Company Overview

En-Gauge

en-Gauge is a safety technology company offering innovative solutions for building safety monitoring. Developed by pioneers in the fire safety business, the en-Gauge fire extinguisher monitoring system is the only monitoring system that remotely protects installed fire suppression equipment and extinguishers from theft, vandalism or malfunction. en-Gauge has deployed its patented monitoring system in airports, college campuses, businesses and government facilities throughout the country. 

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The en-Gauge fire safety system has the potential to reduce total cost of ownership by as much as 40% over the lifetime of the extinguisher (an average of 12 years).

How? First, the en-Gauge reliable fire and safety equipment system can save you money on labor costs and time by not having to have someone manually inspect each and every extinguisher every 30 days since the system does it for you 24/7.

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Suffolk County Sheriff's Department improves safety with electronically monitored fire extinguishers

From Town Online:

Suffolk County Sheriff Andrea J. Cabral recently announced that more than 175 electronically monitored fire extinguishers were installed in two of the Department's correctional facilities - the Suffolk County House of Correction at South Bay and the Suffolk County Jail on Nashua Street, both in Boston. The extinguisher monitoring technology named en-Gauge was developed and installed by Rockland-based MIJA, Inc.

Hero Watch for November 14th

October 17th, Staten Island:

Torres, who lives in the house with his wife and his parents, heard the boy crying at about 1:30 a.m., which struck him as odd. About a half hour later, he smelled smoke coming in through the vents of his own bedroom, which adjoins Isaiah's room. Torres went outside and saw smoke pouring from the side apartment, he said.

Fire Destroys School

A fire that began in a chemistry lab destroyed a high school, leaving more than 1,000 students without a school building for the rest of the year.

A teacher spotted the fire around 2 p.m. Wednesday at Eastern Guilford High School and tried to put it out with an extinguisher, but then pulled the alarm. The school, which has 1,060 students, was evacuated, with students, teachers and other employees going to a nearby church.

The cause of the fire was under investigation.

Inspection trouble for Sacramento Schools:

Inspectection trouble for Sacramento Schools:

Sacramento Fire Department Assistant Chief Troy Malaspino: "A major violation. One of the top two or three items we would require an immediate fix if it was brought to our attention."

Records show evacuation plans were missing at more than 13 schools.

Inspections conducted by the city show fire extinguishers and sprinkler systems that have not been checked or certified for years.

Vandalism Round-Up for October 8th

Fort Wayne AL.:

The vandalism happened sometime late Monday night and the vandals threw much of the football equipment in the field house onto the floor, stopped up the drains on the sinks and turned the water on, causing the facility to flood. Some football helmets were stuffed into urinals. Vandals also broke into the gym, where they removed trophies from a display case, placed them in the middle of the gym floor and sprayed them with fire extinguishers.

Hero Watch

hero Watch
Bellingham, WA:
Comcast technician Jeff Edmondson was getting off Interstate 5 at Sunset Drive when he saw a collision of three cars, one of which had smoke coming out from under its hood. He said people were standing around the crash, but none of them had a fire extinguisher. As the car smoked, the woman inside appeared to be unconscious.

Aloha Fire, Not Such a Friendly Hello

Dorm Fire

Dorm fire in Honolulu put out by fire extinguisher:

Fire alarms rang out, waking Hale Aloha dormitory residents from their sleep yesterday morning at 1:50 a.m. after a fire started in a nearby trash dumpster.

Vandalism Round-Up

Richland WA:

RICHLAND, Wash. - Police said it is the work of a vandal. Windows are broken out and the inside of the Richland Public Library is trashed.

Library workers came in this morning to find a huge mess. They said someone broke-in over night and tore the place apart.

The suspect sprayed the fire extinguisher over everything, including a two of the self-check out machines that cost 10,000 dollars each.

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