Thursday, July 30, 2009

Another close call with a manifold in New Jersey Hope you have checked yours since the last report of this happening?

Hampton Twp. FD says firefighter was thrown after portable hydrant exploded.

Firefighter Close Calls is gathering information for IAFC on any similar incidents (other than Lambertville) for the IAFC Safety, Health & Survival Section. Click here to provide details.

The pictures and information below are from Deputy Chief Bruce Cole of the Hampton Township Fire Department in Sussex County, New Jersey:

On 7-27-09 the Hampton Twp Fire Dept in Sussex County, NJ, was conducting a training exercise. The drill involved 3 tankers and 2 pumpers. It was to be a water shuttle exercise. Eng 48-62 was set up as the hole pumper at the draft site to fill the water tankers. There was 100' of 5" LDH from 48-62 to the portable hydrant, (The hydrant was a Snap Tite water Thief/Manifold,with 5" LDH intake and 4 2-1/2" discharges).

We were using two (2) of the 4 discharges with 100' of 2 1/2" hose from each discharge. The flow rate was 125psi. The order was given for the hydrant to be shut down as the tanker was full. The fire fighter controlling the hydrant began the process of a slow shut down and the pump operator on Engine 48-62 began to reduce his pressure. As the Hampton Twp fire fighter was leaning over the control valves shutting down, for undetermined reasons the portable hydrant exploded. The force of the explosion threw the fire fighter into the air, Her boots were found approximately 50' from were she landed and 25' apart from each other her helmet landed next to one of her boots. Hampton Twp EMS, which was on scene for the drill, started 1st aid procedures and the fire fighter was airlifted to a trauma center.

Chief Cole adds that the firefighter in Monday's incident was treated and released.

You may recall a similar incident in Lambertville, New Jersey on March 28. You can find Snap-tite's report on that incident here. We have emailed and phoned Snap-tite officials and will pass along any comments they provide.

What do you mean, water is heavy?

IN WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN A REHEARSAL FOR AN upcoming “You might be a redneck if…..” episode, two men in Pottawattamie County, Iowa, were arrested Saturday after their pickup crashed.  The truck was towing a trailer on which they’d place a 1,500 gallon tank and then filled with water stolen from a fire hydrant.

Sheriff’s Sgt. Dwayne Ritchie said that a witness saw the men with a large hose attached to the hydrant, filling the tank. Realizing the men were taking the water, one of the witnesses took a photo of the crime in progress before reporting it to the sheriff’s office.

As they were driving away, the overloaded trailer blew a tire and drove both the trailer and the pickup into a ditch.

hydrant-water

The two men were charged with Theft in the 5th Degree, Interference with Officials Acts and Public Intoxication. Both men were being held over the weekend in the Pottawattamie County jail.

They said that they were going to use the water for  a “Slip - N - Slide” setup.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

A new version of MARPLOT is available at

http://www.epa.gov/emergencies/content/cameo/marplot.htm

MARPLOT® (Mapping Application for Response, Planning, and Local Operational Tasks) is a

general-purpose mapping application program that allows you to create, view, and modify maps quickly and easily. It also allows you to link objects on your computer maps to data in other programs.

What is MARPLOT?

_ General-purpose mapping application program

_ Used for creating, viewing, and modifying maps

_ Links objects to data in other programs

_ Used with CAMEO or LandView™ applications

_ Contains information that can be shown on a map

MARPLOT is part of CAMEO’s suite of three separate, integrated software applications

» MARPLOT – Mapping application

» CAMEO – Chemical database and Information modules

» ALOHA – Air dispersion modeling

CAMEO is computer software for chemical emergency planners and responders

Computer-Aided Management of Emergency Operations (CAMEO)

 

EPA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) developed this web site to facilitate the use of CAMEO and to offer online technical support. Please visit periodically for the latest news, information, and resources.

http://www.epa.gov/emergencies/content/cameo/index.htm

ALOHA (Areal Locations of Hazardous Atmospheres)

ALOHA (Areal Locations of Hazardous Atmospheres) is a computer program designed especially for use by people responding to chemical releases, as well as for emergency planning and training. ALOHA models key hazards—toxicity, flammability, thermal radiation (heat), and overpressure (explosion blast force)—related to chemical releases that result in toxic gas dispersions, fires, and/or explosions. (Note: In versions prior to 5.4, ALOHA only models the toxic threat: specifically, how a toxic gas cloud might disperse in the atmosphere after an accidental chemical release.)

http://www.epa.gov/emergencies/content/cameo/aloha.htm

LandView is an innovative “community right-to-know” software tool in the format of an electronic atlas.

LandView has its roots in the CAMEO software (Computer-Aided Management of Emergency Operations). CAMEO was developed by the EPA and the NOAA to facilitate the implementation of the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act. This far-reaching law requires communities to develop emergency response plans addressing chemical hazards and to make available to the public information on chemical hazards in the community.

This product contains both database management software and mapping software used in the CAMEO system to create a simple computer mapping system involving two programs - MARPLOT® and LandView.

http://www.census.gov/geo/landview/

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Home heavily damaged by a gas explosion.

FLORENCE, Ky. -- From Firehouse.com

Fire crews spent much of Sunday afternoon examining a home heavily damaged by a gas explosion.

Firefighters said they were called about 3:25 p.m., when an explosion reported at the vacant home near the intersection of Dixie Highway and Main Street.

Commanders said the leak was blowing into a nearby doctor's office when firefighters arrived, and both buildings sustained serious damage.

"The first suspicion is going to be natural gas. There's a natural gas leak somewhere in the building. What caused the leak, why the building exploded -- at this time those are the things we need to investigate," said Florence Fire Chief Marc Mumech.

Monday, July 27, 2009

OREGON FIRE RESCUE TRUCK CRASH TOTALS THE APPARATUS

On Friday, July 24, 2009

The McMinnville Fire Department may never have another custom-built emergency vehicle like the one that crashed today.
The vehicle, which few regional fire departments own, took months to build by a South Carolina-based company, American LaFrance Fire Engine Co. It cost $200,000 in 2000 and served as both an ambulance and rescue vehicle, carrying heavy-duty tools and 300 gallons of water.

Early today, on the way to an emergency call, the vehicle veered off a two-lane county road, rolled twice and was totaled.
The driver, Teri Apodaca-Stonebarger, 46, of Carlton, and her passenger, 38-year-old John K. Gephart of McMinnville, were not injured.
Fire Chief Rich Leipfert said the accident was a blow.
"We have a variety of other ambulances, but this has a special design, and it's the only one that we have," he said.
The Yamhill County Sheriff's Office, which responded to the accident, said Apodaca-Stonebarger was at fault.
"It was determined to be operator error," said Capt. Ken Summers, spokesman for the sheriff's office. "They went around a curve and drifted into the gravel. (The vehicle) caught and it rolled at least two times."
No citations were issued, he said.
Leipfert said the vehicle, Rescue 1, was responding along with a fire department ambulance to a critical medical call at Rock of Ages Care Facility in McMinnville when it crashed about 6:15 a.m.
The ambulance arrived at the care facility and the 82-year-old patient who was suffering chest pains was treated, he said.

