Sprinkler system 1
By: sumeet bhanja Deo
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Sprinkler system 1 - Video
Cold temperatures are causing problems at Rapid City's Famous Dave's.
Pipes in the sprinkler system froze overnight, causing them to burst.
Damage to the Rapid City restaurant was limited but it did require an extensive early morning cleanup.
Famous Dave's Manager Bruce Carr said this isn't the first time this winter or even this week frozen pipes have caused problems.
"It's happened three times this year. Once in November and twice this week, back-to-back. Inconvenient, because I've got to get up in the middle of the night and then come in to work later in the day," said Carr.
Since Jan. 1 the Rapid City Fire Department has responded to numerous frozen pipe incidents, 15 of which were sprinkler system pipes that froze due to cold weather exposure.
Here are some tips:
During periods of extreme cold regularly inspect your home or business automatic fire sprinkler system, ensuring designed features such as heat and insulation are maintained.
- Ensure that insulation is in place to protect piping next to exterior walls, in attics, or any areas not directly heated by the main heating system.
- Keep the building temperature a minimum of 45 degrees to prevent pipes from freezing.
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Frozen pipes cause headache for Rapid City restaurant manager
Thursday, February 6, 2014 10:11 PM EST
By JUSTIN MUSZYNSKI STAFF WRITER
BRISTOL A minor apartment fire at the Gaylord Towers senior housing complex Thursday afternoon resulted in extensive water damage from the buildings sprinkler system.
Officials said the fire at 55 Gaylord St. began in the kitchen of a sixth-floor apartment. Deputy Chief Mark McCarthy said the call came in around 3 p.m. and the sprinkler system kept the fire contained until firefighters arrived.
The fire was pretty minor, said McCarthy. The bigger problem was the water damage to the floors below.
Floors 6 and 7 were evacuated because there was heavy smoke in the building, McCarthy said. The sprinklers pretty much held the fire in check. It looks like it was mostly kitchen cabinets that were burned.
No injuries were reported.
Mayor Ken Cockayne said many, many people were displaced by the fire.
He said 34 families were forced out by damage caused when the sprinkler system went off because of the fire.
The mayor said the displaced people are being taken in school buses to the DoubleTree Bristol by Hilton Hotel. He said the hotel has been oustanding in rushing to help out.
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Extensive water damage after Gaylord Towers fire
Vaughan Citizen
Vaughans fire chief is calling for sprinkler systems to be installed in all new homes after a spate of devastating blazes in the city.
I think the province should move forward and enact legislation to make them mandatory in all new construction of residential homes, Vaughan fire chief Larry Bentley said Thursday morning, following a fire on Rainbow Drive in Woodbridge. They are designed to control a fire until we arrive and it can help stop a lot of property damage and save lives.
Mr. Bentley said local firefighters have been called to seven house fires in the past 10 days, including at least one total loss", the damages of which are estimated to be about $700,000.
He said if that home had been equipped with a fire-suppressant sprinkler system the damage would have been minimal.
Requiring existing homes to be equipped with sprinkler systems would be costly for homeowners, the fire chief said, but making it mandatory for builders to install them when constructing new homes would be a good first step.
At least one local home builder, Townwood Homes, has stepped up and agreed to outfit 136 townhomes and six semi-detached homes with sprinkler systems in its Mackenzie Ridge Terraces development on Major Mackenzie Drive, near Dufferin Street.
Asked if the province is considering enacting such legislation, a spokesperson for the Municipal Affairs and Housing Ministry responded in an email that the "government takes the safety of Ontarians seriously".
The building code addresses fire safety in a number of ways and its requirements are the strongest in Canada," wrote May Nazar, senior media relations coordinator. "The Building code makes use of a combination of the following fire safety principles: detection, warning, containment, suppression (e.g., sprinklers) and exiting.
Ms Nazar also noted that since 2010, the building code has required that large residential buildings, greater than three storeys, be constructed with sprinklers.
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Vaughan fire chief calls on Queen's Park to enact sprinkler system legislation after spate of fires
News
By Tim Hornyak
February 6, 2014 06:06 AM ET
IDG News Service - Sony will sell its struggling PC business to a Japanese investment firm, the company said Thursday, meaning the slick "Vaio" brand could all but disappear from markets outside Japan.
Tokyo-based investment fund Japan Industrial Partners (JIP) will operate the Vaio PC brand under a newly established firm and initially sell PCs in Japan only.
In another reform aimed at bolstering its restructuring efforts, Sony also said it would turn its beleaguered TV business into a subsidiary.
The moves come as Sony said it now expects a net loss of $1.1 billion for the year to the end of March, a reversal of its October profit forecast.
Vaio, which Sony introduced in 1996, looks set to vanish from most markets, at least for short term, as the new company will initially concentrate on selling consumer and corporate PCs in Japan. Whether or not Sony will continue to produce products under the Vaio brand remains to be seen, Sony said.
Although Sony is selling its PC business, it will continue to produce tablet computers, part of its renewed focus on mobile devices including smartphones.
Sony did not put a price on the sale. Sony will take a 5% stake in the new firm, it said.
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Sony sheds Vaio PC business
ANGEL FIRE The village of Angel Fire could get more much-needed water supplies upon completion of certain documentation up to two decades past due, the State Engineers Office reported last week.
