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Raw video: House fire in Newark, CA.

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Video by  on Saturday afternoon after a garage caught fire in Newark, California.

Newark Patch:

A two-alarm fire in the garage of a single-family home in Newark  displaced a family and caused more than $175,000 in damage, according to  Alameda County fire officials.

The fire on the 35000 block of Severn Drive was reported shortly  before 2:30 p.m., Division Chief Andy Smith said.

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Helmet-cam raw video: Watch the entire video of the fire with children trapped in Alameda County, California from earlier in the week.

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Previous coverage of this story

Read review of video by Bill Carey at Backstep Firefighter

This is the raw helmet-cam video from the news stories we showed you earlier in the week from a fire on Tuesday handled by Alameda County, California firefighters where three kids were rescued. 

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Pre-arrival video & helmet-cam: Rescues of children from house fire in Alameda County, CA caught on video.

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From KGO-TV:

Three children were saved from a fire in the East Bay (on Tuesday morning) and one had to be dropped from the second floor to escape the flames. The dramatic rescue was captured on a helmet camera worn by a firefighter. A mother lifted her child over a second-story railing and into the hands of a waiting firefighter.

Frightened and panicked neighbors could be heard screaming, calling out for firefighters to save the children trapped inside a burning apartment in the Ashland area, just outside San Leandro.

From KPIX-TV:

“She didn’t know what to do so she basically handed her child down to me,” said Anthony McAdams, an Alameda County Firefighter.

Hearing that there were more children still inside, Captain Tom Pappas rushed inside. Pappas had a helmet camera mounted to his head.

“They were in the back bedroom, tucked into the closet under a blanket scared for their lives,” said Pappas.

In total darkness, Captain Pappas grabbed a boy and pulled him to safety. Moments later, McAdams found another child who he was able to pull to safety.

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Raw video: Offensive mode on three-alarm apartment fire in Alameda County, California.

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From KTVU-TV:

A three alarm fire broke out at an 18-unit apartment complex in Alameda Saturday morning, destroying several units and displacing several residents.

Firefighters received reports around 10:30 a.m. that a blaze was quickly spreading through the apartment complex on the 900 block of Shorepoint Court near Westline Drive.

From MercuryNews.com:

Shortly before noon, almost 60 firefighters responded to a call reporting the blaze at a three-story, 18-unit building in the 900 block of Shorepoint Court, near Westline, Division Chief Daren Olson said.

Firefighters used a ladder to rescue two residents from the second and third floors, Olson said.

At least six units were destroyed from heavy fire damage and other units sustained major smoke damage, he said. The building's lower units sustained extensive water damage, he said.

 

Pre-green line arrival video: House fire in Alameda County, California.

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A relatively calm resident arrives back at her Alameda County home to discover it on fire. She is able to get some help from neighbors who search for a nearby green line (in the video above) and then use it in defensive mode.

T-bone, the man on the pipe, without helmet cam (without even a helmet), made sure no good deed goes undocumented. We end up with a nice. steady point of view shot of the initial attack and even a quck closeup of the nozzleman.

Before we jump on T-bone for not taking the first line in the front door, protecting the means of egress and heading to the room on fire, or not getting close enough to the windows for the stream to be effective, we might want to see if they estimated the stretch properly to begin with or if the green line was played out to its maximum length.

Kudos to T-bone for explaining to the homeowner, who was apparently intitially upset that the firefighters pausing down the street ("Over here! Hello! Can't you see it!"), that the hydrant was near where the rig stopped.

It's great that either a police officer or firefighter immediately moved the homeowner and T-bone out of harm's way, but shouldn't they also be asking them right away if everyone is out of the house? Just a thought.