From Phil Stenholm:
Another installment about the History of the Evanston Fire Department
With Evanston Fire Department (EFD) minimum shift staffing officially reduced to 26 in 1980, placing the third MICU ambulance into front-line service while also maintaining five three-man engine companies, two three-man truck companies, and two two-man MICU ambulances (plus the shift commander) would not be possible. Therefore, two paramedics were assigned to Truck Co. 21 each shift so that Truck 21 could be the “jump company” for Ambulance 3, staffing the ambulance if a third ambulance was needed. However, because Truck Co. 21 had to be in quarters in order to staff A-3 – AND – Truck Co. 22 had to be in service to provide truck coverage for the city while Truck 21 was manning A-3, the third ambulance could not always be staffed when it was needed.
As a result, City Manager Ed Martin recommended that Truck 21 and Ambulance 3 be relocated from Station # 1 to Station # 3, with the two paramedics assigned to Truck Co. 21 assigned to Ambulance 3 full-time, and with the three firefighters from Engine Co. 23 and the driver of Truck 21 forming a four-man “quint company” that would operate with Truck 21’s 1,250-GPM / 300-gallon / 100-foot RMA quint. When available, Ambulance 3 would follow the quint to any fire in Station # 3’s first-due area to provide a fifth and sixth firefighter to help make full use of the rig’s capabilities, but otherwise Ambulance 3 would be a full-time MICU ambulance 24/7.
However, by this time it had become very apparent that the quint had two major design flaws. The first was that because the truck had only one rear axle instead of two, if the 300-gallon tank was filled with water, the rear axle could collapse. This happened twice. Also, because the rig had only one outrigger jack on each side, the aerial ladder could not be extended at certain angles without the truck tipping over. This never happened, but it was understood that it could happen if the truck wasn’t perfectly positioned at a certain angle in just the right way. As a result, the plan to move Truck 21 to Station # 3 and place a four-man quint company in service, with Ambulance 3 staffed with two paramedics, was dropped, mainly because the quint could not carry water.
During the years 1981-84, EFD front-line pumpers underwent major refurbishment. Because of the large-diameter supply hose added to EFD pumpers in 1977-78, the hose beds as originally designed were not particularly useful. Therefore, the bodies were reconfigured, with the factory-installed top-mounted booster reels removed and replaced with a transverse hose tray for 1-1/2 inch attack line located atop the pump panel. This provided more room for larger diameter hose in the bed. Also, the turret nozzles temporarily installed in 1978 were made permanent. In addition, enclosed cabinets were installed on the side of the rigs so that SCBA gear could be better protected from the elements, instead of just being hung by straps on the side of the rigs.
After the pumpers were refurbished, the same company converted the EFD’s 1979 Chevrolet utility van into a “command van” (the new F-2), replacing the shift commander’s 1979 Chevrolet station, which was then reassigned to the Medical Officer (F-22). Also, in 1982 a used, 1968 Pirsch / GMC tractor (ex-Aurora, Colorado) was purchased for the reserve truck at Station # 3. This tractor replaced the 1952 Pirsch tractor (refurbished in 1969), pulling the 1952 Pirsch TDA (also refurbished in 1969).
In addition, the box on the 1976 Chevrolet MICU (Ambulance 3) was remounted on a new Chevrolet chassis in 1982, and new Ford MICU ambulances were acquired in 1984 (Ambulance 1) and 1986 (Ambulance 2). One of the two 1980 Ford MICU ambulances was placed into reserve as Ambulance 4 in 1984 replacing the 1975 Dodge van ambulance (the original Ambulance 1 and the EFD’s reserve MICU since 1980), and the other was taken out of service in 1986 and was converted into the EFD’s mobile air cascade known as “Airwolf.” With the exception of the shift commander’s Chevy command van and the medical officer’s Chevy station wagon, EFD staff cars were now unmarked sedans leased from rental car companies.
In late 1983, the EFD took delivery of a new 1,250-GPM / 500-gallon pumper, built by Welch on a Spartan chassis. The pumper cost $114.586.39, but because it was acquired by means of a federal grant, half of the cost was paid by the federal government. However, the grant stipulated that the apparatus be placed at Fire Station # 2, so the 1979 Pirsch 1,250 / 750 pumper that had been Engine 22 since April 1979 was moved to Station # 1 and became the new Engine 21. The 1968 Pirsch 1,250 / 300 TCP that had been running as Engine 21 since 1968 was placed into reserve at this time, and the two remaining 1952 Pirsch pumpers were junked.
