-
County and state fire departments, the sheriff’s office, CHP and city officials explained how they collaborate to ensure emergency personnel can do their jobs and notify residents when evacuation is necessary.
-
Following wildfires in March 2025, the city approved an agreement with FEMA to use the Integrated Public Alert and Warning System, which allows for virtual GPS-based boundaries to trigger targeted automated alerts.
-
The City Council approved $989,000 to build a fully functional emergency operations center at the Community and Recreation Center. It will replace the existing EOC, housed in a break room at City Hall.
More Stories
-
AEDs are used to help people who are experiencing sudden cardiac arrest. Around 80 percent of campus is within a four-minute walk to obtain an AED. That's four minutes total — two minutes each way.
-
Only on a few occasions have parents faced prosecution for their child’s actions in a long and bloody history of mass shootings committed by young adult men in America.
-
Climate changes and rising ocean temperatures have lengthened hurricane season. Experts say that means emergency managers need to expand their understanding of what could happen and when.
-
More than 80 percent of respondents said they would support policies related to the reduction of gun deaths and injuries. Specifically, more than half said they were willing to pay more to have more police on the streets.
-
“I’m stuck, I need to be evacuated,” the caller told a dispatcher, his voice quavering in a rapid-fire string of sentences. “I’ve called a couple of times. I just need to know what’s going on, if I need to try to swim out of here.”
-
"We are a busy 911 center," Delaware County Emergency Services Director Timothy Boyce said. "We're one of the leading centers in the commonwealth. We're very proud of that, answering almost 2,000 calls of service every day."
-
The Environmental Protection Agency announced the grant last week as part of an $8.24 million package for environmental justice projects in Washington. The county was allotted $999,839 to build climate change resiliency.
-
High winds and low humidity increased the fire risk and brought the threat of preventive power shutoffs to almost 70,000 customers in L.A. and Ventura counties, according to Southern California Edison.
-
3,135 homeowners in the county applied for individual damage assistance from FEMA after devastating storm activity in January and 1,554 more did the same after the barrage continued in March.
-
Otis’ top winds rose from 50 miles per hour early Tuesday to 165 mph by 11 p.m. local time. That surge of power, known as rapid intensification, is particularly dangerous because it can take emergency managers by surprise.
-
According to a statement by Chippewa Falls police chief Matthew Kelm, on Oct. 20, a 911 call came into dispatch at 12:44 p.m. that day from a woman who said a man had broken into her home and was threatening her and himself with a firearm.
-
The shootings at Schemengees Bar and Grille and Sparetime Recreation, a bowling alley about 4 miles (6.4 kilometers) away, in Lewiston on Wednesday night killed at least 18 people.
-
It is a multifaceted book, but one theme became solidified as he wrote about memorable calls: Firefighters don't get enough help coping with the distress they and other first responders face.
-
The 27 homes are included in a pilot program run by the Army Corps of Engineers and the state Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority. They are among 3,462 parishes targeted by the larger elevation plans.
-
Among the recommendations of the task force is for the city to improve its winter safety public service announcements by having the city partner with Charter Communications to do several announcements about winter safety.
-
Riptides and the growing threat of sharks can make swimming dangerous, even deadly, at the popular beaches in Atlantic City, N.J. A new drone program aims to increase safety for beachgoers when lifeguards aren’t on duty.
-
No tropical storm watch or warning has been issued for the U.S. Virgin Islands, which is expected to receive between one and two inches of rain over the weekend, with a possible maximum of four inches.
-
The alert buzzed the phones of some MyShakeApp users and jolted many awake at 3:19 a.m. Thursday, seven hours before an alert was planned for 10:19 a.m. as part of International ShakeOut Day.