Posts Tagged Barrington Fire Department

Barrington and Lake Zurich Fire Department news

Excerpts from the ChicagoTribune.com:

Later this spring, both the Barrington and Lake Zurich fire departments will start using the Phoenix G2 Fire Station Alerting System, which can save firefighters up to 60 seconds when they are responding to emergencies. The system assists dispatchers, who will be able to type pertinent information during 911 calls straight into a computer-aided system.  The system then automatically alerts the appropriate fire stations, saving time since dispatchers will no longer have to stop their conversations with 911 callers to dispatch firefighters.

The system has lights and speakers in every station which alert firefighters while scrolling message boards provide them with addresses and how much time has elapsed since an alert was made.

Barrington officials approved $54,300 for the system, while Lake Zurich officials approved $56,500 for the new equipment.

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Barrington Fire Department news

Excerpts from the DailyHerald.com:

Barrington and Lake Zurich are demanding in a federal lawsuit that a Canadian trucking firm replace gear they say was ruined during cleanup of a hazardous chemical that spilled after a fiery crash last year.

Westbound Northwest Highway near Hart Road in Barrington was closed for three days while hazardous materials crews cleaned the area after a Xan Systems Inc. semitrailer truck rear-ended a pickup truck March 7, causing the chemical spill. 

The truck driver initially reported the substance that spilled was vegetable oil. Several hours later Xan Systems told officials it was methylene diphenyl diisocycanate. Barrington and Lake Zurich firefighters who worked the scene did not wear protective gear under belief they were handling vegetable oil.

Barrington and Lake Zurich seek more than $75,000 in damages to cover the equipment and cleanup costs.

“As a direct and proximate result of the gear and equipment exposure to methylene diphenyl diisocycanate, the gear and equipment were rendered unusable and without value,” according to the lawsuit.

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House fire in Barrington, 1-29-17 (more)

Video from Larry Shapiro of the House fire in Barrington, 1-29-17

gallery of photos is at Shapirophotography.net

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House fire in Barrington, 1-29-17

This from Larry Shapiro:

Barrington firefighters were called to 218 Russell Street this afternoon (1/29/17) after a neighbor reported flames coming from the vacant house. Units arrived to find the first floor involved with fire communicating to the second floor and attic of the two-story home with ballon-frame construction.

Mutual aid companies came from Barrington Countryside, Fox River Grove, palatine Rural, Long Grove, Cary, Palatine, and Wauconda.

Firefighters at house fire with heavy smoke

Larry Shapiro photo

Firefighters with hose line battle house fire

Larry Shapiro photo

E-ONE fire trucks at fire scene

Larry Shapiro photo

Firefighters battle house fire with heavy smoke

Larry Shapiro photo

Firefighters battle house fire with heavy smoke

Larry Shapiro photo

heavy smoke from attic during house fire

Larry Shapiro photo

Firefighters use pike poles to ventilate house on fire

Larry Shapiro photo

Firefighters battle house fire with heavy smoke

Larry Shapiro photo

utility worker cuts electric lines during house fire

Larry Shapiro photo

heavy smoke from house on fire

Larry Shapiro photo

multiple lines off E-ONE quint af fire scene

Larry Shapiro photo

Firefighter with hose line battles house fire

Larry Shapiro photo

Barrington FD E-ONE quint with lines off at house fire

Larry Shapiro photo

 

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New ambulance for Barrington

From the Fire Service, Inc Facebook page:

Village of Barrington, IL FD final inspection at Wheeled Coach.

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Barrington Fire marshal retires

Excerpts from the DailyHerald.com:

Lt. James Feit retired from the Barrington Fire Department after 43 years on the job, a feat believed by fire officials to be among the longest tenures in the village’s history.

Starting as a part-time employee in his early 20s, Feit, now 65, rose through the ranks to become the village’s fire marshal, a job that Barrington Fire Chief Jim Arie said Feit excelled at.

Arie said Feit was instrumental in the village’s passing of a 1995 ordinance that required all Barrington construction projects to come installed with a sprinkler system.

“It is a huge safety improvement in terms of protection and minimal loss,” Arie said. “We were the second village in the state to adopt it after Long Grove.”

Arie said among the things that the department will miss about Feit is his dedication to safety.

“He always had in the back of his mind the concern and the safety of the firefighters,” Arie said. “He always provided our guys with feedback if he thought something was a safety concern. He always very attuned to that and sensitive to that.”

thanks Dan

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Haz Mat Box Alarm in Barrington, 7-13-15

Barrington requested a Haz Mat Box Alarm at 40 E. Dundee Road this afternoon (7/13/15).

