The New York Fire Department battled a 4-alarm blaze in the Bronx. Two firefighters are injured and at least six units damaged.
Electrical wiring caused a five-alarm fire at a Bronx apartment building earlier this month, according to New York City fire marshals.
After a massive fire in the Bronx left dozens of families displaced, victims are facing uncertainty as they wait for long-term housing support.
Two weeks after a devastating fire tore through their Wallace Avenue apartment building, more than 300 displaced tenants are now grappling with the harsh
Nearly two weeks after a devastating fire displaced hundreds of residents in the Bronx, dozens of families could soon face homelessness as their temporary housing arrangements come to an end. Miguel Jiminez couldn’t hold back tears as he grappled with the reality that he could soon be without a roof
The gunfire ended a remarkable period of no one shot in five days, from Saturday night to Thursday night, for the first time since the NYPD began keeping detailed records 30 years ago.
Video captured a New York City bus teetering on the edge of an overpass after a bus driver lost control and skidded into a wall, according to officials. A spokesperson for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority and the Fire Department of New York ...
The express commuter bus missed a turn on the route that travels between Manhattan and the Bronx. The driver, the sole occupant of the bus, was not injured.
With multiple fires raging across California, several NYC-area spots are collecting clothing donations and raising money to support those affected.
Jeanette Meyran — whose husband Lt. Curtis Meyran was one of three firefighters killed in two blazes on Jan. 23, 2005 — fought back tears at an FDNY ceremony marking the 20th anniversary of the catastrophe. “It’s hard to be here,” she said of the Bronx firehouse where the event was held.
It’s now been two decades since six FDNY firefighters were forced to leap from the fourth floor of a Bronx building, killing two and critically injuring four
It was dramatic … overwhelming,” FDNY Chief of Department John Esposito told the Daily News, recalling the miles of scorched earth and destroyed homes in L.A.’s Palisades