Archive for March, 2018

Victorville Fire Department hires former Illinois chief

Excerpts from the vvdailypress.com:

The City of Victorville, CA has tapped Greg Benson, a former fire chief with more than 35 years of public safety experience, to serve as the head of the Victorville Fire Department.

Benson will oversee the city’s underway transition from San Bernardino County Fire to its own agency. He is expected to begin April 23. The choice comes after conclusion of a nationwide search for a top official. A native of Illinois, Benson most recently oversaw the formation of the Fox River and Countryside Fire Protection District in Illinois, serving as the fire chief there for five years.

City officials said his experience leading the establishment of a new department and his focus on community engagement were major factors in their decision.

“In addition to leading the formation of a new fire department, Greg has helped fire departments nationwide achieve highly coveted accreditation status,” Interim City Manager Keith Metzler said in a statement. “These experiences along with his sincere commitment to community involvement make Greg the ideal person to lead our city’s fire department, oversee its formation, and ensure it achieves service excellence.”

Since retiring in 2015, Benson has acted as a professional services consultant assisting fire departments nationwide to achieve accreditation status. Benson will immediately be charged with staffing the new department. But in the long-run, officials hope he can garner accreditation status for the new department — a status reportedly achieved by less than 1 percent of the nation’s municipal fire agencies.

City officials have said a reactivation of its decade-long dormant city fire department will reduce spending by 5 percent annually and equate to a $3.8 million savings in the first five years — a shift supported by the majority council. After the first five years, officials expect cost savings of roughly 14 percent annually and also 70 percent less in pension costs than if the city were to continue with the San Bernardino County Fire.

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Of interest … Maps of fire districts in Lake County, IL

Found on the Lake County, Illinois website:

Fire Protection District maps

thanks Drew

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Skokie Fire Department news

Excerpts from the ChicagoTribune.com:

The Village of Skokie and its firefighters union agreed to a new three-year contract calling for annual raises beginning May 1. The agreement between Skokie Firefighters Local 3033 of the International Association of Fire Fighters and the Village of Skokie retains many of the same provisions as the previous contract with some changes in economic benefits.

Under the new contract, which includes a seven-step wage scale, the beginning salary for firefighters at the bottom of the scale is $70,515 and $93,365 for those at the top of scale as of May. That salary range on the scale increases to $72,278 at the bottom of the scale and $95,699 at the top of the scale in May, 2019 and $74,085 at the bottom of the scale and $98,091 at the top of the scale in May, 2020.

The Skokie Village Board approved the contract at its Feb. 20 meeting after the union ratified it the month before.

The wage scale range for lieutenants in May, 2018 is $84,487 at the start and $111,578 at the top of scale; in May, 2019, $86,599 at the start and $114,367 at the top of scale; in November, 2019, $87,032 at the start and $114,939 at the top of scale; and in May, 2020, $89,208 at the start and $117,812 at the top of scale.

The new contract calls for unionized employees to pay the same percent toward their health care costs as non-unionized employees over the life of the contract — with a maximum of 15 percent. Village employees currently pay 12 percent of their health care costs.

Another change in the contract allows firefighters and lieutenants with at least 10 years of employment with Skokie to become eligible for a $1,200 annual certification incentive if they possess and maintain multiple specialized certifications, which are outlined in the agreement.

The contract also provides longevity bonuses ranging from an annual payout of $800 for eight to 14 years of service; $1,100 for 15 to 19 years of service; $1,400 for 20 to 24 years of service; and $2,750 for 25 years or more of service.

Stipends for specialized service are also included in the contract.

The agreement was reached well over two months before the current contract expires.

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New truck for Hammond

From the Fire Service, Inc. Facebook page:

E-ONE Metro 100 quint

New E-ONE Metro 100 quint for Hammond. Fire Service, Inc. photo

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Working fire in Grayslake, 3-21-18

A few photos from a house fire on 3/21/18 at 18314 W Springwood Lane in Grayslake. The address falls within a fire district covered by the Gurnee Fire Department.

Firefighters overhaul after a house fire

Tim Olk photo

Firefighters overhaul after a house fire

Tim Olk photo

Firefighter washes down a roof after a house fire

Tim Olk photo

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Working fire in Chicago, 3-22-18

This from Rob Groszewski:

From a working Still Alarm & Level 1 Hazmat at 110th Place and Loomis around 11:30 Thursday morning (3/22/18). Some type of explosion occurred, partial collapse on C & D sides. Companies were defensive until Peoples Gas could secure the area. Sq-5 snorkel and several hand lines were in use. Neighbors report the building was vacant.