Odd in the News

150 Dogs Found Dead in Freezers at Mich. Home

150 dogs found dead in freezers at Mich. home and over 110 dogs, mostly Chihuahuas, rescued.

Police on Friday found about 150 dead dogs packed in freezers in the basement of a Michigan house littered with feces and trash where more than 110 live dogs, mostly Chihuahuas, were rescued this week.
Dearborn Police Chief Ronald Haddad said the 56-year-old man found Wednesday in the suburban Detroit home with the animals may have been living with an increasing number of dogs for up to three or four years.
"The house was in complete disarray, very cluttered and, with 100-plus dogs running around in there, very filthy," he said.

.

Woman Found Dead at McDonald's Food Processing Plant
A 40-year-old woman has been found dead in a machine at a Southern California food processing plant that is a major supplier for McDonald's restaurants.
Los Angeles County sheriff's detectives say the woman's body was found early Tuesday at Golden State Foods in the City of Industry, an east Los Angeles suburb. Investigators believe her death was accidental.
No other details were given about her death or about the woman except that she was an employee.
The Irvine-based company supplies McDonald's the special sauce for the restaurant's Big Mac

Man Tasered After Sniffing Gas Bursts in Flames
A man whose relatives say had been sniffing gasoline burst into flames after a police officer Tasered him as he ran at officials carrying a container of fuel, police said Tuesday.
The man, identified by his family as 36-year-old Ronald Mitchell, was in critical condition at a Perth hospital in Western Australia state following Monday's incident in Warburton, an Aboriginal community 950 miles northeast of Perth.
Western Australia police said they were responding to a complaint at a house when Mitchell ran outside the house carrying a cigarette lighter and a large plastic bottle containing what they believe was fuel. When he refused to stop running toward them, one officer Tasered him, police said in a media release.
The man was immediately engulfed in flames. The officer threw him to the ground and smothered the blaze with his hands, the statement said. Mitchell was charged with assault to prevent arrest and possession of a sniffing substance.

Uncle Jay Explains July 27, 2009

Attention! Health care reform bill to Emergency, STAT! Obama makes a casual comment about Barbarians at Henry Louis Gates, and suddenly all health breaks loose!

Sunday, July 26, 2009

Unsanctioned volunteer crew operating in Rockland County, New York. Arrive and put the Fire put out before the official fire department arrives.

Photos by Hillcrest fire Chief Kim Weppler.

From Jenna Carlesso at LoHud.com:

A continuing dispute over fighting fires in this small Hasidic village once again boiled to the surface when firefighters from Hillcrest yesterday responded to a blaze at the grand rabbi's home and found that a group of unsanctioned local volunteers with a makeshift firetruck had already begun dousing the flames.
Hillcrest Fire Chief Kim Weppler said he was concerned that the volunteers, who are part of New Square Emergency Services, may injure themselves or others because they have tried to battle blazes without proper training or equipment.
"This could have been a deadly situation. One of their members or someone from the community could've gotten hurt, and it delayed us getting in there," Weppler said.
But village officials say their relationship with Hillcrest and Rockland County fire administrators has been friendly, and their volunteers were only trying to help.
"As of now our intentions are not to fight house fires," Deputy Mayor Israel Spitzer said. "We will sit down (with Rockland fire officials) and make sure we come to an agreement and get all the necessary training in order to qualify."

Spitzer said talks of arranging a meeting between village leaders and Rockland fire administrators had been in the works long before yesterday's fire.
"We are definitely eager and looking forward to making sure we are working together, and we are both working for the safety of the community," he said.
The Moleston Fire District, which oversees the Hillcrest department, took issue with New Square some two years ago because of building and safety violations there. The district threatened to stop providing emergency services to the village unless a meeting was held to discuss improving communications and setting time frames for building inspections and safety improvements.
A little more than a year ago, Weppler said, he began noticing a makeshift firetruck the size of an ambulance with a 200-gallon water tank turning up at fires across New Square.
Often, he said, volunteers would use it to fight flames without contacting the Hillcrest department. State law mandates that they report all fires to the chief of the fire district, in this case, Weppler.
"It's absolutely illegal," he said yesterday. "They are untrained personnel civilians participating in firefighting activities."

The village has set up its own emergency response system, said Gordon Wren, Rockland's fire coordinator. Rather than dialing 911, residents call a different number unique to New Square.
"Today is one of the first times they've had something potentially serious, but we don't know for sure because they don't tell us," he said yesterday.
Wren said he worries about the volunteers because they don't have equipment designed to protect them from smoke.
"I give these guys credit for being so courageous, but I don't think they understand the danger of what they're doing," he said.
Yesterday's fire at 10 Jefferson Ave. consumed a portion of the roof above a library.
As Hillcrest firefighters arrived, New Square volunteers were reeling in two hoses they had used to drench the flames, Weppler said.
No one was injured.
Aron Kaff, the village's public safety coordinator, said volunteers had grabbed fire extinguishers from a nearby elementary school to defeat the fire.
"They are here to help anybody in the community," he said. "They don't take it upon themselves to go after house fires."
Both sides expect to reach an agreement on policies and procedures once a meeting is established.
"There's been some discussion on this, but obviously much more needs to be done," Wren said. "The key here is to get all the appropriate parties together and come up with solutions."

Saturday, July 25, 2009

One more link in the Oklahoma saga - Trooper Daniel Martin suspended for 5 days & Ordered to anger assessment. OHP says stop and arrest justified. Finds medic obstructed officer.

Remember the story from May 24th on the OHP confronting an Medic at an traffic stop, Here’s More

OHP discipline letter to Trooper Daniel Martin

Read OHP official statement

Watch OHP announcement

Paramedic Maurice White Jr. files suit against Trooper Martin and our earlier coverage of this story

Starting today and continuing through Tuesday, Oklahoma Highway Patrol Trooper Daniel Martin is serving a five day suspension without pay. OHP says Trooper Martin showed “conduct unbecoming an officer” in the videotaped confrontation with a Creek Nation ambulance crew on May 24 in Paden, Oklahoma. The trooper has also been ordered to undergo "anger assessment".

Despite those findings, OHP's investigation found that Trooper Martin was justified in stopping the ambulance and making an arrest of Paramedic Maurice White Jr, saying that White obstructed a police officer.

