Archive for June, 2016

Cherry Valley Fire Department news

Excerpts from WIFR.com:

 Cherry Valley Fire Chief Craig Wilt is calling it a career after 44 years with the department.

The 62-year-old has lived in Cherry Valley his whole life, serving not only half a century as a firefighter with the village but also a quarter century as a village police officer.

Thursday, Chief Wilt got to celebrate with the community at a retirement open house at the Cherry Valley Fire Station.

“I don’t know if it’s really sunk in yet. Still trying to learn how to relax. I’m still wound a little tight. Still get up around 5 o’clock every morning and I expect in due time that will start keying down a bit,” says Wilt.

Wilt followed in the footsteps of his father who served as a volunteer firefighter for 48 years. He tells us the biggest event of his career was the 2009 Canadian National Train Derailment and chemical fire.

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Phoenix Fire Department history

This from Mike Summa:

Hello,
This is Phoenix Fire Department Engine 1703.  A very plain 1968 Mack CF600.  It’s a 1000/500 pumper.  Hope that you enjoy,
Mike S.
Phoenix Fire Department history

Mike Summa photo

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Chicago Heights FD honors 10-year-old boy

Excerpts from the ChicagoTribune.com:

The Chicago Heights Fire Department has a new honorary lieutenant among its ranks.

Ten year-old Rocco Debergh, a cancer survivor who spearheaded a community-wide collection of coloring books for hospitalized children, celebrated his honorary position June 1 with more than two dozen friends and family at the city’s fire station at 51 E. 19th Place.

Chicago Heights Fire Chief Jeffrey Springer said Rocco’s helpful spirit is exactly what he looks for in a great fireman.

“I just thought this was so special, a boy, 10 years old going through what he’s going through and thinking about others,” Springer said. “That’s what we do in the fire service, we think about others. It’s such an honor to be here for him. . . From what he’s been through, it’s just such a blessing that he is still here and is in good spirits.”

The Chicago Heights boy said he used coloring books to take his mind off of the cancer while he was receiving chemotherapy, and wanted to share that joy with others. Rocco, who marks two years being cancer-free this summer, was diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia in 2009.

After writing a letter to his principal at Greenbriar Elementary School in Chicago Heights inviting schoolmates to donate coloring books and crayons, the message spread like wildfire. On March 18, he and his family delivered 2,000 coloring books to the University of Chicago Medicine’s Comer Children’s Hospital.

When then-interim Chicago Heights Fire Chief Tim Kennedy heard Rocco’s story, he felt moved to celebrate the youngster’s actions.

“He is just such a great inspiration for all of us,” Kennedy said. “And with his uncle (Ron Lucarini) being one of the chiefs here, it just makes tonight really special.”

Rocco wasn’t the only one appointed honorary lieutenant; his younger brother, Bronx, 7, also was pinned with a ceremonial honor for being a great supporter of his brother.

thanks Dan

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Buffalo Grove blood drive

July 2016 Blood Drive Poster

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Lockport Township FPD news

Excerpts from theCookCountyrecord.com:

A state appeals court said that a former suburban fire chief will be allowed to draw his firefighter’s pension while still working for the same fire protection district he had led, because he doesn’t respond to fire calls.  The fire district’s pension board had incorrectly attempted to deny him his pension when the board determined the former chief had reentered service as a firefighter after the district hired him back on in the role of chief administrator.

On June 14, a three-justice panel of the Illinois Third District Appellate Court, by a 2-1 decision, found state law meant Robert Cronholm, former chief of the Lockport Township Fire Protection District in southwest suburban Will County, was entitled to, simultaneously collect his pension as a retired firefighter and a salary as an administrative professional, from the same public taxing body, despite the opinion of the Illinois Department of Insurance that this was improper.

“Since Cronholm could no longer participate in the work of controlling and extinguishing fires at the location of any such fires, he no longer qualified as a firefighter for purposes of the Pension Code and as such, the DOI’s interpretation was manifestly contrary to the statute,” the majority wrote.

The decision comes in a years-long legal conflagration dating back to October 2009, when Cronholm informed the Lockport fire district of his intent to retire and begin drawing retirement benefits. Within days, the district then, purportedly at the guidance of the district’s attorney, hired Cronholm back on in the role of chief administrator, under a three-year contract beginning Nov. 1, 2009.

The district’s pension board, however, asked the state’s DOI to weigh in on the retirement and rehire of Cronholm, asking whether hiring the purportedly retired fire chief on as a chief administrator, while allowing him to draw his pension, violated the state’s pension laws, which forbid allowing those who have reentered service as a firefighter from drawing a pension while working for a fire department.

The DOI determined it was a violation, prompting the district to again reclassify Cronholm’s position to administrator,”and promote Cronholm’s former assistant fire chief to replace him as chief in March 2010, and earning a stamp of approval from the DOI.

In May 2010, some Lockport firefighters sued the pension board over this finding, saying they believed Cronholm should not be allowed to draw a pension while working as chief administrator.

The pension board later concluded Cronholm should be made to repay $17,693 he had been paid under his pension between the time he has named chief administrator and the assistant chief was promoted.

Cronholm then sued, and a Will County judge said the pension board had erred, ordering Cronholm’s pension to be restored.

On appeal, the majority of the Third District panel backed the finding of Judge John C. Anderson, particularly noting the law governing firefighters’ pensions was specifically changed by state lawmakers to classify firefighters as “those whose duty is to participate in the work of controlling and extinguishing fires at the location of any such fires.”

