Westminster Fire Company Chaplain and PIO Kevin Dayhoff December 8, 2018
Westminster Fire Co. Firefighter – EMS provider Josh Gursky, back-left; Lt. Kim Darby, and Treasurer Caroline Babylon, right, run hose through a cleaning sleeve after the Bowersox Road fire on Thur., Dec. 6, 2018.
The work never ends at the fire service. Cleaning-up and putting away the hose and equipment after the Bowersox Road fire on Thursday, December 6, 2018 took hours. https://www.facebook.com/kevindayhoff/posts/10215325437662770
https://patch.com/maryland/westminster/work-never-ends-fire-service
Related: Thank you for the station fill-ins Dec. 6, 2018 during the Bowersox Rd fire
The men and women of the Westminster Fire Engine and Hose Co. No. 1 would like to thank the Lineboro fire company tanker crew and the Sykesville medic unit from Carroll County, the Emmitsburg tower crew from Frederick Co, and the engine unit from Lisbon for filling-in at station 3 on Thursday, December 6, 2018.
That afternoon, firefighters from the Westminster fire company were helping New Windsor, Winfield, Westminster Taneytown, Union Bridge, Manchester, Reese, Pleasant Valley, Mount Airy, Libertytown, Gamber, and Sykesville on the Bowersox Road fire. http://westminstervfd.org/2018/12/08/wfd-thank-you-for-the-station-fill-ins-dec-6-2018-during-the-bowersox-rd-fire/
Related: No one injured in Bowersox Road blaze
Carroll County Times writers Catalina Righter and Jon Kelvey have the full story on the fire… Winfield fire chief estimates two-alarm blaze did $300K worth of damage to home
Firefighters put out hot spots at the scene of a house fire in the 1600 Block of Bowersox Road in Westminster Thursday. Photos by (Dylan Slagle/Carroll County Times
By Catalina Righter, Jon Kelvey Carroll County Times
It took firefighters from Winfield, New Windsor and at least 10 other fire companies more than an hour to control a house fire Thursday in the 1600 block of Bowersox Road.
[…]
“I will tell you that had it been a newer home, it would have been sprinklered, and the fire would have been controlled by the sprinkler system,” Davis added, noting the structure was built before the requirement for sprinklers in new residential construction. “The fire would have been controlled by probably one or two sprinkler heads with probably minor damage.”
Read the entire story here: https://www.carrollcountytimes.com/news/local/cc-new-windsor-house-fire-20181206-story.html