகரம்
தெற்கு-டகோட்டா
ஒன்றுபட்டது-மாநிலங்களில்

Poor human judgement is the top cause of wildfires

Poor human judgement is the top cause of wildfires Scarlett Lisjak © Noah Berger KOTA RAPID CITY, S.D. (KOTA) - 90% of all wildland fires are human caused in the United States. Many times they are started by unsuspecting people doing everyday activities. According to a National Interagency Fire Center Report, last year almost 6 million acres were burned by human-caused fires. The simplest of things could ignite a fire during these hot dry months. Jerome Harvey is the Fire Administrator for the Pennington County Fire Service; he says the influx of people into South Dakota could pose a risk for more fires. “There are people coming into the area that are either visiting here or moving here that are not aware of the fire regime, the fire ecosystem that exists here in western south Dakota. That not only concerns us the fire service but anyone or everyone that has lived here or spent anytime here in western south Dakota.”

United-states
South-dakota
Pennington-county
Jerome-harvey
Noah-berger
National-interagency-fire-center
National-interagency-fire-center-report
Fire-administrator
Pennington-county-fire-service
National-interagency-fire
ஒன்றுபட்டது-மாநிலங்களில்
தெற்கு-டகோட்டா

KBHB Radio - Pennington County authorities say four people hurt in fireworks incident

KBHB Radio - Pennington County authorities say four people hurt in fireworks incident
kbhbradio.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from kbhbradio.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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Rapid-city
Pennington-county-fire-administrator
Pennington-county-sheriff
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