Now there has been a  filing of a federal lawsuit against Oklahoma Highway Patrol Trooper Daniel Martin by Creek Nation Paramedic Maurice White Jr.

Here are excerpts from an article by Ron Jackson at NewsOK.com:
Maurice White, Jr. claims his civil rights were violated by trooper Daniel Martin, whose actions remain under review by the Oklahoma Highway Patrol. Martin, 37, stopped White's ambulance on U.S. 62. He said the driver, Paul Franks, made an obscene gesture when the trooper tried to pass with his lights and sirens on.
The lawsuit alleges, "Martin had no right or reason to arrest Mr. White who was discharging his fiduciary obligation to his patient, who had committed no crime and who had offered to submit to arrest at the hospital."
The lawsuit further claims, "Martin used unreasonable force in his seizing of Mr. White" by "throttling him by the neck with his hand." The court document also describes Martin's actions as "deliberate, reckless, wanton and/or cruel ..."

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Fire Truck Crash Caught on Tape - Detroit

A run by a Detroit fire crew on the city's southwest side took a turn for the worse Tuesday evening. Watch Video

As a Ladder 13 fire truck, with the sirens blaring, turned from Lawndale Road onto West Vernor Street, and crashed into two vehicles, a surveillance camera from a nearby party store rolled.

Story by clickondetroit.com

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Dramatic Video of Milwaukee Rescue

Raw Video - You Tube Video of Milwaukee Rescue by two off duty FF

Click here for story and interviews with John Rechlitz

Interview with John and Joel Rechlitz on the Today Show

By far, this is the video and story of the day. Firegeezer found this one showing two off-duty Milwaukee firefighters making a dramatic rescue on Sunday of a 32-year-old woman and her two children, ages two and four who were trapped in their overturned burning vehicle. The firefighters received help from an off-duty police officer and neighbors.

The four-year-old boy was the last removed and was the most seriously injured with burns over 30-percent of his body. The firefighters are brothers John and Joel Rechlitz. They were also burned.

John Rechlitz received an urgent call from his wife about the fire. Joy Rechlitz and Joel's wife Kelly were heading to pick up a birthday cake for John and Joy's 17-year-old daughter. The brothers raced to the fire 3-blocks away. Read the details in this story by Linda Spice of the Journal Sentinel.

They were assisted by off-duty Lieutenant Mark Wroblewski of the Milwaukee Police Department. They all live in the neighborhood where the crash occurred.

NIOSH Releases Firefighter Fatality Reports

NIOSH has recently released the following Fire Fighter Fatality Investigation Reports:

F2009-06

Jan 25, 2009

Two career fire fighters die after falling from elevated aerial platform – Texas http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/fire/reports/face200906.html

F2007-27

Jul 24, 2007

Volunteer fire fighter dies after ten-foot fall from engine – Ohio

http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/fire/reports/face200727.html

F2007-17

May 19, 2007

A career captain dies and a fire fighter/driver is seriously injured when two fire trucks collide at an intersection – Connecticut

http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/fire/reports/face200717.html

F2009-01

Oct 13, 2008

Fire fighter suffers sudden cardiac death during rural water supply training – Illinois http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/fire/reports/face200901.html

Monday, July 20, 2009

Mother, daughter and son were trapped in burning SUV Off-Duty Wisconsin Responders Rescue Family

 

A group of people including two off-duty firefighters and an off-duty police lieutenant rescued a woman and her two children from a burning SUV that crashed on Milwaukee's south side Sunday afternoon. Firehouse has the full story

Most of the rescue was filmed by a bystander. The video shows the 1992 Chevrolet Blazer on its left side near S. 22nd Place and W. Layton Ave., its back half engulfed in flames and black smoke.

Click on Picture for Video

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22425001/vp/32006843#32006843"

Uncle Jay Explains July 20, 2009

Sorry if this week's news seems a little late. By about 40 years! Everybody kept talking about Walter Cronkite, plus the historic landing on the moon (wink wink). Maybe they're just trying to get us ready for next month, when they won't shut up about Woodstock.

Sergeant First Class John C. Beale

I received this from my from a friend today. You may fear an wonder what is going on in this nation and the world and what we are going through but watching this has given me hope for our future.

You may need a Kleenex or two.

God bless our soldiers – our heroes…

SFD403

This is not a short watch but it's worth every second.  maybe we will make it through the crap going on in this country after all.

Date: Monday, July 20, 2009,
Killed in action the week before, the body of Sergeant First Class John C. Beale was returned to Falcon Field in Peachtree City, Georgia, just south of Atlanta, on June 11, 2009 .
The Henry County Police Department escorted the procession to the funeral home in McDonough , Georgia . A simple notice in local papers indicated the road route to be taken and the approximate time.      
The link below is a short travelogue of that day's remarkable and painful journey. Watch this if you wish to have some of your faith in people restored. http://blip.tv/play/AYGJ5h6YgmE
Please share widely.

Friday, July 17, 2009

"The Fall of Capitalism and the Rise of Islam."

Earlier this month the newly renovated Hilton Oak Lawn, in the Chicago suburbs celebrated the July Fourth holiday and continued their celebration through the entire month of July by donating a portion of its sales to the Wounded Warrior Project .

Rick Harmon, general manager of the Hilton Oak Lawn said, "We've lighted the guest room tower of Hilton with red, white and blue flood lights that will continue throughout July to raise awareness and enlist the public's aid for the needs of severely injured service men and women.” A very noble cause.

But as Paul Harvey was known to say…”Now for the rest of the story.”

From the headlines - 7/17/09:

A group committed to establishing an international Islamic empire and reportedly linked to Al Qaeda is stepping up its Western recruitment efforts by holding its first official conference in the U.S. Hizb ut-Tahrir is a global Sunni network with reported ties to confessed 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and Al Qaeda in Iraq's onetime leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. It has operated discreetly in the U.S. for decades.

Now, it is coming out of the shadows and openly hosting a July 19 conference entitled, "The Fall of Capitalism and the Rise of Islam."

And guess where they are hosting this recruiting event???? The Hilton Oak Lawn .

Kind of makes their donation to the Wounded Warrior Project seem like a preemptive publicity strike doesn’t it!! It also makes me sick to my stomach. How far our once proud nation has sunk.

Harmon's response when being questioned about the upcoming event was "as long as they don't disrupt out other guests we have no reason to keep them out."

I attempted to contact them this morning via email but when I clicked on their website I got this: “The page you are attempting to view is temporarily unavailable...We apologize for the difficulties you are experiencing with our website.”

Please pass this message along to all who may feel outraged by this.

