Archive for September 13th, 2011

Smoke smell permeates northern Illinois

Residents throughout Lake, Cook, McHenry, and Dupage counties called area fire departments today reporting a smoke smell in their respective areas. Initially, many fire departments responded and could not determine the origin of the smell. It has been reported that wildfires in northern Minnesota are the culprit.

Wildfiretoday.com published the following:

The Associated Press is reporting 60,000 acres, a figure which apparently came from Minnesota Interagency Fire Center spokeswoman Jean Bergerson Tuesday morning.InciWeb, which at times has been having problems today, was updated at noon on Tuesday with this information:

Yesterday, a finger of the Pagami Creek Fire made an unprecedented 16 mile run to the east, reaching the edge of Polly Lake. The fire became a plume-driven event and reached in excess of 60,000 acres. Residents were evacuated from 36 addresses along the portion of the Cramer Road/Lake County Road 7 from Kawishiwi Lake south to the Wanless Road (Forest Road 172) and along the Wanless Road west from the junction with the Cramer Road to Homestead Lake. Winds are expected to be strong and out of the northwest and west again today with little or no precipitation expected.

The blowup was caused by 15-20 mph west and northwest winds on Monday that gusted up to 35 mph pushing the fire approximately 16 miles to the east. The National Weather Service is predicting strong northwest winds again on Tuesday of 18 mph gusting to 28 along with a relative humidity of 37%. But between 2 and 6 p.m. there is a 45 percent chance of showers. Tuesday’s high temperature will be 60 in Ely, but on Wednesday it will cool off quite a bit with a high of only 46, with winds of 14 mph gusting to 18.

The Pagami Creek fire is the largest in the state since the Ham Lake fire burned over 76,000 acres in Minnesota and Ontario in May 2007, destroying 163 structures near Gunflint Trail.

A very thorough article can be found HERE at Wildfire Today.

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Chicago 2-11 Alarm fire 9-12-11

Chicago had a 2-11 Alarm for a fire at 3056 N. Milwaukee Avenue Monday morning.  The Chicago Tribune reports:

The fire broke out at 9:24 a.m. in the building at 3056 North Milwaukee Avenue and when firefighters arrived, heavy smoke was billowing from the basement and the ceiling appeared to be involved in the fire, according to fire department spokesman Larry Langford.

No one was in the two story building, which housed the bakery on the first floor and apartments on the second, Langford said.

Tim Olk and Steve Redick were at the scene. Steve submitted a video and Tim submitted several images.

Chicago 2-11 Alarm fire at 3056 N. Milwaukee Avenue

The fire which originated in the basement forced firefighters out of the building shortly after they arrived. The Mobile Ventilation Unit was called to the scene and deployed. Tim Olk photo

Chicago 2-11 Alarm fire at 3056 N. Milwaukee Avenue

Firefighters use a hand line from the roof of a neighboring building. Tim Olk photo

Chicago 2-11 Alarm fire at 3056 N. Milwaukee Avenue

The 13th Battalion goes to work removing roofing materials. Tim Olk photo

Chicago 2-11 Alarm fire at 3056 N. Milwaukee Avenue

As one company applies water to the fire, another works on ventilation. Tim Olk photo

Chicago 2-11 Alarm fire at 3056 N. Milwaukee Avenue

Firefighters climb the rear stairs as fire burns inside the second floor. Tim Olk photo

The complete Tribune article is HERE.

Tim Olk has more photos HERE.

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new CFD trucks assigned

Chicago Trucks 56 and 62 were heard on the radio today going to the academy for training on their new apparatus.

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North Chicago 3rd Alarm fire + 1 special 9-12-11

After 10AM on Monday morning, the North Chicago Fire Department received reports of smoke coming from a building at the vacant Knights Inn Motel property, 2315 Greenbay Road.  The first arriving companies entered and found two fires. After attempting an interior fire attack, the ceiling began to give way and they backed out of the building and initiated a defensive attack. A MABAS Box Alarm was struck followed shortly by a 2nd Alarm, a 3rd Alarm roughly an hour later, and eventually one special alarm for relief companies. Departments responding to assist North Chicago were Lake Forest, Gurnee, and Highland Park with trucks, Newport, Deerfield, and Libertyville with squads, Winthrop Harbor, Waukegan, Great Lakes, Knollwood, Lake Bluff, Beach Park, Mundelein, Countryside, Lincolnshire-Riverwoods, and Grayslake with engines.

