- Calif. FD celebrates first father and son working together
- N.J. attorneys claim LODDs in ship fire were a ‘fact of life of industrial employment'
- 4 N.C. officers killed, 4 others wounded in shooting while serving warrant
- 350,000-pound load falls on vehicle on Texas highway, killing 2
- Conn. town implements virtual reality training for firefighters, EMS providers
- Mo. protesters oppose firefighter's return to work after fatal crash
- The lonely firefighter: How company officers can reorient crew culture
- L.A. County deputy succumbs to burn injuries after shooting range fire
- ‘Un-Re-New’ your fire department culture
- 5 common causes of electrical fires
Yuba City Firefighter Chase Kennedy grew up visiting his father's firehouse
Newark city attorneys move to dismiss the $50M lawsuit from the Grande Costa d’Avorio fire that killed firefighters Augusto Acabou and Wayne Brooks Jr.
A fourth Charlotte-Mecklenburg officer has died in a shooting that killed three others and wounded four
First responders, surgical staff in Temple worked for over four hours to rescue people pinned inside their vehicle under the load
The training system provides a variety of simulations for first responders, such as heart attacks, burns, childbirth, lacerations, broken bones and overdoses
Protesters call for a Kansas City firefighter to be banned from driving fire apparatus
Feeling alone within a group, especially one that seems otherwise cohesive, can be the worst kind of loneliness
Deputy Alfredo Flores was one of two burned in a fire inside a mobile shooting range in October
A three-step roadmap for cultural transformation
According to the U.S. Fire Administration, there are approximately 24,000 electrical fires per year.