In 1986, the 1968 Pirsch pumper was dismantled and its stellar 1,250-GPM pump was sent to Appleton, Wisconsin, where it was installed in a new pumper being built by the Pierce Manufacturing Company for the EFD. This was Evanston’s first Pierce rig, and it was a high-priority rush job, because the EFD needed a pumper equipped with a foam tank ASAP to provide stand-by at the city waterworks parking lot at Lincoln & Sheridan for medical helicopters landing with patients or organs destined for Evanston Hospital. The Pierce Dash 1,250 / 500 / 30 pumper arrived in April 1987 and became the new Engine 23 at Fire Station # 3, with the 1974 Howe 1,000 / 300 pumper being placed into reserve.
At 2:45 PM on the afternoon of Monday, July 22, 1985, the Evanston Fire Department responded to a report of a fire at a duplex at 1927 Jackson Ave. It was thought to be a “routine” house fire, like hundreds of others fought by the EFD over the years. Shift Commander Joe Planos was already on the road and arrived a minute after the call was dispatched, reporting smoke showing from the residence. While he was waiting for the first-due companies to arrive, Capt. Planos was advised by neighbors that an infant might be in the house. Planos directed the first arriving company to commence search & rescue efforts immediately.
Truck Co. 21 arrived first, parking directly in front of the house. The truck company was staffed by three firefighters cross-trained as paramedics, Joe Hayes, Marty Leoni, and James Edwards, and the crew went to the rear of the residence and made entry into an enclosed back porch. Meanwhile, Engine Co. 21 (Capt. Ken Dohm and crew) and Engine Co. 23 (Capt. Ward Cook and crew) arrived, and the two engine companies led-out hand-lines from Engine 21, attacking the fire through the front door. As Truck Co. 21 made its way up a rear stairway to the second floor, an apparent “backdraft” explosion in the 1st floor apartment blew-out the back door and sent a fireball up the stairway.
Acting Captain Hayes, standing at the foot of the stairs, and truckman Edwards, halfway up the stairway, were able to side-step the flames. Marty Leoni, already up on the 2nd floor landing, could not escape, and was trapped. Hayes called for Leoni to jump, but he chose instead to break down the door and force-entry into the 2nd floor apartment, probably with the intention of escaping out a second-floor window. However, upon entering the flat he was attacked by a guard dog. Hayes attempted to make his way up the stairway to assist his stricken comrade, but was driven back by fire, suffering serious burns to his hands and face in the process.
By this point, the rear stairway was engulfed in flames. Acting Capt. Hayes’ portable radio was damaged by the fire, and so the two engine companies operating hand-lines in the front of the residence were initially unaware that a firefighter was trapped. However, once they were advised and the hose lines were brought to the rear of the house, the flames had communicated into the second floor interior and the residence was fully-involved in fire. All on duty EFD personnel, as well as units from Wilmette, Skokie, and Winnetka, were called to the scene to assist with the rescue efforts, but they proved unsuccessful. Marty Leoni died in the second floor apartment before he could be located. He was 28 years old and had joined the EFD in January 1981.
It was later learned that the infant who was believed to be in the house when firefighters arrived had already been driven to the hospital by his distraught mother accompanied by other family members – BEFORE – the EFD was even notified of the fire. It seems the infant’s five-year old brother had been playing with a cigarette lighter, and in doing so, unintentionally set his little brother’s bedding on fire while the child was asleep in the crib. Everyone in the house at the time the fire started was at the hospital by the time firefighters arrived.
Subsequent to this fire, three engine companies would be dispatched to all Evanston fire calls (known in EFD parlance as a “general alarm”), even before a working fire could be confirmed. It was understood that if three engine companies had responded initially to the Jackson fire instead of two, one of the engines would have reported to the rear alley and would have been available to lead-out a hand-line that would have backed-up the truck company operating in the rear of the residence.
