oddly enough
oddly enough
Firefighters wake up to smoke in station, then battle blaze
SALT LAKE CITY
Firefighters are used to alarms in the middle of the night, but the smoke doesn’t usually come to their front door.
A group of sleeping Salt Lake City firefighters cracked open the door of their upstairs dorm room early Tuesday to find smoke pouring inside from a fire that erupted at their own station.
They closed the door and jumped on the room’s fire pole to flee the flames, then quickly returned to the building with a firetruck to battle the blaze.
“They wake up, and within a minute they’re fighting a fire in their second home,” said Jasen Asay, Salt Lake City Fire Department spokesman.
Two dozen additional firefighters soon joined them. When the fire was extinguished, nine firefighters were taken to a hospital to be evaluated for smoke inhalation and then released several hours later.
“They love their station and needed to react quickly, and they did a good job of that,” Asay said.
Still, it was an emotional morning, he said. Crews usually have a few minutes to prepare themselves before they start putting out a fire, but that was impossible Tuesday as the blaze spread in a place with special meaning for many of the city’s firefighters.
The station is one of Salt Lake City’s oldest, and most of the department’s 325 firefighters have worked there at some point, Asay said.
“It means a lot to the entire department, especially to the nine firefighters who were there this morning,” he said.
Investigators are trying to determine what caused the accidental blaze, which left the second floor of the building with heavy damage. It started in a utility room with a soda machine where linens and rags are stored and spread to the kitchen and the building’s vent system.
Smoke woke up two captains sleeping on the first floor about 1:30 a.m., and they called to the other seven firefighters upstairs.
All the firefighters based at the damaged building are working out of other stations until their facility gets repaired.
Couple gets engaged, then stranded on mountaintop
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.
An ecstatic New Mexico couple who got engaged on top of Sandia Peak had to curtail their celebrations after getting stuck for hours because of high winds.
KOB-TV in Albuquerque reports that Arthur Edelhoff and Lindsay Duncan of Corrales took the tram up the mountaintop early Sunday evening.
After taking happy engagement photos, the couple were told that they had to wait for the 40-mph wind to die down before they could return.
Jay Blackwood, the assistant manager of the Sandia Peak Tram, says about 140 people were stranded for about four hours.
Associated Press
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