Can first responders see your house address during the day or night? If not, Fire Rescue Chief Greg Hoggatt has some recommendations.
Press Release: https://t.co/wl2W4wHpnu
Fire crews were on scene of a structure fire in the 900 block of East 17th Street Tuesday around 8 p.m. No injuries were reported. Most of the damage was sustained to the outside of the structure. Cheyenne Fire Rescue is investigating the cause.
Cheyenne Fire Rescue along with Laramie County Fire Districts #1 and #2 responded to a grass fire in the 8900 block of Campstool Road Thursday afternoon.
The fire burned approximately 5 acres of grass. No structures were damaged; no animals were injured.
Cheyenne Firefighters Robert Kreps and James Lewis hold the hand sanitizer from the Pine Bluffs Distillery that was delivered Monday evening to Cheyenne Fire Rescue. The donated sanitizer is enough for each fire apparatus to be able to use during this pandemic.
People on Social Media platforms are telling everyone that its OK to mix bleach and vinegar as a cleaning solution. CFR reminds residents that mixing these two chemicals together makes chlorine gas. It doesn't matter how much you dilute it, mixing chemicals is dangerous.
The Wyoming Tribune Eagle published its Readers' Choice Awards 2020. In the firefighter category, the top four spots were Cheyenne Fire Rescue firefighters. Congratulations to Shane Reed (first place), Chad Miller (second place), Kevin Hunt (third place), and Andrew Dyl (HM).
Be A Good Neighbor! It's important that we all try to do our part to help stop the spread of COVID-19 . For more information on COVID-19, go to https://t.co/kAfGgLFnXo
On Friday, March 27, 24th Street between Warren Avenue and Evans Avenue will be closed for one day. Ambulance access will be maintained and detours will be posted. The closure is for equipment removal at Cheyenne Regional Medical Center.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, being a good neighbor is key to stopping the spread of COVID-19. For more information about COVID-19, go to https://t.co/TGD3CH10XK
All public meetings or tours scheduled or unscheduled at Cheyenne Fire Rescue Stations and the department’s Training Complex have been cancelled until further notice because of COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic.
For further information, call Cheyenne Fire Rescue at 637-6311.
Cheyenne Fire Rescue wants to remind everyone that it's not too late to change the batteries in your smoke alarms. Smoke alarms don't last forever. Get new smoke alarms every 10 years. Three out of five home fire deaths result from fires without working smoke alarms.