  • Atlas Shrugs: ISLAM IN AMERICA: "FALL OF CAPITALISM AND RISE OF ISLAM"

    Hizb ut-Tahrir is "coming out" in the USA. They are feeling welcome under a jihad president. For Atlas readers unfamiliar with this group, ...

  • Riehl World View: Chicago "Fall Of Capitalism, Rise Of Islam ...

    We are tolerant of a great many things in America. But it would be good to see this protest by REAL draw some support.
    www.riehlworldview.com/.../chicago-fall-of-capitalism-rise-of-islam-conference-and-protest.html - 1 hour ago - Similar -

  • Mommy Life: Fall of Capitalism, Rise of Islam - 7/19 Chicago ...

    Jul 16, 2009 ... Fall of Capitalism, Rise of Islam - 7/19 Chicago conference. Only in the United States do we roll out the red carpet for those intent on our ...

  • Fall of Capitalism, Rise of Islam” Khilafa Conference is back ...
  • Tanker Fire Causes Collapse of Overpass

    Tanker Fire

    Tanker Fire Causes Collapse of Overpass

    Hazel Park and Area Firefighters Challenged with Large Fire

    Tonight a tanker carrying 9,000 gallons of flammable liquids traveling on I-75 was involved in an accident with a Meijer delivery truck.  Reports indicate the truck hit a portion of the bridge support and rolled over and ignited in fire.  Crews from Hazel Park, Ferndale, Royal Oak, Detroit, and beyond are working to extingusih the fire which is feed by the flammable liquid carried on the tanker vehicle.

    Initial reports have indicated that the driver of the two vehicles may have been killed.  The fire has caused a portion of the Nine Mile Road bridge to collapse onto the freeway.

    A partial evacuation of the area has been conducted and both directions of the freeway will be closed for some time.

    Structural stability of engineered lumber in fire conditions online course

    This online firefighter training course is the result of a research partnership among UL, the Chicago Fire Department, IAFC, and Michigan State University, funded in part by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. This self-guided course, which focuses on the structural stability of engineered lumber under fire conditions, is targeted toward the 1.1 million fire service personnel in the United States and Canada. The knowledge developed and shared in this course is critically important to firefighter and civilian safety.

    http://www.ul.com/global/eng/pages/offerings/industries/buildingmaterials/fire/structural/

    Wednesday, July 15, 2009

    Knox County, Tennessee. Fire engine rolls on way to medical call


    From WBIR-TV:
    A Rural/Metro fire truck has rolled off the 8400 block of Thorn Grove Pike while responding to a medical call.
    An ambulance and fire truck were dispatched to a home on McCarty Avenue for a complaint off chest pains at 11:40.
    At 11:51, the occupants of the Engine 226 called in to say the truck had rolled off the road.
    On the scene, Rural/Metro spokesman Larry Wilder said the two firefighters inside the truck had no apparent injuries, but they were being taken to UT Medical Center for evaluation.

    Image from WATE-TV

    The firefighters in the truck report they were on their way to the medical call when an oncoming vehicle drifted into their lane. In avoiding it, they drifted slightly off the road.
    When they tried to get back on the road, the truck jumped to the other side of the road and rolled off.
    Rural/Metro crews are salvaging whatever firefighting equipment they can off the truck before attempting to get the truck back on its wheels. There's no estimate of damage done to the truck at this point.

    Monday, July 13, 2009

    IAFC DISPUTES ARTICLE REGARDING FIRE ACT GRANT TESTIMONY

    From Fire fighter close calls

    I think like many of you, we have seen the below article in Firehouse.com this afternoon that gave us, some very serious concern.
    THIS IS PART OF WHAT WAS PUBLISHED ON FIREHOUSE.COM:
    "The neediest fire companies across the country would be all but eliminated from receiving fire grants under a proposal penned by several major fire service organizations.
    If approved, the match for departments serving populations of 20,000 or fewer would jump from 5 to 15 percent, while those with populations between 20,000 to 50,000 would be 15 percent, up 5 percent from what they pay now.
    The largest departments, however, would see a 5 percent decline in the funds they would have to promise. Right now, it's 20 percent, but their share would be just 15 percent.
    The proposal by the IAFF, IAFC, NFPA and CFSI surfaced Wednesday during a House subcommittee hearing on the Fire Act grant program reauthorization.
    The NVFC was not consulted, and other groups including the International Association of Arson Investigators did not sign off on the 15 percent proposal. "

    TO BE CLEAR: The IAFC absolutely denies what was published as being accurate and they have countered with a response (below). The IAFC is requesting an immediate correction from Firehouse.com.
    THIS IS PART OF WHAT THE IAFC HAS IMMEDIATELY RESPONDED WITH:
    "This morning, Firehouse.com released an article that erroneously indicated that the IAFC supports raising the FIRE grant program’s local match for smaller departments.  The IAFC does not support raising the match for jurisdictions serving smaller populations. (The entire IAFC response is shown below, scroll down)
    HERE is the entire article from Firehouse.com
    http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=46&id=64458
    HERE is information related to the testimony from the IAFC:
    http://www.iafc.org/displayindustryarticle.cfm?articlenbr=39771
    (Below is the IAFC STATEMENT regarding Firehouse.com's article being inaccurate)
    It is no secret that we are gravely concerned about making sure that both the FIRE ACT GRANTS as well as the SAFER Grants receive full funding, including bringing the FIRE ACT Grants back up to last years funding, as well raising SAFER to the level as is currently proposed. More to follow.
    ========================================================== 
    IAFC MEMBER ALERT-Contact: IAFC Government Relations Department
    The IAFC Cites Inaccuracy in Firehouse.com Article on FIRE Grants,
    Requests Immediate Correction

    Fairfax, Va., July 9, 2009... This morning, Firehouse.com released an article that erroneously indicated that the IAFC supports raising the FIRE grant program’s local match for smaller departments.  The IAFC does not support raising the match for jurisdictions serving smaller populations.
    According to the current statute, fire departments with a population of greater than 50,000 have to meet a 20 percent match.  A jurisdiction with 20,000 to 50,000 residents has to meet a 10 percent match, and a jurisdiction with 20,000 or fewer residents only has to meet a 5 percent match. 
    The IAFC joined with the IAFF, CFSI and NFPA in support of a proposal to reduce the match for communities of greater than 50,000 from 20 percent to 15 percent.  The IAFC does not support increasing the match for the smaller jurisdictions, and has made that clear in both its testimony before the House Science and Technology Committee and in meetings on Capitol Hill.
    The IAFC also has recommended that Congress create a waiver for jurisdictions that cannot meet these local match requirements.  To quote Chief Johnson during yesterday’s hearing before the House Science and Technology Committee, “According to the existing statute, most jurisdictions must meet a 20 percent match, while jurisdictions serving smaller populations must meet matches as low as 5 percent.  Some jurisdictions cannot meet these requirements due to the economic downturn, but still need training or need to replace antiquated equipment.  The IAFC recommends that Congress create the authority for DHS to waive the local match requirement for these needy departments.”
    To read Chief Johnson’s written testimony, please go to:
    http://www.iafc.org/displayindustryarticle.cfm?articlenbr=39771
    The IAFC has asked that Firehouse.com correct its story, and Chief Johnson will talk with the Firehouse.com reporter tomorrow morning to make sure that the IAFC position is accurately understood.