With the tragic death of Marty Leoni, the EFD suffered its first “killed in action” fatality since December 1905, when firemen George Stiles and William Craig were killed at the Mark Manufacturing Company fire. Subsequent to Marty Leoni’s death, the “Fallen Fire Fighters Memorial” — a monument to Evanston’s fallen firefighters — was built by members of IAFF Local 742 at Firemen’s Park at Simpson & Maple, being officially dedicated on July 23, 1993. While building the monument, off-duty firefighters were approached by an eight-year old child on a bike. He had no hands, because they had been lost to fire some eight years earlier. The boy was the infant Marty Leoni had been trying to rescue that day in 1985.
#1 by Phil Stenholm on December 23, 2022 - 8:00 AM
BILL:
Prior to the firefighters strike of February 1974, the Evanston Fire Department membership had stood constant at 100 since 1955, which was also the year the three new fire stations were completed (the relocated Station # 2, the relocated Station # 3, and the new Station # 5 in northwest Evanston).
The EFD was still operating with two platoons in 1955, with 43 men on each platoon. The EFD had operated with five engine companies and two truck companies since November of 1927, and while there were significant staffing cuts resulting from the Great Depression and the subsequent implementation of “Kelly Days” — the first ones in 1942 and then additional “Kelly Days” in 1948, minimum shift staffing had remained constant at 28 since 1942.
The 28 man minimum shift staffing was not in a contract, because IAFF Local 742 didn’t even exist prior to 1942, and had no CBA with the city prior to 1974. The minimum shift staffing was de facto, as the result of an EFD rule that allowed each company to run no more than one man short each shift to cover for absences stemming from vacations, sickness, and/or an injury incurred on duty.
Prior to 1955, the four companies at Station # 1 (Truck 21, Truck 22, Engine 21, and Engine 25) operated with a minimum of four men per shift (five maximum if nobody was absent), and the other three engine companies operated with a minimum of three men each shift (four maximum). Two men were detailed to staff the new Squad 21 beginning in 1952.
Beginning in 1955, the number of firefighters assigned to each company was ten (five each shift), and one man on each company was on a Kelly Day every shift, and each company could run one man short if a member of the company was absent (vacation, sick, or injured), so therefore the minimum number of firefighters on each company each shift was three, although in practice four men were usually on duty with each company each shift.
Two new companies — Truck Co. 23 and Squad 21 — were organized when the EFD expanded from 88 to 100 members in 1955, so there were now nine companies (five engines, three trucks, and the squad) of ten men each (total of 90 men assigned to the nine companies), with five on each company on each shift (total of 45), one man on a Kelly Day every shift (so that’s nine men on Kelly Days each shift), and each company could run one man short each shift if a man was absent, so that’s a 27 man minimum right there.
However, one additional man was detailed to be the chief’s buggy driver each shift, and the shift commanders were relieved of company officer responsibilities and got a station wagon and a driver. So beginning in 1955, the minimum shift staffing was increased from 28 to 30.
The three platoon system was implemented in 1957, but EFD membership remained at 100, with the two platoons stretched to three platoons. While that might seem like an impossibility, you have to remember that Kelly Days were eliminated when the three platoon system was implemented, so that freed-up 18 men (nine each platoon each shift) right there. Also, Squad 21 was cut-back to a two-man crew each shift (just like 1952-55) and responded only to inhalator calls, working fires, and specialized rescues city-wide, but each of the other eight companies (five engines and three trucks) were still ten man companies with a minimum of three men working on each company each shift.
However, the ten men were now spread over three shifts instead of two. This meant that there was no longer one extra man assigned to each company each shift. Instead, only one extra man was assigned to each company, and he covered for absences from that company on all three shifts, as long as the absences were known in advance (like vacations or long-term illnesses or on-the-job injuries). Otherwise a comp day would be given to any firefighter working his day off, and the comp day could be used later as a single vacation day when the company was back at full-strength.
So because there were eight companies, there were no more than two or three extra men (in aggregate) assigned to each shift, depending on which company had their tenth man scheduled to work that day. Minimum shift staffing was reduced (de facto) from 30 to 29 in 1957, and there would be no more than 31 or 32 men (maximum) assigned to work on each shift at any one time instead of 37, and that’s only if nobody was absent.
