By MARC BEJAAssociated
Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) -- During a heat wave in New York this week that topped
100 degrees, city firefighters had it even worse.
Firefighters battled
more fires this week than any other week in the last 30 years, according to the
Uniformed Firefighters Association of New York.
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There were more than
8,700 fire incidents between July 4 and July 9 alone. Of those, nearly 100
caused enough damage to make a property uninhabitable or cause injury. More than
470 firefighters were injured; few seriously.
Steve Cassidy, the
association's president, said the total number of incidents this week was 30
percent higher than normal and the number of serious fires had more than
tripled.
Cassidy said he didn't know what caused the increase in
incidents this week, but that the heat was only making it more
difficult.
"These guys are operating in brutal conditions, in 100 degree
weather," Cassidy said. "Fighting fires in these conditions is incredibly
debilitating."
Fire Department spokesman Frank Dwyer said more
firefighters were needed because of the heat.
"The extreme temperatures
surely contributed to raising alarms," Dwyer said. He said more firefighters
were needed to rotate into and out of fires.
There was also an increase
this week in medical emergency calls to the FDNY's Emergency Medical Services
department. On Tuesday, the department had a 21 percent increase in calls for
help.
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