They said the plain language of the law meant the Lockport district’s pension board had made a mistake in determining “his position as chief administrator was essentially the same job as the fire chief,” and thus he “had reentered active service from the day after his retirement … until March 18, 2010, when a new fire chief was hired.”

The justices said the lawmakers’ debate concerning the change in the law illustrates their point.

“The transcripts from the debate in the legislature make it clear that the intent of the legislation was to limit participation in the pension system to only firefighters, not to the myriad of other personnel who, although integral to the success of the fire department, are not firefighters,” the majority wrote.

In his dissent, however, Justice Schmidt said his colleagues in the majority had misread the case, particularly noting repeatedly that Cronholm “did the same job as chief administrator that he did as fire chief.”

“Chief administrator was an unsworn position but identical to that of fire chief, save the removal of on-site fire suppression from his list of duties,” Schmidt wrote. “Cronholm continued to carry his fire chief’s badge, occupy the same office he did as fire chief, and prepare and present monthly fire chief reports while serving as the district’s chief administrator.”

Schmidt noted Cronholm presented no evidence that he had ever actually fought fires while he served as chief.

“Municipalities are looking for ways to save money,” Schmidt wrote. “By striking one duty, which the former chief probably never performed while chief (he had the burden of proof and did not offer any evidence of this), the municipality kept its own chief at a reduced salary while transferring the obligation to pay some of Cronholm’s ‘salary’ to the pension fund.

“The end-around violates the spirit of the Act and will undoubtedly, if allowed, lead to further abuses of firefighters’ pension funds.”

thanks Dan

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Tinley Park Fire Department news

Excerpts from the ChicagoTribune.com:

Tinley Park trustees have approved naming Daniel Riordan interim fire chief once Chief Ken Dunn retires at the end of this month.

Riordan, 58, is deputy chief of fire prevention with the department, where he has served for 35 years. His term as interim chief begins July 1 and runs through Sept. 30.

Dunn, who has been the department’s chief since 1996, announced his retirement in March.

The department was founded in 1901 and currently has 121 part-time firefighters, with the department operating four stations and a fire training tower next to the village’s police station, according to the village’s website.

During the interim period, the village plans to use a search firm to find a replacement for Dunn, although a firm has not yet been hired. The search will consider candidates from within as well as outside the department.

Riordan, who is senior inspector in the department’s fire prevention bureau, said he had not yet decided whether to apply for the position.

thanks Dennis

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3-Alarm house fire in Aurora, 6/19/16 (more)

Dave Weaver video of the Aurora 3-Alarm fire 6/19/16

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Chicago FD Special Duty – suicidal individual 6/23/16

This from Tim Olk:

A man climbed over a fence on the expressway wanting to jump, but a Squad 1 firefighter climbed out and talked him into coming down

Chicago firefighters save a man threatening to jump onto the highway

Tim Olk photo

Chicago firefighters save a man threatening to jump onto the highway

Tim Olk photo

Chicago firefighters save a man threatening to jump onto the highway

Tim Olk photo

Chicago firefighters save a man threatening to jump onto the highway

Tim Olk photo

Chicago firefighters save a man threatening to jump onto the highway

Tim Olk photo

Chicago firefighters save a man threatening to jump onto the highway

Tim Olk photo

Chicago firefighters save a man threatening to jump onto the highway

Tim Olk photo

Chicago firefighters save a man threatening to jump onto the highway

Tim Olk photo

Chicago firefighters save a man threatening to jump onto the highway

Tim Olk photo

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Chicago FD LODD Firefighter Daniel Capuano, 12-14-15 (more)

Excerpts from dnainfo.com:

Julie Capuano remembered visiting her late husband Daniel, more than a decade ago when he was a training at the Robert J. Quinn Fire Academy. Capuano pulled his then pregnant wife aside to show her the Wall of Fallen Heroes. Inside the display case at 558 W. DeKoven St. are hundreds of badges of fallen firemen.

Daniel Capuano’s badge was added to that wall Wednesday afternoon (6/22/16) in a ceremony honoring the fallen firefighter from Mount Greenwood. Capuano, 42, died Dec. 14 while working a warehouse fire at 92nd Street and Baltimore Avenue. He fell two stories down an unmarked elevator shaft.

“I never thought we’d be here,” Julie Capuano said. “It’s heartbreaking to see his name.”

He left behind Julie, and their three children — Amanda, Andrew and Nicholas. Later that afternoon Amanda and Nicholas placed a brick engraved with their father’s name at the Chicago Fire Department Fallen Firefighter/Paramedic Memorial Park along the lakefront at 2300 S. Ft. Dearborn Dr.

Seeing the names on the wall, Julie Capuano remembered her husband attending the funerals of some of men whose badges are now placed beside his own. She found several prayer cards belonging to these fallen co-workers recently when going through his things.

“It’s a great honor for him to be on that wall with all those other guys,” she said.

thanks Dan

All of the posts about the LODD of Chicago FD Firefighter Daniel Capuano can be viewed HERE

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New ambulance for Crystal Lake

From the Foster Coach Sales Facebook page:

Brand new custom Horton conversion on an E450 chassis

New ambulance for the Crystal Lake FD

New ambulance for the Crystal Lake FD. Foster Coach Sales photo

new ambulance photo

Foster Coach Sales photo

rear of new modular ambulance

Foster Coach Sales photo

ambulance interior

Foster Coach Sales photo

ambulance interior

Foster Coach Sales photo

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