Prior to the three platoon system in 1957, all of the companies had an extra man scheduled to work EVERY SHIFT, so while the minimum shift staffing was 30 once Truck Co. 23 and Squad 21 were organized in 1955, there actually could be as many as 39 firefighters working at any one time if nobody was absent. In fact, a company was actually more likely to be at full strength than not most shifts.
During 1962, EFD Chief Jim Geishecker requested the city council purchase a 100-foot TDA for Station # 1, which would allow the existing Truck 21 (the 1951 Pirsch 85-foot TDA) to be relocated to Station # 3 to replace the 1937 Seagrave 65-foot service aerial ladder truck (Truck 2 1937-52) that had been running as Truck 23 ever since Truck Co. 23 was organized in 1955.
The city council refused to purchase a new truck at that time, so Chief Geishecker ordered the 25-year old Truck 23 to be taken out of service on January 1, 1963, with its manpower transferred to Squad 21. The squad had been running with a two-man crew from 1957-59, and then with just a driver (usually the mechanic) after inhalators were placed aboard all five engine companies in 1959, but beginning in 1963, Squad 21 would now respond to all fires city-wide, as well as inhalator calls and minor fires in Station # 1’s district, just as it had done in 1955-57 prior to the implementation of the two platoon system.
Since there already was one man assigned to Squad 21, transferring Trick Co. 23’s crew to Squad 21 meant the squad was now a four-man company each shift. A new International R-190 cab & chassis was purchased by Evanston in 1965 (the exact same cab & chassis used as Evanston garbage trucks at that time) and it was converted into an attack pumper-squad by General Body Company of Chicago (which designed and fabricated the squad body) in 1966, as Squad 21 was now once again the busiest company in the Evanston Fire Department (just like it had been 1955-57). You might say Squad 21 was the EFD’s version of Chicago’s SS-1.
Also, the shift commander’s buggy driver was transferred to Truck 21 at this same time, so Truck Co. 21 now had a four-man crew each shift, just like Squad 21. In addition, the mechanics were assigned to Engine 21, so Engine 21 often ran as a four-man company as well, so all three “high value district” companies (S21 and T21 at all times, and sometimes E21) operated with four man crews 1963-76.
An agreement reached between the city and Local 742 after the firefighters strike of February 1974 gave firefighters Kelly Days again (just like prior to 1957) and more vacation time. Also, implementation of fire department paramedic ambulance service beginning in 1976 and the creation of a half-dozen new administrative positions by Fire Chief Glen Ayers in 1977 cut staffing on Truck 21 and Engine 21 to three each shift, and on Squad 21 to two each shift. The two firefighters assigned to Squad 21 were the jump crew for Ambulance 3, the ex-Skokie F. D. Cadillac ambulance 1977-80.
Prior to the 26-man minimum being established in 1980, the number of firefighters each shift could vary, depending on how many firefighters called in sick or how many were out of action with an injury that day.
The reason Local 742 agreed to the 26-man shift minimum and taking Squad 21 out of front-line service and making Truck 21 the jump company for Ambulance 3 was to insure that the city could not cut staffing below 26 at any time in the future. 26 was like a “line in the sand,” and Local 742 was concerned that the city might cut shift staffing below 26 if given a chance to do so. So getting back to a 28-man minimum (much less 29 or 30) was seen as a pipe-dream.
In return for Local 742 agreeing to cut staffing from 28 to 26, the city gave firefighters more Kelly Days and vacation time, and permitted off-duty firefighters to cover for unplanned absences by working overtime, instead of having extra men assigned to each shift to cover for an unplanned absence that might or might not happen.
As for Ambulance 3, EVERYBODY knew that Evanston needed three dedicated full-time MICU ambulances, and it would have happened in 1981 if the plan to take Engine Co. 23 out of service, relocate Trick Co. 21 and Ambulance 3 to Station # 3, and run Truck 21 as a four-man quint company while staffing Ambulance 3 with two paramedics full-time, had been implemented. Unfortunately, design flaws in the quint made that plan a no-go.
As for why Evanston never purchased as snorkel, it was probably because EFD chiefs had enough problems just getting new aerial-ladder trucks and pumpers without even considering acquiring a snorkel.