The village requested a variety of water consumption credits through a return-flow report filed with the State Engineers Office in 2005. The report suggests the village should be allowed to take more from its wells because much of the water used by the municipality returns to the ecosystem as a result of snow-making, land applications, septic discharge, golf-course irrigation, waterline breaks and waterline leaks.
In a letter delivered to Angel Fire Manager M. Jay Mitchell last week, however, Sheldon Dorman of the State Engineers Office wrote the village will not be eligible for any water credits until the municipality files a variety of documentation that should have been submitted from 1992-2013.
Among the missing documents are 23 well-completion reports due Nov. 30, 1992, a well-completion report due Dec. 30, 2008, and proof of beneficial water use due Oct. 31, 2013, Dorman wrote. Another well-completion report is due March 31 of this year, he wrote.
Dorman also wrote that the only water credits available to the village are for snow-making and sewer discharge.
It is recommended that credit for return flow for golf course irrigation, septic tanks, land application and unaccounted water such as leakage will not be granted to the Village of Angel Fire, a memo from the State Engineers Office states.
Although Angel Fires return-flow report suggests 79 percent of its water used for snow-making returns to the ecosystem, the memo states the villages snow-making credit would be based on an analysis for the Santa Fe Ski Company. Angel Fire Resort used an average of 84.24 acre-feet of the villages water for snow-making during each of the last three winter seasons, according to municipal records.
If the Santa Fe study came back and actually showed that theres a higher level of evaporation or something like that, it might be a lower (credit), Mitchell said.
Through the sewer-discharge credit, Mitchell said, the village would be allowed to use an additional acre-foot of water for every acre-foot of effluent released into the Cineguilla Creek. Although the village has the ability and permits to discharge about 1,120 acre-feet of water into the creek each year, the municipality released an average of only 63.08 acre-feet during each of the last six years.
This is why we need to get more people hooked up on our sewage system. We dont get septic credit. Its metered, so anything we process, clean and discharge, we get one-for-one credit on it, Mitchell said. ...Out of just roughly over 1,800 water customers that the village has, weve only got 389 that are on our sewer system.
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Sangre Chronicle > Angel Fire > Much-needed Angel Fire water credits hinge on missing documents
WATERLOO | A contract to upgrade Waterloo City Hall's main meeting room won approval this week.
City Council members voted 5-2 Monday to approve a $194,500 contract with Failor-Hurley Construction, of Waterloo, to renovate, install new electronic equipment and add a wheelchair ramp to the council chambers on the building's second floor.
Councilmen Steve Schmitt and Tom Lind voted against the project.
"While I look at these chambers and do not argue for a minute that they need to be touched up a little bit, I just struggle with supporting this given what we're doing right now as far as the budget goes," Schmitt said. "While I think this is a real good project I think the timing on this is just completely wrong."
Mayor Buck Clark countered that abandoning the project now would not help lower taxes in the upcoming budget.
"This is not general fund money," Clark said. "It is not necessarily taxpayer money although it will be paid back with taxpayer money. This project has been in the works and we have been planning bond money for this for at least four or five years."
He also said the work is not just a "cosmetic makeover" given the addition of data ports, cameras and other equipment to improve the meeting presentations and eliminate using lots of paper.
"We're not in the 20th century with electronic equipment," Clark said.
Failor-Hurley submitted the lowest of six bids on the project and came in well under the $250,000 estimated cost.
Council meetings after Feb. 17 are expected to be held at the Waterloo Center for the Arts while the council chambers are renovated.
Cazenovia The Cazenovia Board of Education meeting room overflowed with students, parents, coaches and other supporters of the districts girls softball program last Monday, Jan. 27, all of them there to lobby the school board to create a second modified team to accommodate the large influx of new seventh grade players moving up this year.
Without the addition of a second modified team, supporters claim, the program will have to cut about a dozen players this year since the program currently has no junior varsity team and the modified and varsity teams can only have a certain number of players. Such a circumstance could permanently harm the future of the program, since cut players may move to another sport, some argued.
Frankly, we didnt see the numbers coming out of the youth program like they did, said varsity softball coach Ed Roickle. He told the board there are already 42 players signed up for this years program, and, without a third team, 10 or 12 girls will get cut. There wont be any other way to do it, and it would be a shame to deny them the chance to play, he said.
The Cazenovia softball program historically has had one varsity, one junior varsity and one modified (grades 7 and 8) team. In 2012, due to large number of ninth and 10th graders on the varsity team, it was decided to temporarily eliminate the JV team while fielding a varsity team of 15 players and a 7-8 modified team of 15 players, for a total of 30 players. Money was included in the budget that year for a JV team but was not used, according to both Roickle and district athletic director Michael Byrnes.
Last year, money for a JV team was again included in the district budget but was not used due to small player numbers at the ninth and 10th grade levels. Instead, the modified team had 18 players and the varsity team has 17 players, Roickle said. After two years without a JV team, no money was budgeted for it in 2014 due to an uncertainty regarding numbers at the seventh and eigth grade levels, but, as it turned out, 42 players signed up, including 32 at the 7-8-9 levels.
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School board pressed to add third girls softball team
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