Archive for April, 2015

Article highlights changing trend in fire service as responses for EMS continue to grow

Excerpts from MySuburbanLife.com:

[For] the Algonquin-Lake in the Hills Fire Protection District, EMS responses continue to outweigh fire responses, as they have since at least 2001, according to data from the district. Then, medical calls represented 53 percent of the total responses, whereas they made up 68 percent in 2012. Meanwhile, fire responses declined from 47 percent of the total to 32 percent in that time.

In Crystal Lake, the fire and rescue department, which integrated fire and EMS services in 1980, reported almost two times the number of EMS calls last year compared to the year 2000, and only 56 fire calls in 2014 compared to 169 in 2003.

The local data mirror those of agencies nationwide, according to the National Fire Protection Association. Figures from an association survey indicate a 58.5 percent decrease in fire calls from 1980 to 2013. On the medical aid side, calls shot up 323 percent in that same time frame.

“In terms of the decrease in fire calls, as a country we are becoming much more fire safe,” said Kenneth Willette, manager of the association’s public fire protection division.  “We see the impact of modern fire codes in commercial and industrial buildings, requiring better fire detention and suppression systems – all of these things have made the country more fire safe.”

And as the Bureau of Labor Statistics points out, the aging population is expected to be a factor in firefighter employment growth. The bureau has projected the role to grow 7 percent from 2012 to 2022 as elderly people typically use more emergency medical services.

Woodstock Fire Chief Ralph Webster did say officials there have been mulling the possibility of reallocating some of the existing personnel to address the shift. “We’re currently having discussions about putting additional resources toward handling the emergency medical calls and siphoning off resources dedicated to fire apparatus,” Webster said. “The primary reason we’re looking at that is because our job has changed.

 

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New engine for Mundelein

This from John Tobin:

The rig has the followin discription:
KME STAINLESS STEEL PREDATOR SEVERE SERVICE CAB
STAINLESS STEEL FLEX BODY 
INTERNAL/EXTERNAL EMS COMPARTMENTS
CUMMINS ISL 450HP ENGINE
ALLSION EVS 3000 TRANSMISSON
WATEROUS 1500-GPM SINGLE-STAGE PUMP 
750-GALLON UPF POLY WATER TANK
LOW PROFILE HOSE BED
HARRISON 6K GENERATOR 
WILBERT 1.8-3000 LIGHT TOWER
ZIAMATIC SWING ARM LADDER RACK
Thanks very much.
JT
Mundelein Fire Department fire engine

John Tobin photo

fire engine at night with light tower

John Tobin photo

engraved fire engine bell

John Tobin photo

KME Predator Severe Service fire singe

John Tobin photo

fire engine blueprint

New engine for Mundelein

fire engine with engraved bell

John Tobin photo

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Tornado damage in Fairdale, IL – 4/10/15

This from Tim Olk:

house destroyed by a tornado

Tim Olk photo

tornado damage in residential neighborhood

Tim Olk photo

house destroyed by a tornado

Tim Olk photo

house destroyed by a tornado

Tim Olk photo

house destroyed by a tornado

Tim Olk photo

house destroyed by a tornado

Tim Olk photo

house destroyed by a tornado

Tim Olk photo

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2-11 Alarm fire and EMS Plan I, 4-12-15 (more)

This from Eric Haak:

Fire early Sunday morning (4/12) in Chicago’s Pilsen neighborhood.  At approximately 0143, a Still & Box Alarm was given by the Main Fire Alarm Office for the report of people trapped in a building on fire at 22nd and Wolcott Avenue.  First due companies arrived within one minute of the fire being boxed and reported that they had fire through the roof.  About 0145, the 4th battalion chief requested an EMS Plan I and reported he had fire on all three floors.  2-2-1 took control of the fire at 0151 and ordered a 2-11 Alarm about 3 minutes later.
Just before 0200, companies were ordered out of the building and a defensive attack was initiated.  For most of the incident, there were three master streams working with several hand lines.  Tower Ladder 5 and Engine 23’s deck gun were in sector A and Squad 1A was positioned on Wolcott in sector D.
At around 0300, fire had got into the B side exposure’s cockloft (image 5).  Tower Ladder 39 was then brought in as a 4th master stream.  Engines 23, 18, and 39 were all pumping at the scene.  Thankfully, all 21 individuals who lived in the building escaped without injury.  My apologies if any details of this report are inaccurate, but I believe this to be a fairly good account of what took place.
flames through roof of apartment building at night

Eric Haak photo

flames through roof of apartment building at night

Eric Haak photo

flames through roof of apartment building at night

Eric Haak photo

flames through roof of apartment building at night

Eric Haak photo

flames through roof of apartment building at night

Eric Haak photo

Chicago fire trucks at night fire scene

Eric Haak photo

apartment building fire at night

Eric Haak photo

Chicago FD Engine 23 at a fire scene

Eric Haak photo

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2-11 Alarm fire with EMS Plan I, 4-12-15

Excerpts from the ChicagoTribune.com:

night fire scene

Quinn Ford, Chicago Tribune
Firefighters work at the scene of a fire in a three-story residential building on the corner of West 21st Street and South Wolcott Avenue in Pilsen on Sunday.

An extra-alarm fire that tore through two apartment buildings in Pilsen early Sunday morning forced 21 people from their homes, officials said.

