Fire spreads in Columbiana County home
CALCUTTA, Ohio (WKBN)- Calcutta firefighters responded to a house fire that spread to different levels of a home Tuesday night, according to a Facebook post.
Crews were called to a home on Stagecoach Road around 8:45 p.m.
When firefighters arrived, the fire spread from the kitchen to the attic. Crews put out the fire quickly, saving the home.
The one person who was in the home made it out safely. One Calcutta firefighter was treated for a small cut. No serious injuries were reported.
Calcutta Fire Department was assisted by Glenmoor Vol Fire Dept, Liverpool Township Vol Fire Dept. Stations 7 & 8 and St. Clair Township Police Officers Cannon and Mayfield.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
17 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Benefits cheat who said she couldn't stand to cook caught after posting 10k run photos on Facebook
A benefits cheat who lied about her multiple sclerosis (MS) to claim more than £20,000 was caught after competing in scores of running events and sharing them on social media. Sara Morris, 50, was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 2005 but in 2020 she exaggerated the extent of her condition and claimed Personal Independence Payment (PIP). The mother-of-three inflated the severity of her MS and also claimed to be so anxious when she left the house that even a trip to the pharmacy to collect her medication left her in tears. She had also claimed that she lacked balance, and was unable to get out of her bath nor stand at her cooker. Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court heard she failed to mention to the Department for Works and Pensions (DWP) that she was in fact a member of the Stone Master Marathoners and regularly ran 5km and 10km races. She was caught out by her own Facebook posts of her running. Morris, of Walton Way, Stone, was overpaid £20,528.83 between October 20, 2020 and April 25, 2023. She pleaded guilty to dishonestly making a false statement to obtain a benefit and was jailed for eight months last July. During her court case, she accepted that her application 'crossed over into the realms of dishonesty'. She ended up serving nine weeks in total and recently reappeared at Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court for a Proceeds of Crime hearing. Judge Graeme Smith was told Morris benefited from her criminality by £22,386.02 and the available amount was £60,000. He ordered Morris to repay £22,386.02 within 28 days or serve nine months in prison in default.
Yahoo
20 minutes ago
- Yahoo
If you do burnouts in your car at this local event, you can be charged
SALEM, Ohio (WKBN)- The City of Salem wanted to make the public aware of a new state law that was passed regarding burnouts. The city announced on Facebook that it will be abiding by a new law that prohibits activities like burnouts, wheelies and street racing. The post reads that drivers can be charged with a first-degree misdemeanor if they are street racing, stunt driving or participating in a street takeover. Offenders could face sanctions and have their driver's license suspended for up to three years. The city said that people who assist with this behavior will also be charged. Ohio Revised Code defines 'street racing' as the operation of two or more vehicles side-by-side at an accelerating speed in an attempt to out-distance each other. A 'street takeover' is the action of blocking or impeding the regular flow of traffic on a public road, street, highway, or public property that is open to the general public for street racing or stunt driving. Ohio Revised Code defines 'stunt driving' as performing or engaging in burnouts, doughnuts, drifting or wheelies, or allowing a passenger to ride either partially or fully outside of the vehicle while operating that vehicle. This information was released ahead of the Salem Super Cruise event on Thursday, June 5. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
.png&w=3840&q=100)

Miami Herald
30 minutes ago
- Miami Herald
Stubborn 7-foot alligator refuses to leave swimming pool, Florida video shows
An alligator in Florida has become a hot topic on social media after it magically appeared at the bottom of a home's swimming pool. The debate is over how it got there, given the pool is surrounded by a wooden fence about 6 feet high that's designed to withstand storms. It happened Saturday, May 31, at a home in Jensen Beach and video shows deputies found the 7-foot gator was making a comically bad attempt to blend into the aqua colored bottom of the pool. A trapper was summoned and his efforts to pull the alligator off the bottom resulted in a tug-of-war that went from one side of the pool to the other. The video ends with the gator being dragged through a gate. Deputies aren't sure how it got there, but there are only two realistic possibilities: 'It's believed the gator either climbed over or found its way under the fencing,' the Martin County Sheriff's Office wrote in a Facebook post. The video had been viewed more than 321,000 times as of June 3 and amassed 2,100 reactions and comments, many from people in disbelief. 'Fully fenced yard? Yikes,' Colleen Marie wrote. 'That high (a fence) without sliding back down?' Danielle Rosario wrote. 'I've lived here since 1970. I've seen gators climb chain link, wooden, vinyl fences. ... And screen(ed) enclosures. ... If there's a body of water in Florida … always assume a gator, croc, snake, bear, or any wildlife could be lurking beneath the waters,' Debbie Williams said. 'I don't think it should have been a wooden fence, it should have been a concrete infilled taller fence,' Ella Maria wrote. Water attracts alligators but experts say there is another reason it may have strayed into the yard. 'This unusual encounter is an important reminder: it's mating season for alligators,' the sheriff's office wrote. 'During this time, they become much more active and may travel into areas they don't typically frequent — including fully fenced yards like this one.' Jensen Beach is about a 110-mile drive north from Miami.