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Planning to set off fireworks? There s a $500 fine in Edmonds, and a new ban in unincorporated SW Snohomish County

MY EDMONDS NEWS Posted: June 16, 2021 149 If you are planning to launch fireworks to celebrate the Fourth of July this year, take note: Fireworks use is banned in unincorporated areas of southwest Snohomish County, and there is now a $500 fine for those setting off fireworks in Edmonds. South County Fire spokesperson Leslie Hynes noted in a press release that fireworks use is now banned year-round in South County Fire’s entire service area, including the cities of Brier, Edmonds, Lynnwood, Mountlake Terrace and unincorporated neighborhoods.  (See map) In addition, those setting off fireworks in Edmonds now face a stiff penalty if they are caught. The Edmonds City Council in September 2020 voted unanimously to get tougher on those who set off illegal fireworks in the city to the tune of $500 for a first-time offense.

No injuries in duplex fire near Olympic View Drive Saturday

MY EDMONDS NEWS Posted: May 29, 2021 Fire crews at the scene of the residence Saturday. Photo by Brent Tugby Five people were displaced following a kitchen fire in a two-story duplex located near Olympic View Drive in Edmonds Saturday. No one was injured. South County Fire spokesperson Leslie Hynes said firefighters were called around 5:40 p.m. to the residence, located in the 18500 block of 73rd Avenue West just off Olympic View Drive. The fire caused extensive damage to the first floor of one duplex, and both units suffered smoke damage, leaving them uninhabitable, Hynes said. The Red Cross is assisting those who were displaced. The cause of the fire has not yet been determined.

South County Fire reunites family with Pearl Harbor survivor s memorabilia

MY EDMONDS NEWS Posted: May 13, 2021 34 Linda Nelson, second from right, accepts her father-in-law’s shadow box from Lynnwood firefighter Craig O’Neill (far left), Captain Todd Wigal (middle) and Kim Sharpe (far right). (Photo courtesy South County Fire) Edmonds resident Kim Sharpe is a Navy veteran, and also works with South County Fire as its veterans outreach coordinator. “So it was just by coincidence (and) good luck,” he said, that the woman who showed up recently at Lynnwood Fire Station 15 with a shadow box of unknown origins happened to encounter him. Fire station employees noticed she was holding a wooden display, and Sharpe said he recognized even from across the parking lot that the triangular-shaped shadow box was likely military-related because he has a similar one for his father, who had served in the Marines during World War II. Sharpe said he’s glad to have his dad’s memorabilia and medals earned while in the military and “realized another f

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