Firefighters were called about 1:40 a.m. to a three-story residential building at 1900 W. 21st St., officials said. When crews arrived, they found fire on all three floors of a stairwell in the building, said Chicago Fire Department Assistant Deputy Commissioner Mark Nielsen.

Some residents had to be rescued from the building by firefighters, (plus) a worker from a factory located across Wolcott Street used a forklift to help a man jump from a second-floor window, according to fire officials and witnesses.

The bulk of the fire was isolated to the third floor of the building but did reach the cockloft allowing flames to spread to the adjoining apartment building.

apartment building ire at night

Eric Haak photo

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Working fire in Gary, IN 4/11/15

This from Eric Haak:

Another busy weekend for the Gary Fire Department.  This was at the corner of 43rd and Georgia Street and was a one-story grocery store.  As you can see in the third image, water pressure became an issue at one point.  Lake Ridge was brought in as an additional engine company so that other Gary resources could remain in place.  While this was an active incident, Engine 8 had a brush fire on the opposite side of town.  Gary companies working this incident were Engines 9 and 5, Truck 2 and Squad 2.
heavy smoke from commercial fire

Eric Haak photo

firemen at fire scene

Eric Haak photo

firemen at fire scene

Eric Haak photo

HME fire truck at fire scene

Eric Haak photo

fireman on aerial ladder at fire scene

Eric Haak photo

firemen at fire scene

Eric Haak photo

Sutphen fire engine at fire scene

Eric Haak photo

HME fire engine at fire scene

Eric Haak photo

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House fire in Hanesville, IL 4/9/15

Excerpts from the ChicagoTribune.com:

An apparent lightning strike Thursday afternoon set the roof of a house on fire in Hainesville.

A 911 call came in at 12:20 p.m. for a house fire in the 200 block of Big Horn Drive, officials said, and first-responding crews arrived to find a quarter of the roof on fire.

flames through roof of house struck by lightning

Mark Typlin photo

smoke from roof of house on fire

Mark Typlin photo

house fire scene

Tim Olk photo

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New tower ladder for Bedford Park

This from Josh Boyajian:

Had the opportunity to shoot both of Bedford Park’s tower ladders on Friday. The new one is a 2015 Pierce Dash CF PUC 100′ RM with an aluminum ladder, a 2000-GPM pump, and a 280-gallon water tank. Here is a shot with both of them together before the old one goes off to Canada.
new fire truck for Bedford Park

New and old Bedford Park Tower Ladder(s) 709. Josh Boyajian photo

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Lakewood considers options for fire protection

Excerpts from the Northwest Herald:

A long-term solution to the village of Lakewood’s fire protection services is a topic of conversation as the expiration date for the village’s agreement with the Woodstock Fire/Rescue District approaches.

Escalating costs have sent the village from option to option over the past eight years, first ending a decades-long agreement with the city of Crystal Lake to hire American Emergency Services to operate a village fire department and then contracting with the Woodstock Fire/Rescue District in 2011.

A five-year agreement with the Woodstock Fire/Rescue District is set to expire at the end of the year.

“There is a philosophical discussion happening internally about whether we should continue to have a contractual relationship with a provider for this service or run a referendum so that our fire service is provided by another unit of local government through a fire district,” village President Erin Smith said.

The village pays for fire protection services out of its general fund, an unusual practice in McHenry County where most areas are served by a separate fire protection district that passes its own property tax levy and has its own governing board.

The Woodstock Fire/Rescue District employees that operated out of the village-owned Haligus Road station used to wear uniforms identifying them as with the Lakewood Fire Department and still use village-owned equipment.

To join a fire protection district or to create its own, voters would have to pass a referendum, something that has happened in the past, Village Manager Catherine Peterson said. Voters had OK’d joining the Crystal Lake Rural Fire Protection District, but for reasons Peterson doesn’t know, the decision was never acted upon.

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Ballot question to determine Warrenville FPD trustees (more)

Excerpts from the ChicagoTribune.com:

Voters overwhelmingly approved choosing the three-member board of the Warrenville Fire Protection District.  With all 24 precincts reporting, unofficial vote totals early Wednesday showed that 89 percent of the district’s voters supported the measure, with just 11 percent casting ballots in favor of the status quo.

The DuPage County Board chairman currently nominates district trustees, who are then confirmed by the County Board. Recently, a group of Warrenville-area residents circulated petitions and collected enough signatures to put the measure on the ballot.  Backers of the referendum noted that voters in a dozen or so DuPage County fire districts choose their trustees. Just three districts, including Warrenville, have appointed board members.

Warrenville’s fire district serves almost the entire city, along with a swath of unincorporated areas in Wheaton and Naperville and small pieces of unincorporated Naperville.

During the past several years, DuPage County Board Chairman Dan Cronin has pushed DuPage’s many fire districts to either consolidate or share services to be more efficient. The effort has been part of Cronin’s broader ACT initiative, which seeks accountability, transparency and consolidation from local governments.

Cronin asked Warrenville’s fire district to join the West Suburban Fire/Rescue Alliance to share services and shorten response times. He also encouraged the district to adopt the county’s ethics ordinance and sign an intergovernmental agreement subjecting it to enforcement measures.

Supporters also disputed some of Cronin’s initiatives, noting they would prefer to work with nearby Naperville. Other DuPage fire districts, they said, are just too far away geographically. And they pointed out that the Warrenville fire district has its own ethics ordinance and questioned a county ethics ordinance that would require the district to pay it for any investigations.

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