More than 100 personnel remain engaged with full suppression efforts on the Simmons Fire burning northwest of Kearny in Pinal County. Cooler overnight temperatures coupled with increased relative humidity levels kept fire activity quiet into the early morning hours. A night shift staffed with a hand crew and engines focused on the east and southeast flanks of the fire, ahead of the community of Kearny. Engine crews also conducted structure protection to properties ahead of the fire.
Fire overhead mapped the fire this morning at 475 acres with no containment. Department of Forestry and Fire Management overhead will fly over the fire today to gather information to better assess fire activity and behavior and view potential fire growth. The Great Basin Incident Management Team will be reassigned from the Rocky Fire on the San Carlos to the Simmons Fire.
Due to increased fire danger and for public safety, the Kaibab National Forest will implement Stage 2 fire restrictions forest wide beginning 8 a.m. Friday, June 21. A temporary area closure will also be implemented for the Bill Williams Mountain watershed, located just south of the City of Williams, due to the area's susceptibility to uncharacteristically severe wildfire and the post-wildfire flooding that would potentially result.
Forest managers consider several factors before implementing fire restrictions or forest closures, including current fire danger and fire activity, local, regional, and national fire preparedness levels, expected weather conditions, availability of firefighting resources, and the economic impacts on businesses and communities. The Kaibab National Forest continues to coordinate with federal, state, tribal and local partners.
For restriction information on state and federally managed lands in Arizona, visit wildlandfire.az.gov/fire-restrictions. Find restriction information for Coconino County at coconino.az.gov/2595/Fire-Restriction-Information.
Firefighters are continuing to monitor and assess the fire. We have been observing by air the fire location and perimeter as it continues to grow. We are looking at minimizing high fire severity burn by using fire in the right locations to maintain a low to moderate fire intensities in the vicinity of the fire. Crews and heavy equipment will continue prepping and reopening some of the old containment lines from previous fires to include Forest Road 567 and Highway 191 corridor.
The Foote fire behavior has been moderate to low burning naturally consuming down and dead fuels to ash. Currently no values are at risk. Josh Ranch is about 2 miles to the west and the community of Blue is about 3 miles to the east. The public is advised to drive with caution on Forest Road 567 and Highway 191 where fire personnel and vehicles are present. News releases will be posted every other day unless there are major changes.
Smoke: Communities of Alpine and Blue might be affected by smoke, Go to fire.airnow.gov/ to see the latest smoke conditions in your community. Smoke may be visible from the surrounding communities.
We have a platform which allows our admins to impersonate a client user, this allows them to see an identical version of the platform that the client user would see. The admin can then complete tasks on their behalf which fires events as the client user.
If the next day the client user 5678 logs onto the platform as does actions themselves and fires events. In this case would the impersonating_user_id property fire as null as no one is impersonating? or does the old user property be pulled across.
Would the below setup capture our non-impersonated active users who have fired an event, even if at a seperate time they had been impersonated by an admin?
As Amplitude is an events-based platform, you will be querying on events at the time they occur. So the impersonating_id would be 1234 for client 5678. If Admin then logs out and the client triggers another event, the previous user property will populate to the next call. To stop that, and if you want to set the impersonating_id to 0, you could use something like our identify API to change or remove the impersonating ID value before the actual client uses it. Otherwise, you could implement a check to see if the client is doing the event, to have a user property such as Access=Client or Access_Admin so you can easily group by on those properties and filter the events done by the client, and not the Admin.
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If you don't have an Amplitude account, you can create an Amplitude Starter account for free and enjoy direct access to the Community via SSO. Create an Amplitude account. Want to sign up as a guest? Create a Community account.
The City of Statesville proudly announces the grand opening of the new Fire Station 1, officially named the Woody Woodard Memorial Fire Station. This event marks a significant milestone in the city's ongoing efforts to enhance public safety and community services.
Located at the intersection of Fifth Street, Wilson Lee Blvd, and Charlotte Avenue, the new Fire Station 1 represents a major upgrade from its previous location on S. Meeting Street, where it served the community for 70 years. The relocation process began in 2017, driven by the need to optimize service coverage and improve response times. The City Council approved the site purchase and development in October 2020, with the property acquisition completed by February 2021.
Cpt. Matt Thompson provided a historical perspective on the Statesville Fire Department, noting its resilience and innovation since its origins in 1869. The department has continually evolved to meet the needs of the community, from the establishment of a Hook & Ladder company in 1876 to advancements in firefighting technology.
The new station, a two-story, 26,000-square-foot facility, is a state-of-the-art hub for firefighters. The upper level includes essential amenities like bunk rooms, showers, a kitchen, and spaces dedicated to training and fitness. The lower level houses administrative staff. The station features four pull-through apparatus bays, additional mezzanines for storage and training, and a three-story training tower on the premises, further enhancing the capabilities to prepare for emergencies.
Special recognition was given to the late retired Captain J.D. Harris and Retired Lieutenant Lewis Alexander for their efforts in preserving the department's history, and to Vallereux Photo Restoration for their work on the historical photos displayed at the station. Special thanks were extended to Statesville Housing Authority Executive Director Darbah Skaf and the entire SHA team for their collaboration and efforts in making this project a success.
The grand opening was commemorated with a ribbon-cutting ceremony attended by City Council members, Ms. Dorothy Woodard and members of the Woodard family, Statesville Fire Department personnel, city staff, and community members. The ceremony was followed by guided tours of the new station, conducted by the firefighters, providing attendees with a look at the state-of-the-art facilities.
About the City of Statesville
The City of Statesville is truly a diverse community that welcomes new people, new voices and ideas, new industry, and business. We have already made significant investments in our downtown amenities, our business sector, our schools, our infrastructure, and more is on the horizon. We are creating a dynamic future for ourselves as we build on our successful history and the positive energy we experience today, all the while incorporating the values and quality of life that we cherish. To learn more visit www.statesvillenc.net.
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Many people contribute content to that playbook. The president issues proclamations and executive orders. Congress enacts laws. The Secretary of the Interior publishes departmental manuals, secretarial orders, and strategic plans. The Office of Wildland Fire director issues policy memos and other directives, and the Interior bureaus issue policy as well.
The Interior Department develops policy to guide operations across the department. These policies can be found in the Electronic Library of the Interior Policies. Handbooks and policy memoranda specific to wildland fire are available in the Wildland Fire Management folder.
Four bureaus manage wildland fire on behalf of the Department of the Interior: the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the Bureau of Land Management, the National Park Service, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Visit their websites to learn about policy specific to their operations.
Protect your lawn from fire ants with Ortho Fire Ant Killer Broadcast Granules. It kills fire ant mounds in 15 minutes and protects your lawn for up to 6 months. Don't treat just the infested areas where mounds are visible, treat your entire lawn to control reinfestation of fire ants from neighboring areas. For best results apply with a Scotts spreader when ants are most active (morning or late evening) and when temperatures are between 65 and 80 F, and water in after application. Covers 5,000 sq. ft. of residential lawn space. To keep fire ants at bay, use as part of the Ortho 2-Step System - use Ortho Orthene Fire Ant Killer 1 (sold separately) as a first step to destroy existing mounds, then, use Ortho Fire Ant Killer Broadcast Granules to prevent new mounds from forming for up to 6 months. Trust Ortho Fire Ant Killer Broadcast Granules to not just kill fire ants, mounds and queen, but to keep them away as well.
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