Also, Squad 21 might have been the company that got a snorkel, but it was seen as essentially the second engine company at Station # 1, and responded to fire calls city-wide as well as to inhalator calls and minor fires in Station # 1’s district. I guess maybe Squad 21 could have run as a two-piece company (like Chicago’s snorkel squads), but it just never happened. Maybe snorkels were not in the EFD’s DNA.
As I’m sure you know, Skokie operated with a 1968 Pirsch 65-foot snorkel-truck at their Station # 1 (now Station # 16) for about twenty years (it was eventually replaced with a tower-ladder), Wilmette operated with a 1974 Seagrave 1250 GPM / 30 gallon 55-foot snorkel squad (and that’s just the kind of rig Evanston might have considered as a second-piece of Squad 21), and Winnetka had a 1983 American LaFrance 65-foot snorkel-quint for a number of years.
For some reason, neither Skokie’s snorkel-truck or Wilmette’s snorkel-squad was due to respond to Evanston on a MABAS box back in the day (Skokie would send an aerial-ladder truck from Station # 3 and an engine from Station # 2, and Wilmette would send an engine). However, the Winnetka snorkel-quint was added to Evanston’s MABAS box card back when I was there (Evanston had only just the one box card back then, and it covered the entire city).
#2 by Bill Post on December 21, 2022 - 5:35 PM
Phil thanks for the fantastic job that you are doing on your History of the Evanston Fire Department!
I have a few questions. In installment 77 you had mentioned that the manpower roster was reduced 114 people to only 104 and the minimum manning per shift went down to 26 people so that Squad 21 was taken out of service. As you had also mentioned that was the lowest shift staffing since 1926.
So I was wondering what the manning per company before the reduction? As when the manning was reduced the Engines and Trucks were only assigned 3 men per company were any of the companies 4 man units before the reduction? Was there ever a time that all of the companies in Evanston all ran as 4 man units? As you know according to the National Fire Protection Association all Engines and Truck are supposed run with a minimum of 4 men assigned per shift however we will never see that,considering the very tight budget that most Chicago suburbs are on .
A second question is did the Evanston fire department ever even consider purchasing or even try out a Snorkel? Back in the 1960s and 70s when Snorkels were still very popular and many fire departments were buying them I would have thought that Evanston would have purchased one or at least tried one out.
I am sure that Evanston fire fighter union would like to see the minimum shift staffing increased from 26 to 28 because if that was done they would be able to man the third Ambulance as a full time company. Skokie was lucky because they never allowed themselves to reduce their shift staffing to 26 people and when they added their 3rd Ambulance all they did was eliminate the 4th man from Rescue Truck 17 and Squad 18 and that gave them the manpower for the new Ambulance 17 when the new Station 17 was opened. The irony is that both Skokie and Evanston both run with 7 fully manned fire companies Skokie runs with a 28 man minimum per shift so they can run with a fully manned 3rd Ambulance.
#3 by Phil Stenholm on December 19, 2022 - 10:51 PM
EVANSTON FIRE DEPARTMENT FLEET ROSTER
