Photo of the Day: The Color of Safety

The fire service has a rich history filled with traditions. For as long as fire engines have been in service, almost 300 years, they have have been traditionally red. Ask any child to draw a fire truck and you can pretty much bet the truck will be red. But in recent years, some department have merged to a lime green/yellow paint scheme for their apparatus. This is actually for safety, there have been plenty of studies conducted that have proven the lime green/yellow color is easier to see at night and at day. In fact, a four year study in Dallas put the lime green/yellow to the test against the traditional red. The report of the study released 1995 showed that the Dallas Fire Department's red engines were three times as likely to be involved in an accident than the lime green/yellow. This study was then extended out to nine more cities and it still showed the lime green/yellow engines to be involved in less traffic crashes. Pictured here is an engine from the Lee County Port Authority Fire Rescue. The Port Authority provides coverage to Southwest Florida International Airport and Page Field. Because of the visibility needed around an airport, Airport Fire Rescue vehicles are required to be a lime green/yellow color under an advisory from the Federal Aviation Administration. (Photo: August 29, 2019)

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