North Chicago vacant motel fire 9-12-11 arson

Multiple colors of smoke can be seen here as the fire begins to burn through the roof. Jeff Rudolph photo

North Chicago vacant motel fire 9-12-11 arson

Heavy smoke and fire blows out the front of the building which most recently housed a night club. Scott Lasker photo

Four aerials with master streams went to work along with multiple hand lines and multi-versals.

North Chicago vacant motel fire 9-12-11 arson

A company from Lake Bluff works a hand line into a side door. Jeff Rudolph photo

The Chicago Tribune reported the following information:

North Chicago firefighters will have to find a new place to practice after vandals set a fire this morning that destroyed a vacant building earmarked for fire training.

The fire department had recently received permission to use the building for training. But firefighters were called there for a real emergency shortly after 10 a.m. following a report of smoke coming from the shuttered hotel and restaurant at 2315 N. Green Bay Road, said fire department shift commander Dell Urban.

The complete article can be found HERE.

Jeff Rudolph, Scott Lasker, and Tim Olk went to the fire and submitted images.

North Chicago vacant motel fire 9-12-11 arson

The North Chicago tower ladder gets ready to go to work as firefighters hope to burn off some of the roof to allow access to the fire inside the building. Jeff Rudolph photo

Jeff Rudolph had the following description:

Companies responded to a smell of smoke in a vacant building. Companies found a small rubbish fire inside the rear portion of a vacant night club about 100′ x100′. Crews came back in with extingushers, but found a heavier body of fire on the other side of a wall and backed out to grab a hand line. The fire was fueled by foam and other highly combustible materials used in the nightclub, and when crews reentered they where forced out as the ceiling collapsed. Command requested a box that would go up to a third with a special for manpower. Most of the fire was knocked by elevated master streams provided by North Chicago,Lake Forest, Gurnee, and Highland Park. Plywood covered the inside of the front windows . Once the main body of the fire was knocked  an excavator was brought in to tear down the structure .
North Chicago vacant motel fire 9-12-11 arson

The Lake Forest tower ladder stands ready on Greenbay Road. Scott Lasker photo

 

North Chicago vacant motel fire 9-12-11 arson

Great Lakes Engine 1912 supplied master streams and hand lines from Greenbay Road. Tim Olk photo

North Chicago vacant motel fire 9-12-11 arson

Firefighters work from the bucket of North Chicago Tower 9. Tim Olk photo

North Chicago vacant motel fire 9-12-11 arson

Lake Bluff Engine 519 was also pumping. Jeff Rudolph photo

North Chicago vacant motel fire 9-12-11 arson

Gurnee's tower ladder was one of four aerials using elevated masters streams. Tim Olk photo

Newport Township FPD Squad 1455

Newport Squad 1455 sits staged down the street. Jeff Rudolph photo

Waukegan Fire Department  2011 KME engine

Waukegan responded with two engines, one was Engine 3 with their new KME. Jeff Rudolph photo

North Chicago vacant motel fire 9-12-11 arson

After the bulk of the fire has been extinguished, the Lake Forest and North Chicago tower ladders brought their buckets to street level and directed the streams in through the front windows. Tim Olk photo

North Chicago vacant motel fire 9-12-11 arson

After the fire was out, this view from a tower ladder basket shows the roof of the building and just how much remained intact. Multiple HVAC units remain precariously supported in place. Tim Olk photo

Tim Olk has a gallery of images HERE.

Jeff Rudolph has a gallery of images HERE.

 

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9/11 remembrance ceremony – North Maine FPD

The North Maine Fire Protection District received a section of steel from the World Trade Center wreckage and unveiled it on Sunday at a memorial service commemorating the 10th anniversary of the worst terrorist attacks to date on US soil. The artifact was incorporated into an existing 9/11 memorial in the Ridgewood Cemetery on Milwaukee Avenue.

Tim  Olk attended the event and submitted these images.

North Maine Fire Protection District 9/11 memorial ceremony world trade center steel

Members of the North maine FPD honor guard stand by the department's 9/11 memorial which was unveiled at a ceremony on Sunday. Tim Olk photo

North Maine Fire Protection District 9/11 memorial ceremony world trade center steel

The 9/11 memorial which features a section of steel from the World Trade Center collapse was incorporated into an existing 9/11 memorial that features granite benches along a lake providing an area for quiet reflection. Tim Olk photo

A gallery with more images can be viewed HERE.

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