DECEMBER 1982
300 – 1977 Dodge sedan (F-34)
301 – 1975 Plymouth sedan (F-22)
302 – 1978 Plymouth sedan (F-26)
303 – 1979 Chevrolet station wagon (F-2)
304 – OPEN
305 – 1979 Seagrave 1250 GPM / 300 gallon / 100-ft RMA quint (T-21)
306 – 1982 Mercury (F-25)
307 – 1978 Dodge sedan (F-33)
308 – 1982 AMC (F-35)
309 – 1977 Dodge sedan (F-27)
310 – 1975 Dodge van MICU (Reserve A-4)
311 – 1979 Ford MICU (A-1)
312 – 1952 Pirsch 85-ft TDA (Reserve T-23)
313 – 1968 Pirsch 100-ft TDA (T-22)
314 – 1982 Chevrolet MICU (A-3)
315 – 1979 Ford MICU (A-2)
316 – 1982 Chevrolet sedan (F-1)
317 – OPEN
318 – OPEN
319 – OPEN
320 – OPEN
321 – 1968 Pirsch 1250 GPM / 300 gallon pumper (E-21)
322 – OPEN
323 – 1979 Pirsch 1250 GPM / 750 gallon pumper (E-22)
324 – 1975 Howe 1000 GPM / 300 gallon pumper (E-24)
325 – 1952 Pirsch 1000 GPM / 100 gallon pumper (Reserve E-27)
326 – 1974 Howe 1000 GPM / 300 gallon pumper (E-23)
327 – OPEN
328 – 1952 Pirsch 1000 GPM / 80 gallon pumper (Reserve E-28)
329 – 1970 Pirsch 1000 GPM / 300 gallon pumper (Reserve E-29)
330 – 1976 Mack 1000 GPM / 300 gallon pumper (E-25)
331 – OPEN
332 – 1977 Chevrolet / Penn Versatile Van (SQD-21)
341 – 1979 Chevrolet van (utility)
#4 by Phil Stenholm on December 19, 2022 - 10:18 PM
EVANSTON FIRE DEPARTMENT:ROSTER
DECEMBER 1982
CHIEF:
Chief Sanders “Sam” Hicks
DIVISION CHIEFS:
Deputy Chief Robert Brandt (Operations)
Assistant Chief John Becker (Personnel)
Assistant Chief Dave Franzen (Training)
Assistant Chief Robert Schumer (Fire Prevention)
OFFICERS:
Capt. Mike Adam
Capt. Bill Betke
Capt. Samuel Boddie
Capt. Phil Burns (Medical Officer)
Capt. Jim Dillon
Capt. Ken Dohm
Capt. Randy Drott
Capt. Milton Dunbar
Capt. Keith Filipowski
Capt. Tom Fisherkeller
Capt. Pete Hanchar
Capt. George H. Harrison
Capt. Bob Hayden
Capt. Jim Hayes
Capt. John “Skip” Hrejsa (Shift Commander)
Capt. Sam Hunter
Capt. Tom Kavanagh
Capt. Tom Linkowski (Public Information Officer)
Capt. Pat Lynn
Capt. Jim Marti
Capt. Jim McLaughlin
Capt. Jerry McDermott
Capt. Jim McIntyre
Capt. Don Melzer
Capt. James Mersch Jr (Fire Prevention Officer)
Capt. Joe Planos (Shift Commander)
Capt. Jim Potts
Capt. LeRoy “Charlie” Rohrer
Capt. Bob Schwarz
Capt. James “Guv” Whalen (Shift Commander)
Capt. Mike Whalen
Capt. John Wilkinson
Capt. John Wright
FIREFIGHTERS:
Mike Anderson
Dave Arreguin
Bob Becker
Alan Berkowsky
Richard Borre
John Brewer (Fire Inspector)
Robert Brown
Ron Brumbach
Roger Bush
Dave Cleland
Wayne Coleman
Ward Cook
Jim Cox
Jerry Czarnowski
Kurt Dickman
Pat Dillon
James Dupont
Dave Ellis
Tom Erpelding
John Fisher
Bruce Freeman
Ed Galloway
Ronn Gannon
Don Gschwind
Blair Haltom
Scott Hargreaves
Joe Hayes
Jerry Heber
Gary Hilbert
Paulette Hojnacki
Tony Howson
Ben Jaremus
Jim Keaty
Kevin Kelly
John Kloiber
Don Kunita
Marty Leoni
Al Lesiak
Todd Lewandowski
Lou Lobianco
Charles Lord
Bob Marti
Dennis McGuigan
Tom McGuigan
Michael Meier
Art Miller
Jack Mortell
Darold Olson
Dave O’Malley
Bruce Peters
Dave Pettinger (Fire Inspector)
Roger Pettinger
Richard Redfield
Bill Reid
Pat Reif
Ted Riley
Richard Ruske
Mike Ryan
Rich Schumacher
Ken Semrow
Max Sheaffer
Thomas Simpson (Fire Inspector)
Jobe Smith
Davud Suther
Larry Vacala
Robert Wagner
Otis Washington
Clyde Williams
Donald Williams
COMMUNICATIONS OPERATORS:
Sandy Jenkins
Lynn Johnson :
Luther Langford
Perry Polinski
Bob Porter
Anita Schy
Matt Siegel
Phil Stenholm
Walt Sterrenberg