Archive for November 5th, 2015

Rockford firefighters and area nurses perform home visits

Excerpts from RRStar.com:

Much the way social service agencies work to put themselves out of a job, fire departments do the same.

Although municipalities typically require builders to put smoke detectors in new homes, many fire departments provide free smoke detectors to residents of older homes and conduct free home inspections to identify possible fire hazards. Overhead sprinklers are required by code in new commercial buildings, especially high-rises. Even the number of wildfires caused by discarded cigarettes has declined by 90 percent according to the U.S. Forest Service Southern Research Station.

The end result is fewer fires nationwide. Rockford is no exception. There were 638 structure and non-structure fires in the city in 2014, down 20 percent from 796 in 2005.

Even though there are fewer fires, the Rockford Fire Department’s call volume continues to rise by an average of 3 percent each year. Of last year’s 26,010 calls, just 2.45 percent were for fires. A whopping 80 percent were EMS and search and rescue related.

Driving the increase in medical calls is an aging Baby Boomer population. Between Jan. 1 and Sept. 30 of 2014, 20 people accounted for 192 calls and visits to SwedishAmerican Hospital’s emergency room.

This year, the Fire Department in partnership with SwedishAmerican Hospital initiated a pilot program called Mobile Integrated Healthcare. A focus group of about 20 people known as “frequent fliers” were identified for making numerous 911 calls and ER visits by ambulance.

Bob Vertiz, Rockford Fire Department EMS coordinator, and two SwedishAmerican nurses with case management and social service work training, routinely visited the would-be patients at their homes. While Vertiz checked for fire and safety hazards in the home, the nurses made sure the patients were taking their medicines as prescribed and scheduling their doctor visits. They also tried to address any other heath concerns expressed by the patient.

“Most of the people who utilize our services often have legitimate health concerns,” Knott said. “The ideal of a mobile integrated health care program is to get those people in touch with the right services. Picking someone up at their house and taking them to the hospital isn’t the care that they need. They need long-term solutions to issues, and that’s what this does.”

The results of the pilot program are expected to be released at the November Rock Stat meeting.

To expand the program and devote more firefighters and nurses to the program would likely be an expense in the short-term. However, if you consider the costs involved each time an ambulance and fire truck responds to a medical call, the program has the potential to produce huge savings to the patient and the city in the long run.

“It’s not just about dollars for us,” Knott said. “We look at the care of patients. That’s really where our concerns are.”

Heather Schafer, National Volunteer Fire Council chief executive officer, said the volunteer fire departments are experiencing the same trend of fewer fires and responding to an 80 percent EMS call load. In many cases, they are doing so with fewer resources than full-time fire departments.

“A lot of departments are asking their firefighters to be crossed trained, and funding is definitely a challenge,” she said. “When you look at the training, the equipment and the cost of the apparatus involved, that’s a lot of chicken dinners.”

Cherry Valley Fire Protection District Chief Craig Wilt said his department has 15 full-time firefighters and 30 paid-on-call firefighters. He said the EMS calls account for 75 percent to 80 percent of the department’s call volume.

“As the Baby Boomer population continues to age the number of EMS calls will only go up.”

While OSF Saint Anthony Medical Center provides free paramedic training, Wilt said certification can be a two-year process, which means when firefighters are in training, other firefighters are paid overtime to maintain an adequate staffing level.

One way to cut down on that expense, Wilt said, “All new full-time hires have to already be a paramedic at the time of hire.”

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Worker killed at Winnetka construction site

Excerpts from the ChicagoTribune.com:

A 68-year old construction worker was killed on Wednesday while working with a crew building a house in the 300 block of Linden Street in Winnetka. Fire Chief Alan Berkowsky said the incident took place about 11:50 a.m., when the man fell roughly 12 feet and hit a beam while he was working on the base of the foundation of the home.

“The construction worker was seriously injured when the beam hit him,” Berkowsky said.

The man had to be extricated from the injury site, according to a statement from the Winnetka Fire Department and the man was then taken to Evanston Hospital. Marc Hornstein, shift commander with the Winnetka Police Department, said the man died a short time later.

 

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New truck in Evanston

Evanston fire truck

New TDA for Evanston Truck 23. Evanston FD photo

Excerpts from EvanstonNow.com:

Evanston fire officials dedicated the city’s new Truck 23, a Pierce tractor-drawn aerial that replaces a similar unit now 23 years old.

Fire Chief Greg Klaiber said the new truck, based at Fire Station 3 at 1105 Central St., will assure three to five minute response times to fire calls for all parts of the city north of Church Street. The city’s other ladder truck, stationed at Fire Station 2 at 702 Madison St. and serving the south half of town, was replaced with a new model in 2011 after about 20 years of service.

Klaiber said the primary role of ladder truck crews is search and rescue efforts at fire scenes, and he said the well-organized equipment bays on the new vehicle will assure that firefighters can quickly find the equipment they need to whatever situations they may encounter.

Klaiber said planning to acquire the new truck started 18 months ago after an examination of the repair record of the old vehicle. He says 20 years is about the typical life for a ladder truck in fire departments across the country. Purchase of the new truck was approved last August.

The brief ceremony at Station 3 ended with Fire Chaplain David Jones annointing the St. Florian Cross logo on the truck cab with holy oil in the name of the patron saint of firefighters.

Excerpts from the ChicagoTribune.com:

The city’s new $1.1 million aerial ladder truck was placed in service on Monday but the preparations which brought it to that point began long before.

The process started with Klaiber meeting with Lonnie Jeschke, the city’s fleet services manager, who has since retired, going over maintenance and repair records of the previous truck and then putting together a plan making the case for a replacement. Jeschke, recently retired Division Chief Tom Janetske, Shift Chief Bill Muno and Management Analyst Mike Whalen served on the group, determining the right height, width, storage capacity of the new vehicle.

The tractor-drawn, 100-foot aerial ladder truck is steered from the front and back ends.

“Some of our streets, especially in winter are very difficult to get down,” Klaiber pointed out, “and a straight truck with all the equipment we carry, they may not be able to make those turns.”

For about the last month, firefighters have been working to get the new truck ready for service. Klaiber singled out Firefighter Michael Hasanov who did much of the carpentry work, custom fitting the truck’s cabinets.

The new truck replaces a 23-year-old 100-foot aerial ladder truck “so this is for the next generation of firefighters,” the chief said.

thanks Dan

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Wet-Down for new engine in Glencoe

Glencoe Public Safety Wet Down

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