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  • 27
    Apr
    2012
    5:10am, EDT

    Fire crews called in after paratroopers get stuck in trees

    Lacey Fire District Three via AP

    An army paratrooper tangled in a tree on Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash., on April 26, 2012. Lacey Fire District Three aided in the rescue of two paratroopers who were blown into trees during a training exercise.

    Lacey Fire District Three via AP

    Lacey Fire District Three's tall ladder being used to reach one of the trapped paratroopers.

    KING 5 News reports — Two Joint Base Lewis-McChord (JBLM) paratroopers were back on solid ground Thursday evening after getting blown into trees during a training exercise.

    Lacey Fire District Three was called to the scene in Thurston County, Wash., by the JBLM Fire Department to assist with the rescue.  

    Army beefs up leadership at troubled Lewis-McChord base

    One paratrooper was safely pulled from a tree before the Lacey crews arrived. The second paratrooper was higher up in a tree and JBLM didn't have a ladder capable of reaching him. Lacey firefighters were able to get close enough with the ladder truck to rescue him.

    Both paratroopers are okay. 

    Video: NBC’s Miguel Almaguer reports on the troubled past of Joint Base Lewis-McChord

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Lacey Fire District Three via AP

    One of the paratroopers is helped to the ground.

    55 comments

    Glad to see both members of our military are safe. While a bit of a hassle and slightly embrassing, these troops will have a good story to tell, and pictures to prove it! Good to see both of them with their boots on the ground again.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: rescue, us-news, tree, featured, paratrooper, fire-crew, lewis-mcchord
  • 4
    Dec
    2011
    12:55pm, EST

    Storms spark debate over Conn. trees

    By The Associated Press

     HARTFORD, Conn. -- Once again, Connecticut's trees are at the center of a storm.

    Countless trees and limbs were brought down by the remnants of Hurricane Irene in late August. Two months later, trees with their leaves still fully on branches were overwhelmed by a rare October snowstorm and were felled by heavy snow.

    Both times, overhead electric lines were tangled in downed branches, which blocked roads and slowed repair trucks.

    Politicians, utilities and tree-lovers are now battling over the future of trees in one of the most heavily forested states.

    Investigations are focusing on how to avoid future widespread outages such as those that affected more than 800,000 utility customers for a week or longer in October and early November. One solution that's emerging is to trim or remove trees to provide greater clearance for overhead wires.

    Opponents of broader tree clearance have skewed priorities, said state Sen. Steve Cassano, D-Manchester.

    "Those same people were not pleased to not have power for eight days or 10, let alone two blackouts in six, eight weeks," he said.

    The cause of the outages was obvious, Cassano said.

    "The reason the power was down was because of trees," he said. "We have been complaining about being over-treed, and a lot of people would probably disagree."

    The Greenwich Tree Conservancy would disagree. It's urging state officials to require Connecticut Light & Power to bury power lines to avoid tree removal.

    "The cutting down of hundreds of thousands of trees is not going to solve the problem," said Peter Malkin, president of the group. "It would be an environmental disaster."

    He said trimming also is unacceptable because it "takes the heart out of the trees and they die."

    But United Illuminating, which serves 325,000 customers, says burying power lines is prohibitively expensive.

    "It isn't prudent and customers don't appear to be in the mood to pay those costs," said spokesman Michael West.

    In addition, trimming alone does not solve the problem, he said. United Illuminating trimmed trees in its easements and outages still occurred, he said.

    Malkin said not burying power lines leads to costly cleanup and restoration operations after destructive storms. Connecticut Light & Power and its parent company, Northeast Utilities, have said it expects the tab to be $200 million or more for cleanup and restoration related to the two storms.

    Utilities are required to provide uninterrupted service, but fail to do so when the weather turns nasty, Malkin said.

    "The system we have in Connecticut is 19th-century. It must be updated," Malkin said.

    Mitch Gross, a spokesman for Connecticut Light & Power, said the utility has 17,000 miles of electric lines and interest by towns in burying lines evaporates when CL&P officials mention the cost. In addition, lines belonging to cable and telephone companies also would have to be buried in construction projects that are extremely disruptive, Gross said.

    In the conflict between aesthetics and trimming or removing trees to ensure reliable electricity, the balance has shifted to cutting trees because of the outages, said Dave Goodson, manager of vegetation management at CL&P.

    The state's largest utility is asking Gov. Dannel P. Malloy and legislators to change state law that limits tree cutting and trimming, he said. For example, making it easier to cut trees on private property and streamlining an array of state laws and local ordinances governing tree maintenance in scores of towns are among changes that are needed, Goodson said.

    "There is no short-term fix here," he said.

    The battle over trees covers a lot of ground. As much as 58 percent of Connecticut is forested, making it 12th among the states in forest cover, said Jeffrey Ward, chief scientist at the Department of Forestry and Horticulture at the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station.

    "That's one of our connections to nature," he said. "When you think of New England, you think of stone walls and trees."

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    101 comments

    Burying the lines is the least expensive in the long term, for multiple reasons. People used to care more about generations to come; now they just seem to care about their own generation. It's sad.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: power, storms, tree, conn

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