Trending Topics

Mass. official encourages locals to participate in ‘fire hydrant challenge’

With snow burying 1,253 hydrants across Lawrence, a local “fire hydrant challenge” is offering Dunkin’ gift cards for before-and-after photos

FR1 Affiliate images - 2026-01-30T125118.639.jpg

Lawrence firefighters dig out a hydrant

Lawrence Fire Deparment/Facebook

By Jill Harmacinski
The Eagle-Tribune

LAWRENCE, Mass. — More than 1,200 fire hydrants across the city were covered by 2 feet of snow in a monster storm earlier this week.

Firefighters were out in force Wednesday clearing the hydrants. Lawrence City Councilor Marc Laplante also renewed his “fire hydrant challenge” to uncover the water-supply equipment.

| MORE: For firefighters, cold doesn’t mean safe

The hydrants need to be dug out with a radius of 3 feet around them and preferably a path to the street, Fire Chief Patrick Delaney said.

“It’s a community effort and we always need assistance,” he said while referring to a map showing 1,253 hydrants in the city that measures roughly 6 square miles.

With Laplante’s challenge, residents are asked to identify a hydrant and photograph it before and after. Email the photos to Laplante at marclaplante@rocketmail.com to quality for a $10 Dunkin’ gift card while supplies last.

Keeping a hydrant clear means easier firefighter access to water in the event of a fire and “more time doing what really matters — fighting a fire,” Laplante said.

From last Friday through Monday, including during the snow storm, city firefighters responded to more than 100 calls that included a structure fire, motor vehicle accidents, medical aids and reports of broken pipes and malfunctioning sprinklers, Delaney said.

Throughout the storm, city officials and departments heads had a plan which kept them in communication with another.

Trending
We asked current fire service leaders to spotlight the best of the best — those leaders, living or departed, whose influence is felt far and wide
The First Responder Center for Excellence and the University of Iowa are developing free online wellness modules to help first responders build coping skills and recognize when stress becomes distress
A Boston dispatcher who took the fatal mayday call joined family and firefighters in honoring Robert “BK” Kilduff Jr.
Squad 410 firefighters said they were shocked by the proposed elimination of the Cabarrus County support unit, which officials say is no longer needed as more departments add paid staff

© 2026 The Eagle-Tribune (North Andover, Mass.).
Visit www.eagletribune.com.
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Company News
Pierce Manufacturing demonstrated how fire apparatus innovation, connected technologies and evolving manufacturing advancements are driving the future of the fire service