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Palmer Lake Volunteer Fire Department
FIRE BAN ENFORCEMENT
8.10.010 Palmer Lake Municipal Code
This notice is notification of the continuing fire ban within the city limits of Palmer Lake and the Palmer Lake Watershed.
Open fire burning shall include not only camp fires, but all types of open fires and charcoal grills in public places. Attended home charcoal grills are permitted as well as propane and natural gas grills. Open burning of any other substances on private property is prohibited even if done in a grill or any other open or partially open vessel.
The fire danger is very high this year and this ban is necessary to minimize a disastrous fire. We encourage all parents to make a special effort in the supervision\education of their children of the importance of this firework\fire ban order.

If you need to contact the Palmer Lake Volunteer Fire Department, please call 719-481-2902.
History
The Palmer Lake Volunteer Fire Department celebrated its 60th anniversary in the summer of 1998.
The department got its start in the mid-1930's. Back then, the department's equipment consisted of a hand-drawn hose cart stored at an automotive garage in the center of town. When a fire started, volunteers passing by the garage would pick up the cart on the way to the fire.
Over the next several years, the department evolved. A modified 1927 Dodge became the department's first fire truck. In 1937, the department officially began, with a new fire truck and a new station built on the corner of Middle Glenway and Valley Crescent, where the station still stands today.
In the early days of Palmer Lake, the fire department was one of the few community organizations in town. As a result, many of the town's traditional celebrations had their beginnings with the fire department. The annual chili supper and Christmas Star lighting ceremony and Yule Log Hunt were all conducted by the town's fire department when it began in the 1930's. The department still oversees those operations today. It has since added the responsibility of conducting the town's July 4 fireworks display every year.
The department is the only true volunteer department still operating in the Tri-Lakes area today. None of its 30 volunteers are paid and the department is governed by the Palmer Lake Town Council. Many of the volunteers work during the day, which prompted the town to contract with the neighboring Tri-Lakes Fire Protection District for daytime coverage during the week. Tri-Lakes Fire also provides ambulance service to Palmer Lake.
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