    LODD

    Notice of Firefighter Fatality: Mandeville, LA

    from USFA Firefighter Fatalities

    Joseph T. Grace of the Saint Tammany Fire Protection District #4 - Mandeville Fire Department in Mandeville, LA has died as the result of an on-duty incident that occurred on 2009-07-09

    On the evening of 7/8/09, Joseph Grace participated in a departmental drill for a "man down" drill. He had also responded to multiple incidents during the day of the 7/8/09 and over night into the early morning of 7/9/09. At approximately 0645 hours on 7/9/09, he responded to an incident prior to going off shift around 0730 hours. He reported to his second job as a paramedic and was in the process of cooking breakfast when crew members entered the kitchen and found him collapsed around 0830 hours. Care was initiated on scene and he was transported to a local care facility before being transferred to a larger medical center where he remained until his death. The nature of the fatal injury is still to be reported.

    Uncle Jay Explains July 13, 2009

    Michael Jackson may be gone, but those unforgettable, familiar and spectacular lawsuits will be with us forever. Speaking of spectacles, here's how to tell the Sotomayor hearings from the latest UFC match: there's no theme music in the Senate. Uncle Jay explains what he can!

    Sunday, July 12, 2009

    Another Backdraft caught on tape

    I do love to get links like this and pass them on, here is another backdraft caught on tape. Click here for the video on You Tube

    This is one from a fire on Tuesday morning in New Hanover County, North Carolina. Here is the description that goes with the video:

    On July 7th, 2009 New Hanover County Firefighters encountered a backdraft/smoke explosion while fighting a fire in a large two story single family residence. One Lieutenant was injured slightly, but has returned to work.

    The pictures below are from WECT-TV's website. Click here for a few more details.

    Fire Truck Overturned In Raleigh

    North Carolina – Friday, A Raleigh fire truck has overturned at Dawson and South streets, leaving three firefighters injured. Police on the scene speculate the driver was trying to make a left on South Street from Dawson Street and did a three-quarter flip into a grassy area off the road. The wreck occurred around 10:50 a.m. about a block away from a downtown fire station.

    ABC local news has a video

    Local NBC News 

    Overturned fire truck

    WATCH VIDEO
    Fire truck overturns, injuring three

    Both drivers of the tiller truck involved in the accident have “extensive experience” driving the vehicle, Styons said. The driver of the front of the vehicle has 15-years of firefighting experience. The driver in the back has 13-years of experience.

    A fire truck overturned on South Dawson Street and South Street near downtown Raleigh on Friday.

    A fire truck overturned on South Dawson Street and South Street near downtown Raleigh on Friday.

    Friday, July 10, 2009

    Waste and it won't be the last time!

    SAD COMMENTARY ON DO AS I SAY  .........  NOT AS I DO .........  SOMETHING IS VERY WRONG HERE ...........

    SUBJECT:  Human Waste and it won't be the last time!

    Is Obama arrogant or not?  Does he shove it up America 's a.. or not?  Is this a "screw you America " or not?

    A Boeing 757 and a fleet of armored cars for Michelle's sight seeing tour!

    !cid_1_658387922@web36407_mail_mud_yahoo

    Michelle One

    On Sunday, President Obama flew back to the United States on Air Force One. His wife, two daughters and her mother stayed on in Paris to do a bit of shopping in Paris before taking their own Boeing 757 (C-32) over to London to do some sightseeing.

    We all remember Obama's admonishment to corporate CEOs in February:


    QUOTE: “You can't buy or use corporate jets, you can't go take a trip to Las Vegas or go to the Super Bowl on the taxpayers dime.”

    Apparently that doesn't apply to the Queen of Washington.

    The London Times opened its description of Michelle's visit this way:

    "Motorcycle outriders, armoured Chevrolets and bullet-headed men in raincoats criss-crossed London yesterday as Michelle Obama and her daughters spent a second day on an unofficial visit to the capital."

    The Times went on to describe that when Michelle and the girls arrived at Westminster Abbey, the building was closed to tourists with people already in told to wait against the wall. An American visiting the Abbey said "Right then I knew it was probably someone from our royal family". 

    !cid_2_658387922@web36407_mail_mud_yahoo

    Michelle's motorcade shut down the London street above as the First Lady of the World and her children go for Fish and Chips at a pub in Mayfair . The entourage inside the restaurant was 15 people while dozens more wait outside. Include the dozens of Air Force personnel to fly and service the plane, embassy personnel and other staff and we are talking about a serious expenditure of tax payer dollars.

    Meanwhile, millions of Americans have lost their jobs and won't be able to take their family on a summer holiday. Despite their circumstances they'll still be expected to fork over the tax dollars to pay for Michelle's trip!                                                                   Absolutely incredible!

    Officials Say Swine Flu Vaccine is Coming

    Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said Thursday at a government-wide summit on the H1N1 virus that a vaccine for swine flu should be ready by mid-October.

    The summit, which was attended by Sebelius, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, Education Secretary Arne Duncan, and White House Homeland Security Adviser John Brennan, was meant to begin coordinating federal, state and local governments in preparation for the possibility of a magnified H1N1 outbreak this fall.

    Public health officials worry that H1N1 could behave like the Spanish Flu of 1918, which experts estimate killed as many as 50 million to 100 million people worldwide over a period of about two years. That flu first appeared as a mild strain in the spring only to reappear in a deadlier form in the fall.

    As of July, the World Health Organization has reported that the H1N1 virus has infected nearly 95,000 people worldwide and killed about 430. About a third of the cases and nearly 170 of the deaths, occurred in the United States.

    President Obama, who is in Italy for a meeting of the G8 nations, joined the summit briefly by telephone.

    “In conversations with world leaders, it is clear we are ahead in our preparation,” Obama said.

    His message contrasted slightly with that of the secretaries: Be prepared, because we don’t know what’s coming yet.

    “All the experts tell us is, prepare to be surprised,” Sebelius said.

    “What we’ve been advised to do is anticipate a worst-case scenario,” she added. “What we can’t do is wait until October and then decide we’ve got a serious situation on our hands.”

