FireWatch

FireWatch is a service that provides links to news stories from the fire community that have attracted our attention.

Fire Department Chief killed in Bronx explosion is promoted

Fire Department Chief killed in Bronx explosion is promoted

Chief Michael J. Fahy, a 44 year old battalion chief with the New York City Fire Department who was killed by debris after a house exploded in the Bronx has been promoted to deputy chief. Investigators continue to dig through the rubble to determine the cause of the...

New barn fire prevention tool

New barn fire prevention tool

Equine Guelph has launched a new online tool as a resource for horse owners. The Barn Fire Prevention tool is easy to use and provides horse owners with interactive assessments for their individual facilities. Click here to read more.

Fire safety chemicals threaten public health

A number of associations have warned the use of chemical flame retardants in furniture to improve fire safety can have severe negative impacts on public health. Click here to read more.

Ottawa stopped counting fires on First Nation reserves in 2010

Ottawa stopped counting fires on First Nation reserves in 2010

Conservate M.P. and former firefighter John Brassard asked for the number of fires that occurred on First Nation reserves in the past decade. His answer included numbers only up to 2010, when Indigenous Affairs stopped collecting the data. Click here to read more.

Fire Chief advocates for municipal sprinkler regulation

Pitt Meadows Fire Chief Don Jolley, vice-president of the Fire Chiefs Associaiton of BC, hopes a new regulation associated with BC's Building Act will encourage local governments to make sprinklers mandatory in new homes. Click here to read more.

Unclear Tweet causes panic during wildfires

Unclear Tweet causes panic during wildfires

When a wildfire in northern British Columbia grew large enough to threaten people and property Emergency Info BC tweeted a link to information about evacuation alerts and orders in Fort St. John. The problem with that was, the evacuation alerts weren't in Fort St....

September in Fire History – The Great Fire of London

September in Fire History – The Great Fire of London

The Great Fire of London broke out in the early morning hours of September 2, 1666. By the time the flames were extinguished, four days later, 13,200 homes in 400 streets had been burned or demolished to create firebreaks, with 70,000 to 80,000 people made homeless....

Boeing patents giant bullet to shoot down wildfires

Boeing patents giant bullet to shoot down wildfires

Boeing has been awarded a patent for an artillery shell "designed to either detonate in front of a wildfire, spreading retardant materials on the ground to prevent the fire from progressing, or to detonate directly above it, dampening the flames."  This method of...

The lonely lives of the last remaining forest fire lookouts

The lonely lives of the last remaining forest fire lookouts

They call them "Freaks on the Peaks". A few years ago thousands of people spent their summers on mountaintops, living in remote lookout towers and scanning the surrounding wilderness for signs of smoke. Now only a few hundred remain. Click here to read more.

New form of fire, inspired by bourbon, might help with oil spills

New form of fire, inspired by bourbon, might help with oil spills

Fire whirls, commonly known as firenadoes, look like tornadoes and burn hotter than many other fires. Scientists from the University of Maryland conducted experiments on fire whirls because they thought there was a possibility that their power could be harnessed for...

Why no standards for rescue training?

Why no standards for rescue training?

The deaths of a firefighting student and a volunteer in separate training accidents in Ontario underscore the astonishing lack of regulation that exists across the dangerous profession. Both men died after being pulled under river ice during cold-water rescue...

June in fire history – The Ufa train disaster

June in fire history – The Ufa train disaster

A powerful gas pipeline explosion demolished part of the trans-Siberian railway on June 4, 1989, engulfing two passenger trains in flames and leaving hundreds dead. Many of the victims were children bound for holiday camps by the Black Sea. Click here to read more.

Incremental alarms better for firefighter heart health

Incremental alarms better for firefighter heart health

According to a recent study, incremental alarms help prevent firefighter heart rates from reaching extreme highs. And that could help curb a leading cause of firefighter deaths. Click here to read more.

Fire safety training comes to Ahousaht schools

Fire safety training comes to Ahousaht schools

Fire Safety experts arrived in Ahousaht to spend two days working with senior Maaqtusiis Secondary students and interested community members on home fire safety and firefighting training. Click here to read more.

Too little being done to protect communities from wildfires

Yet another destructive wildfire raises questions about our failure to learn from Kelowna and Slave Lake - to take steps to guard against their fury. "This happened in Kelowna in 2003, why didn't we all learn from that?" Click here to read more.

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