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Lancaster County woman saves neighbor from fire

2 injured in Friday night fire in Lancaster County

Resident in critical condition after fire in Lancaster Township, two homes damaged

A Lancaster Township resident is in critical condition after a fire on Friday night, according to the Lancaster Township Fire Department Firefighters were dispatched at 10:29 p.m. for a dwelling that was on fire in the first block of Pickford Drive in Wedgewood Estates, off of New Danville Pike between Second Lock Road and Hoover Road, according to Capt. Greg Leaman. The resident of the home was taken to Lancaster General Hospital in critical condition and was then flown to a burn center for treatment. A neighbor returned home at around 10 p.m. and noticed the smell of smoke in the area. They first thought the smell was from a fire pit from a neighboring home, Leaman said. 

Fire crews free five-week-old puppy that had got its head stuck in a garden chair

Share We often assist with animals in danger, from baby ducklings stuck in storm drains, or pets locked in cars and even the occasional cat stuck in a tree. As long as there is no other call for service at the same time, we always assist the animals in distress, whether wildlife or domesticated pets. The puppy was playing in a yard when it poked its head through a gap in the overturned chair in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, on Wednesday When the dispatcher gave us the information, we immediately knew we had to rush to the scene in case the dog was having difficulty breathing. We treat our residents pets as carefully as if they are human and rushed to the scene to assist him.

Revoked state grant stalls upgrades of Lancaster city traffic lights [Lancaster Watchdog]

However, funding would be restored under a spending proposal made by Gov. Tom Wolf. Awarded in November 2019, the Green Light-Go grant would have paid for the installation of preemption devices at eight downtown intersections. Affixed next to traffic signals, the devices look like small flood lights and can turn lights to green when they are triggered by strobe lights on approaching emergency vehicles. “It’s definitely good technology to use and we’re always looking for equipment and technology advances to make our job safer and more efficient,” Lancaster city Fire Chief Scott Little said, noting the preemption devices improve response times and reduce accidents.

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