    While many major decisions about vaccinations have yet to be made, including whether to provide any at all, some details emerged at the summit. Sebelius said the priority groups for receiving swine flu vaccine would be different from those receiving the seasonal flu, and the delivery of the H1N1 vaccine probably wouldn’t go through traditional health care systems.

    “We’re anticipating not doing it through the traditional vaccination systems, but looking at different sites,” Sebelius said.

    Schools might be used for delivering vaccine because the virus has hit school-age children particularly hard, the secretary said.

    The first vaccine should be ready for testing in August, said Thomas Frieden, the director of the Center for Disease Control and Prevention. Vaccine manufacturers were able to speed up the manufacture of seasonal flu vaccines, clearing up the production lines for H1N1, he said.

    Anthony Fauci, director of National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said vulnerable groups will be given priority to receive the vaccine, including school-age children, pregnant women, health care employees, and adults with underlying diseases. However, a decision to go ahead with vaccinations will have to wait until health officials assess the activity of the virus in Southern Hemisphere, where it is flu season, as well as the progress of the virus here this summer.

    So far, he said, the virus is not changing in any substantial way.

    “That’s a good thing,” Fauci said, because it means vaccines developed from H1N1 in the spring will still work this fall.

    In addition, antiviral drugs are working against the virus, which could mean only a limited amount of vaccine will be needed.

    Meanwhile, scientists are unsure about the amount of vaccine that could be needed to trigger an immune response in people. The standard flu shot is about 15 micrograms, but vaccines developed to combat the H5N1 avian flu required two shots of 90 micrograms each and produced a response in only 50 percent of the recipients.

    Fauci said the current form of swine flu has reacted similarly to other flu strains, and H1N1 vaccines should produce a response with a smaller dose.

    Federal Funding

    At the summit, the governors of several states, including Maryland, Vermont, Maine, Connecticut, Kansas and Wisconsin, asked the three Cabinet secretaries questions via video-conference about federal preparations and funding to combat the virus.

    Pointing to funds already appropriated by Congress in the last war spending bill (PL 111-32), Sebelius assured them of federal support and said HHS hopes to spend $350 million in preparedness grants, $216 million of which would go to state health departments, by July 31.

    However, states hoping to qualify for federal assistance under the Stafford Act (PL 100-707), which authorizes federal disaster-response activities, could be out of luck, Napolitano said.

    The bill is designed to help with natural disasters, not epidemics, she said: “The act and the flu do not match up well.”

    Thursday, July 9, 2009

    What the F**K

    Proposed AFG Changes Could Ax Rural Depts.

     

    Looks like the full time fire departments were represented and not the small volunteer department that desperately need this fire act grant!

     

    WASHINGTON, D.C. -- The neediest fire companies across the country would be all but eliminated from receiving fire grants under a proposal penned by several major fire service organizations.

    If approved, the match for departments serving populations of 20,000 or fewer would jump from 5 to 15 percent, while those with populations between 20,000 to 50,000 would be 15 percent, up 5 percent from what they pay now.

    The proposal by the IAFF, IAFC, NFPA and CFSI surfaced Wednesday during a House subcommittee hearing on the Fire Act grant program reauthorization.

    The NVFC was not consulted, and other groups including the International Association of Arson Investigators did not sign off on the 15 percent proposal.

    Read the Full story here Firehouse news

    Photo Courtesy of Ben Eachus

    A panel of fire service officials testified before a House subcommittee on the reauthorization of the AFG grant program.

    See any volunteers here, nope can’t afford to take off their job, fly to Washington and testify, who paid for this?

    Line of Duty

    Firefighter David Grass, Jr. of the Ste. Genevieve Fire Department Dies In Line of Duty

    David Grass of the Ste. Genevieve Fire Department has died in the line of duty after participating in a department sponsored physical fitness program. Grass, 34, had been a firefighter since January and was preparing for a state certification course.

    Our condolences go out to the Grass family, friends and the members of the Ste. Genevieve Fire Department.

    Grief

    Wednesday, July 8, 2009

    Update on the Disney World monorail crash - Early video after monorail crash, One person was killed as Two trains collide

    Early video immediately after the collision of the two monorail trains.

    Orlando Sentinel coverage

    Watch story from WFTV-TV

    Woman trapped for 90-minutes, Runaway fire engine injures three people in Indiana. - Video

    Watch story from WTHR-TV

    Story from FireFightingNews.com

    More from Firefighter Close Calls

    A woman was trapped for 90-minutes under a fire engine Saturday night after the 1988 Grumman took off while firefighters tended to an injured person. It happened around Lake Santee during Fourth of July fireworks. The firefighters from the Clarksburg VFD told the sheriff's department they had put the rig in park, it started "winding up" and "just started bouncing and going".

    A nurse who was already helping the person the fire crew had come to assist, was the one who was trapped. Her leg was caught between the steering rod and axle.

    More from the AP:
    A rolling, unmanned fire truck injured two pedestrians and a motorist inside a parked vehicle at a southeastern Indiana Fourth of July fireworks display.
    The Decatur County Sheriff's Department says volunteer firefighters were responding to another emergency about 10 p.m. Saturday when the injuries occurred at Lake Santee, about 50 miles southeast of Indianapolis.
    The sheriff's department says no one was inside the Clarksburg Volunteer Fire Department truck when it began moving and struck the two pedestrians and the parked vehicle. It's not clear why it began moving.
    The sheriff's department isn't disclosing the extent of the injuries, nor is Decatur County Memorial Hospital in Greensburg, where the three were taken.

    Tuesday, July 7, 2009

    Gasoline Tanker Rollover on I-95 - No Ignition

     

    A TANKER CARRYING 10,000 GALS. OF GASOLINE WAS INVOLVED in a 4-vehicle accident Monday morning that left 10 people injured, at least one critically.  The accident took place on I-95 near Newburyport, Massachusetts, about 300 yards from the bridge over the Merrimack River.

    tanker-b-wcvb

    WCVB

    Witnesses say that one of the cars was driving very erratically on the highway causing other vehicles to take evasive actions when he eventually collided with the tanker and two other cars.  The truck rolled over and one of the compartments ruptured with a resulting gasoline leak.  Fortunately there was no ignition of the product.

    Boston TV station WFXT had a reporter on the scene file this story at 4 pm:

    10 people have been injured, one of them seriously. The seriously injured person has been taken to a Boston hospital by helicopter. All three passengers cars and the Tractor Trailer were going North bound.

    tanker-a-wcvb-stan-forman

    WCVB image by Stan Forman

    Right now, there is a command center being set on Laurel Road, which runs parallel to I-95. There are about 6-12 homes on that road being evacuated. There is also an big environmental cleanup going on and the Coast Guard is taking measures to protect the Merrimack River from dangerous chemicals. They are also spraying the foam everywhere because it’s windy and they are afraid of an explosion if there are any sparks.