Chicago FD Truck 24 at work

Rob Groszewski photo

Chicago FD Squad 5A at work

Rob Groszewski photo

Chicago FD Squad 5A at work

Rob Groszewski photo

Chicago FD Squad 5A at work

Rob Groszewski photo

Chicago FD Squad 5A at work

Rob Groszewski photo

Chicago FD Squad 5A at work

Rob Groszewski photo

Chicago FD Squad 5A at work

Rob Groszewski photo

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Lincolnwood Fire Department news (more)

Excerpts from the ChicagoTribune.com:

A lawsuit filed by a former Village of Lincolnwood firefighter against the village and the private company that employed him will be allowed to continue, but the count filed against the village has been dropped, a federal district court judge wrote on Wednesday.

Joshua Weller alleged in the lawsuit that while he worked as a firefighter/paramedic in Lincolnwood for Paramedic Services of Illinois Inc. (PSI), he saw widespread discrimination against a female coworker.

The lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division on Aug. 30, 2017 by Weller’s attorney, Daniel Zemans.

But the defendants, which include PSI, the village of Lincolnwood and “Jane and John Does 1-10,” filed a motion seeking to have the suit dismissed. Then on Jan. 18, Zemans asked to drop the portion of the suit against Lincolnwood, while keeping the portion against PSI.

In a written ruling filed Wednesday, Judge Charles Kocoras granted Lincolnwood’s and Zemans’ requests to dismiss the count against the village without prejudice. He agreed to dismiss one count against PSI, but denied PSI’s motion to dismiss six other counts filed against them in the lawsuit.

According to the lawsuit, after Weller stood up to the mistreatment and, in a separate incident, reported a supervisor’s drug abuse, other men he worked with and male superiors responded by retaliating against him by harassing and eventually Weller was fired.

After reviewing the complaint “with due deference – and the lascivious, hostile nature of the firehouse portrayed therein – we find that Weller has sufficiently pled his gender discrimination causes of action,” Kocoras wrote.

Kocoras denied one count against PSI, that of intentional infliction of emotional distress, without prejudice, he wrote. The alleged harassment was “carried out for the exclusive purpose of gratifying the individual perpetrators in a manner readily distinguishable from any sort of business aim.”

In his complaint, Weller says he was employed by PSI starting in October 2010, and the company placed him in Lincolnwood in December 2015, where he worked until he was fired the following July. The north suburb is one of the few municipalities in Illinois to outsource firefighter staffing, according to village officials. Lincolnwood officials said outsourcing saves the village money on pensions and benefits for the workers.

Weller witnessed male coworkers calling his female coworker explicit vulgarities, describe her as “useless,” talk to her “brazenly” about her breasts, tell her “she should not try to seduce anyone at work,” and ask if she was sleeping with her coworkers, according to the complaint.

Weller said in his lawsuit that male co-workers called him the woman’s guard dog, spread rumors that he and the woman were having an affair, asked Weller if he had impregnated her, asked for videos of the two having sex and texted him pornographic images asking if “the images depicted the type of sexual activity” Weller and the woman engaged in.

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New ambulance for Lombard

From the Foster Coach Sales Facebook page:

Brand new  custom Horton conversion on a Ford F550 chassis

 

New ambulance for Lombard

New ambulance for Lombard. Foster Coach Sales photo

New ambulance for Lombard

New ambulance for Lombard. Foster Coach Sales photo

New ambulance for Lombard

New ambulance for Lombard. Foster Coach Sales photo

New ambulance for Lombard

New ambulance for Lombard

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Oak Forest Fire Department history

This from Mike Summa:

#TBT- Engine 92, a 1947 Pirsch 750 gpm pumper x-Waukegan.  Enjoy and comment. Mike Summa

1947 Pirsch fire engine

Oak Forest Engine 92, a 1947 Pirsch 750 gpm pumper x-Waukegan. Mike Summa photo

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North Maine Fire Protection District history

For #throwbackthursday some photos of the old North Maine FPD Ward LaFrance fleet

Ward LaFrance Ambassador fire engine

North Maine FPD Engine 1. Larry Shapiro photo

Ward LaFrance Ambassador fire engine

North Maine FPD Engine 2. Larry Shapiro photo

Ward LaFrance Ambassador mind-mount Grove aerial ladder

North Maine FPD Truck 1. Larry Shapiro photo

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