🌟 Exciting News from GrantsHelp! As part of our ongoing efforts to streamline user experience and improve access to grant products and related resources, the GrantsHelp websites will begin to sunset starting on October 1, 2025. All grant content and tools are being integrated into our core media platforms— Police1, FireRescue1, EMS1, Corrections1, and Gov1—where the majority of our audience already engages. We appreciate your support as we modernize and consolidate our digital presence to better serve public service agencies and their funding needs.

Fire prevention grant buys high-visibility address markers

Free to residents, fire chief says these markers will reduce response time for 911 calls


By Madelyn Fairbanks
The Tribune

SNOHOMISH COUNTY, Wash. — For those who live within Monroe Fire District 3, an eye-catching address marker designed to make it easier for emergency units to find a home where 911 was called from is now available at no cost.

The signs are fluorescent blue with reflective numbering bearing the address, Fire Chief Jamie Silva said. “They really stand out,” Silva said.

The project to clearly mark houses was originally funded by a federal fire prevention grant Fire Marshal Mike Fitzgerald applied for in 2009. The grant money bought the first batch of 200 address markers, which were quickly dispersed to Monroe residents, starting at an October open house.

Full story: Fire departments offer address markers

Copyright © 2025 FireGrantsHelp.com. All rights reserved.