    WXFT also filed these two raw videos taken from their helicopter:

    WHDH-TV also filed this video:

    At 4:00 pm the gasoline hazard had been mitigated and the tanker uprighted.  The main labor now is the environmental cleanup in progress.  The opposite-travel lanes of the Interstate have been re-opened.

    WCVB-TV has a 41-image photo gallery HERE.

    Chief Bennie Crane Dies

    REST IN PEACE CHIEF BENNIE CRANE

    REST IN PEACE CHIEF

       REST IN PEACE CHIEF

    Monday, July 6, 2009

    While not a line of duty death, Chief Crane was a good friend to us on the Sandwich Fire Department and I wanted to pass this on. We had many a good time when he came to talk at the station and at schools Chief Bennie Crane passed away on July 4, 2009, after a long illness. A popular speaker and certified facilitator, Crane began his fire service career with the Chicago (IL) Fire Department in 1961  

    and retired as district chief in 1995. He was a field instructor with the University of Illinois Fire Service Institute and Northwestern University. Crane was a longtime member of the Fire Department Instructors Conference (FDIC) Associate Advisory Board, reviewing call for presentations submissions that helped to shape the educational content of the FDIC. He was a frequent speaker on leadership and diversity at FDIC and wrote on those topics for Fire Engineering. Crane also co-authored with Dr. Julian Williams the book Personal Empowerment: Achieving Individual and Departmental Excellence (Fire Engineering, 2002). He owned Bennie L. Crane & Associates, a consultant organization serving the public sector.
    Fire Engineering Editor in Chief/FDIC Education Director Bobby Halton on Crane's passing: "Fire Engineering and the fire service were deeply saddened this weekend to hear of the passing of this great friend, mentor, and leader of the American fire service. Bennie always had a kind word of encouragement, a contagious smile, and a good word for every firefighter he met. We all knew him as a man of deep faith, tremendous commitment to the fire service, and unfaltering belief in the goodness of his fellow man. Bennie was a wonderful gentleman and an excellent friend, and he will be deeply missed by everyone who knew and loved him."
    More Bennie Crane: http://www.mpowerself.com/

    LODD

    Missouri Fire Chief Dies at July 4 Blaze

    Courtesy of Nevada Daily Mail

    Schell City is mourning the death of Schell City Fire Chief Dale Haddix, 70, who perished after having responded to a July 4 fire caused by what officials described as "the improper use of fireworks."

    Haddix died while assisting with firefighting efforts, and officials hope an autopsy on Haddix, whose body has been transported to Springfield for examination, will determine a cause of death.

    "We don't have any results yet and it might take awhile, we'll just have to see." Vernon County Sheriff Ron Peckman said.

    Read More....

    New York Firefighter Dies of Complications from Injury


    Firehouse.comNews

    A New York firefighter injured in October in a fall from a fire truck died Sunday of complications.

    Robert Johnson, 75, had been in a coma since the Oct. 20 incident that occurred during a public education effort at a school, according to published reports.

    Johnson was a 17-year member of the Mahopac Falls Volunteer Fire Department.

    Read More....

    Latest issue of NFPA Journal® is available

    June 30, 2009 —The latest issue of NFPA Journal, the official magazine of the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA), explores the issues surrounding lightweight construction in the face of fire.

    Based on recent studies, the widespread use of lightweight construction in homes is a source of severe danger when it comes to withstanding fires. The otherwise highly effective strength of lightweight structures has proven to have a much faster failure rate than traditional lumber structures when burning, a grave concern for homes and first responders.

    NFPA Journal’s July/August 2009 issue also includes the following features:

    • 2008 Firefighter Fatalities Report
      The annual compilation of firefighter losses suffered in the United States has revealed a repeat of last year’s numbers.  NFPA’s Fire Analysis and Research Division details the fatalities involving on-duty firefighters in 2008.
    • A View from the DHS
      NFPA’s codes and standards are helping the U.S. Department of Homeland Security provide protection for people.  An interview with Bert Coursey, the deputy director for the Test & Evaluation and Stan-dards Division of the Science & Technology Directorate of the DHS, explains how they’re always working to keep us safe.

    NFPA has been a worldwide leader in providing fire, electrical, building, and life safety to the public since 1896. The mission of the international nonprofit organization is to reduce the worldwide burden of fire and other hazards on the quality of life by providing and advocating consensus codes and standards, research, training, and education. Visit NFPA’s Web site at www.nfpa.org.

    Monday, July 6, 2009

    LODD

    Pennsylvania Firefighter Collapses at Scene


    Firehouse.com News

    A Pennsylvania firefighter collapsed and died early Monday at a trash fire.

    The 37-year-old victim was a member of Strattanville Volunteer Fire Department, according to published reports.

    The firefighter complained of a severe head ache before collapsing. Crews immediately started treatment. He was transported to Clarion Hospital where he was pronounced dead, preliminary reports indicate.

    Read More....

    Uncle Jay Explains July 8, 2009

    Hope you had a happy Independents Day! Wait, is that spelled wrong? Nope, because during this special time of patriotic arson, Uncle Jay explains the most important Americans ever: Independent Voters! Really, they're important, just ask them. You'll see that they even have a cute mascot, just like Democrats and Republicans do.

    Uncle Jay Explains July Special

    It's time to sing America's praises for the Fourth! Unfortunately, Uncle Jay sings about the news instead. Ever since last December's year in review, fans have been screaming for Uncle Jay to be singing. So by popular demand, here's 2009 in singing review. The first half, anyway.

    Sunday, July 5, 2009

    Monorail crash at Disney World leaves one person dead, The two trains collide during last run early this morning.

    Image from WKMG-TV's website.

    Watch story from WFTV-TV

    Orlando Sentinel coverage

    From the AP:
    Walt Disney World says a monorail at the Florida theme park is out of service after an employee death.
    The Reedy Creek Fire Department tells Orlando television station WESH that two monorails collided around 2 a.m. Sunday, killing the operator of one of the trains. The station says no guests were seriously injured.
    Walt Disney World vice president of public affairs Mike Griffin issued a statement offering condolences to the employee's family and saying the monorail was closed.

    Statement from Walt Disney World's Mike Griffin:

    "Today, we mourn the loss of our fellow cast member. Our hearts go out to his family and to those who have lost a friend and co-worker. The safety of our guests and cast members is always our top priority. The monorail is out of service and we will continue to work closely with law enforcement to determine what happened and the approximate next steps."

