Recovery
Latest Stories
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The state’s new Infrastructure Planning and Development Division has adopted cloud technology to help community governments navigate matching requirements, compliance and project delivery.
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After a teenager died in a flash flood last summer, the Town Council plans to install two sirens to make sure residents know to seek shelter in the face of a flood, tornado or hurricane.
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The solidarity and unity once palpable after Harvey has been left to the history books. Now it feels like we're back to politics as usual.
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One of the train cars slanted at a 45-degree angle onto the highway. Others crashed into a wooded area nearby, aerial images show. Twelve cars total went off the tracks.
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They are instrumental in protecting and preserving lives at accidents, fires, natural disasters and even terrorist attacks.
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The Thomas fire is on track Tuesday to become California’s second-largest wildfire. It’s now just 161 acres smaller than the second-largest fire on record, the lightning-sparked Rush fire that burned 271,911 acres in Lassen County in 2012.
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Commissioners signed an 11-year agreement with Motorola for upgrading the system equipment, software and purchasing 1,200 radios for the county and local fire and police departments.
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Between the drivers and train passengers, roughly 100 people were taken to local hospitals, a number of them with critical injuries.
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A total of 77 people were sent to hospitals in Pierce and Thurston counties, according to CHI Franciscan Health, which operates numerous hospitals in Western Washington.
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One in three U.S. homes — some 44 million residences — are in the wildland-urban interface, where they abut fire-prone forests and open space.
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The Thomas Fire, which began burning through Ventura and Santa Barbara counties on Dec. 4, has grown to 270,000 acres — the third-largest fire in the state’s modern history — with containment up to 45 percent.
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First responders taking on the role of educators, conduits to treatment in new program.
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On Thursday, they were deep in the Los Padres National Forest, covered in wood grit, soot and sweat, as the Thomas fire continued to grow — becoming the fourth-largest in modern California history.
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PG&E and other utilities in the fire-prone Golden State would be required to increase the minimum clearances between trees and other vegetation and electrical equipment such as power and transmission lines.
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Fiction has become a reality, and police agencies across the country increasingly are turning to these miniature aerial platforms to help in their work.
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'The expectation of the public is that it comes to device in your hand.'
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'FEMA recommends monitoring your credit report for any accounts or changes you do not recognize.'