MESS Emergency Canteen Service assisting firefighters

Tim Olk photo

firefighters at the scene of a hazardous materials incident

Tim Olk photo

firefighters at the scene of a hazardous materials incident

Tim Olk photo

Palatine Fire Department fire truck

Tim Olk photo

Cary Fire Protection District fire truck

Tim Olk photo

Barrington Fire Department fire truck

Tim Olk photo

firefighters at the scene of a hazardous materials incident

Tim Olk photo

fire department accountability board at incident

Tim Olk photo

firefighters at the scene of a hazardous materials incident

Tim Olk photo

firefighters at the scene of a hazardous materials incident

Tim Olk photo

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Barrington & Barrington sign auto-aid agreement

The Daily Herald has an article about an automatic aid agreement that has been signed between the Village of Barrington Fire Department and the Barrington Countryside Fire Protection District.

Nearly six months after their acrimonious breakup, the Barrington Countryside Fire Protection District and the Barrington Fire Department have reached an automatic aid agreement governing when, how and where each will respond to emergencies in the other’s jurisdiction.

The deal, ratified by both sides Monday evening, calls for the district to respond to all commercial fire alarms in the village of Barrington that occur west of Route 59. In return, the Barrington Fire Department will provide fire and emergency medical service coverage to sections of the district that are in the vicinity of the village’s fire station at 400 N. Northwest Highway.

The agreement was negotiated by district Fire Chief Jeff Swanson and Barrington Fire Chief Jim Arie.

“We are confident that (the agreement) improves public safety for residents of both the district and village, and ensures that the aid we provide will be reciprocated when we need it,” Barrington Countryside Fire Protection District board President Thomas C. Long said.

Prior to Jan. 1, the fire district paid the village of Barrington to provide fire protection services to its 48-square mile jurisdiction, which includes the towns of Barrington Hills, South Barrington, Lake Barrington, Inverness and unincorporated Cook, Lake and McHenry counties. But after disputes over staffing and equipment needs, the fire district ended the relationship and launched its own department at the start of the year.

thanks Dan

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Barrington touts ISO upgrade after split

The Daily Herald has an article

An imminent upgrade of Barrington’s fire insurance rating is being hailed by village officials as validation of their fire department’s realignment after the Jan. 1 split from the Barrington Countryside Fire Protection District.

Effective Aug. 1, the Insurance Services Office will upgrade the village’s public protection classification from a 4 to a 2 — putting it in the top 1.5 percent of all fire departments in the U.S., according to the village

While it’s less likely the improved rating will make an impact on homeowners’ insurance rates, Barrington Fire Chief Jim Arie is encouraging commercial property owners to tell their insurance agents of the change. The Insurance Services Office’s classifications are based 50 percent on the resources of the local fire department, 40 percent on access to water and 10 percent on communications, Arie said.

Prior to Jan. 1, the village’s fire department provided services for properties within the fire protection district, which covers 48 square miles in parts of Barrington Hills, Lake Barrington, South Barrington, Inverness and unincorporated Cook, Lake and McHenry counties. With the split, the fire protection district formed its own department to serve those areas.

As a result, Barrington’s fire department no longer covers large areas outside the village that don’t have fire hydrants.

Barrington officials say the upgraded rating also attests to the reconfigured fire department’s ability to do its job competently.

thanks Dan

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Editorial on the Barrington FD & FPD split

The Lake County News-Sun has an editorial about the current relationship between the Barrington Fire Department and the Barrington Countryside Fire District.

When fire departments compete over who gets what truck and whose salary and pensions come out of which wallet, residents can only hope the debate does not damage the point of having a fire department.

Just put out the fire, save property and protect lives.

Citizens expect the fiscal administration of fire departments to be efficient. But when fire departments argue over jurisdictions and resources, the result can be hard feelings.

Without oversimplifying the tortured separation of firefighting duties around Barrington, it’s safe to say there are hard feelings.

Civic leaders in Antioch eventually resolved decades of feuding over emergency services by merging and ending the debate about overlapping and redundant efforts.

In Barrington, civic leaders took the opposite approach. After arguing for years over who should pay for what service in the 45 square miles around Barrington, the village and its neighboring communities went their own ways.

When the Barrington Countryside Fire Protection District officially disconnected from Barrington this year, it was almost all about money. As a “paper district,” it paid Barrington for protecting tony suburbs.

Barrington leaders said they paid too much for fire protection they didn’t use.

The first real test of that divorce decree occurred on April 9. A residential fire broke out at 1025 S. Grove St. that day, and Countryside fire trucks took 5 minutes, 35 seconds to reach the rural address.

The Barrington fire chief said his trucks at a station just down the road could have reached the house in less than three minutes. But Barrington fire trucks were never called even though the departments have reciprocal service agreements.

Barrington’s fire chief said two minutes in a house fire can mean the difference between lives saved and lives lost.

The Countryside fire chief told him to mind his own business.

If anything, the event was a warning, not to the fire departments, but certainly to the people around Barrington.

Dividing fire service may have cured one problem, but it’s caused another, far more dangerous one.

thanks Dan

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