    Saturday, July 4, 2009

    4 th of July

    See full size image

    From book by Garrison Keillor “Liberty” Fitting for this day

    The glorious fourth
    Last year’s Lake Wobegon Fourth of July (Delivery Day) was glory itself, sunny and not too hot, flags flying, drummers drumming, scores of high-stepping horses, smart marching units in perfect cadence, and Ben Franklin, Sacajawea, Ulysses S. Grant, Babe Ruth, Amelia Earhart, and Elvis marching arm in arm along with Miss Liberty majestic in seven-pointed crown and wielding her torch like a big fat baton, plus the Leaping Lutherans parachute team, the Betsy Ross Blanket Toss, a battery of cannons belching flame boom boom boom from the crest of Adams Hill and Paul Revere galloping into town to cry out the news that these States are now Independent, God Bless Us All, and Much Much More, all in all a beautiful occasion in honor of America, and the only sour note was that so few in Lake Wobegon appreciated how truly glorious it all was, since Wobegonians as a rule consider it bad luck to be joyful, no matter what Scripture might say on the subject, and so in the swirl of color and music and costumes and grandeur you could hear people complain about the high cost of gasoline and shortage of rainfall and what in God’s Name were they going to do with the leftover food. It was all eaten, that’s what was done. More than seventeen thousand people attended and downed 800 pounds of frankfurters, 1800 of ground beef, a half-ton of deep-fried cheese curds, 500 gallons of potato salad, a tanker-truckload of Wendy’s beer, but the next day the talk in the Chatterbox Cafe was not about exultation and the wonders of the great day, no, it was about the bright lipstick someone smeared on the stone face of the statue of the Unknown Norwegian and the word RATS! painted on walls and sidewalks and the innerspring mattress dumped on the lawn of Mr. and Mrs. Bakke, the work of persons unknown. People grumped about vandals and what made them do the bad things they do (lack of parental discipline, short attention spans) and maybe it’s time to rethink the Fourth of July and pull in our sails a little and not give bad apples an arena for their shenanigans.
    The Chairman, Clint Bunsen, was unfazed by this, having grown up with these people, and he weathered the petty complaints and dispatched his men to pick up the mattress and clean up the graffiti, and by the time March rolled around and the snow melted he was all set to go again and giving The Speech which the Old Regulars knew almost by heart and which went something like this: “July Fourth is the birthday of our country and deserves to be done right because, by God, it is a great country and it changed the world and if we can’t even find a way to say that, then who are we? A bunch of skunks, that’s who. When you neglect the details, you lose the big picture. For want of a nail the shoe was lost, for want of a shoe the horse was lost, and so forth. Like my father said, personal slovenliness is the doorway to cowardice and cruelty. Nobody cares about holidays anymore. Which is why—and I’m only giving my opinion here—the country is so beset by government lies and corruption and everybody out for himself and to hell with the future—because those people grew up thinking the Fourth was just a day to lie around on the beach and toast your weenie.”

    Thursday, July 2, 2009

    Another First on the Scene Video

    I love these  types of videos that show the arrival, here is another one from Prince George's County Fire/EMS Department. Good for showing bad AND GOOD tactics on the scene.

    Chief Spokesman Mark Brady was first arriving at a garage fire in Lanham on July 1, 2009. His video catches Engine 848 and Truck 828 pulling up to 9308 Annapolis Road. You will notice the man in the white helmet on the engine stretching the first line. Indication that Engine 848 responded with just two firefighters. Staffing was made up from the truck company on the scene.

    Wednesday, July 1, 2009

    Fire truck rolls over into ditch to avoid accident

    A fire truck rolled over after it tried to avoid slamming into traffic on route to a call on June 30.

    Full coverage here with video

  • Fire truck rolls over into ditch to avoid accident (06/30/2009)

    Firefighters in Whitby had a close call on Tuesday when their fire truck rolled over into a ditch. The truck veered into the ditch to avoid slamming into traffic, earning the driver praise.

  • The driver attempted to avoid slamming into other vehicles after allegedly being cut off.

    "He did everything in his power, and was successful in not hitting anybody else and bringing the truck to a safe landing in a ditch -- but nobody was injured," Deputy Chief Bob Mowat of Whitby Fire told CTV Toronto on Tuesday.

    2008 NFPA Firefighter Fatality Report

    2 EXCELLENT REPORTS.... THE NFPA ANNUAL FIREFIGHTER FATALITY REPORT NUMBERS DIFFER FROM THE USFA 2008 FIREFIGHTER FATALITY REPORT

    As they do annually, the NFPA provides an excellent report on how (within the NFPA definition of what an LODD is) firefighters lost their lives. However, to be clear, the NFPA calculates LODD's differently than the United States Fire Administration.
    The way the NFPA looks at on-duty (LODD) deaths shows 103 Firefighter LODD's in 2008. On the other hand, the USFA's report stated that there were 114 Firefighter LODD's during the same time period.
    Based upon the NFPA's determination of on duty firefighter fatalities in 2008, a total of 103 on-duty firefighter deaths occurred in the U.S. This is the same number of deaths (using the NFPA calculations) as occurred in the U.S. in 2007, and the fourth time in the last 10 years that the annual total has been 103. The largest share of deaths (39 deaths) occurred while firefighters were responding to or returning from emergency calls. This includes a single incident which resulted in nine deaths. Stress, exertion, and other medical-related issues, which usually result in heart attacks or other sudden cardiac events, continued to account for the largest number of fatalities.
    Rita Fahy, one of the authors, has recently done a podcast about the fatalities, and the link is below if you would like to check it out. There is also a podcast that Mike Karter has done on the Patterns of Firefighter Fireground Injuries as well: Check it out HERE: 
    http://feeds2.feedburner.com/NFPApodcast
    For more information, based upon which LODD numbers you want to look at, go to our FIRE REPORTS page located here for the new NFPA report:
    http://firefighterclosecalls.com/fullstory.php?88488
    and here:
    http://www.firefighterclosecalls.com/firereports.php 
    For the USFA reported information, go to:
    http://www.usfa.dhs.gov/media/press/2009releases/010709.shtm
    Why are the numbers different? In our opinion, it's the same reason FD company officers in different FD's wear different color helmets...and why some FD's lay 3" to supply a 1500 gpm pumper and why some FD's...err, uhh...well, you get the idea. Change is tough in our business and tradition, right or wrong-is also at the base of the issue. The IAFC Safety, Health and Survival Section www.IAFCSafety.org has reached out to the various organizations in an attempt to have one number based upon one common criteria.
    Time will tell how that works out. 
    Actually, the better news is that both the NFPA and the USFA reports both have ALL the info you would need to create solutions to your FD minimizing their chance of being the subject of those reports.