Posts Tagged Chicago Fire Department
Chicago Fire Department news
Feb 22
Chicago Fire Department news
Feb 21
This from E-ONE.com:
E-ONE ANNOUNCES FIVE-YEAR CONTRACT WITH THE CITY OF CHICAGO
OCALA, FL – FEB. 19, 2019 – E-ONE, a subsidiary of REV Group and a leading manufacturer of fire apparatus, has announced a five-year contract between the City of Chicago and E-ONE’s authorized dealer Fire Service, Inc., to provide multiple E-ONE apparatus including pumpers, aerials and platforms.
The City of Chicago has 98 fire stations citywide and it has more than 140 apparatus in service today. This contract will enable the city to replace dated fire apparatus and continue its best in class fire suppression and emergency demands for over 2.7 million citizens.
The contract allowed the city to examine a dealership and OEM who could manufacturer fire trucks and equipment needed to compliment the city with all current NFPA codes and standards in the fire industry, and to service the units as needed in the future.
“This important contract is replacing an aging fleet and equipment and we look forward to working together with the City of Chicago,” said Shawn Junker, Principal of Fire Service, Inc.
Jay Johnson, Vice President and General Manager of E-ONE, stated, “We are excited to serve the City of Chicago as their apparatus provider. Fire Service, Inc. is an outstanding dealer partner and we have full confidence in their ability to service and support the City of Chicago.”
thanks Andy
This from Chi-Town Fire Photos:
I took some shots at the fire on Lake Street this morning. 3-11 Alarm + Level 1 Hazmat for a fire in a nickel plating company. Numerous engines were lead out, Squad 1, TL 5, TL 10 all had aerial master streams up.
Here is the link to my full gallery
Video by Steve Redick from the 3-11 Alarm fire and Haz Mat Level 1 at 1223 W. Lake Street 2/21/19
This from Steve Redick:
Companies working
on 12-30-07 during a Still & Box at 7041 Overhill at a 3-11 at 820 W 36th St on August 30, 2007
This from Steve Redick:
A few shots from 11-6-07, a 2-11 at 2417 Wabash
This from Steve Redick:
Some shots from 8-30-07, a 3-11 at 820 W 36th st
Chicago Fire Department news
Feb 16
Excerpts from the CookCountyRecord.com:
A state appeals court has ordered a Chicago firefighters’ pension board to award a paramedic a duty disability pension equal to 75 percent of her salary after a little over five years on the job, because they said the board ignored evidence the paramedic had suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder.
The board had rejected the claim because they said the paramedic’s disability claim arose years later from incidents paramedics can regularly encounter.
On Feb. 1, a three-justice panel of the Illinois First District Appellate Court found in favor of the plaintiff, Leah Siwinski, who had served as a paramedic at the Chicago Fire Department (CFD) from December 2008 until January 2014.
Two years after she began working for the department, Siwinski responded to a call in which a firefighter she knew was laid dead on her stretcher. Siwinski testified she was not emotionally prepared for such an incident.
In the months that followed, Siwinski said she began experiencing symptoms of anxiety and PTSD. In 2011, she took a seven-month leave for non-duty illness. She testified that she was seeing a therapist, but a stigma that surrounds emergency personnel seeking mental health treatment made her reluctant to seek further help.
Seven months after returning to work, she experienced another traumatic incident when she responded to the scene of a shooting. The victim was already dead when she arrived, according to court documents, but onlookers became enraged that the paramedics could not help him, threatening them and throwing objects. Siwinski’s mental state deteriorated further.
For the last six months of her CFD career, Siwinski worked a desk job for the assistant deputy chief, but even though she was off the streets her purported symptoms of PTSD did not improve. She was placed on medical leave in January 2014 and did not return to work.
In December 2015, the Retirement Board of the Firemen’s Annuity and Benefit Fund of the City of Chicago unanimously denied Siwinski’s application for a duty disability pension, which entitles recipients to 75 percent of their salary for life, for becoming disabled in the line of duty.
She requested administrative review, and a Cook County judge vacated and remanded the decision. Without reviewing any additional evidence, the board denied the request a second time, and the circuit court confirmed it.
The board claimed she did not have PTSD because her symptoms were self-reported years after the traumatic incidents occurred and because the type of trauma she experienced is common in paramedic work. The board also indicated it did not believe Siwinski’s symptoms because she once said she did not like her job and because, at the time she applied for the job, she did not indicate she had a history of depression. Any symptoms she experienced, the board found, were related to her depressive disorder and did not qualify her for duty disability.
The appellate court identified three questions in its review: whether Siwinski sustained an injury; whether that injury resulted from an act of duty; and whether that injury prevented her from performing her duties at CFD. The appellate justices found the board decided against the manifest weight of the evidence in every question.
The appellate justices found the record clearly identified two traumatic situations Siwinski encountered while on duty as a paramedic and that she was diagnosed with PTSD during residential treatment in 2014. Both her therapist and the board’s own psychiatric expert testified that Siwinski had PTSD related to her job as a paramedic. The board’s expert also opined that the PTSD – and not depression – was the specific issue that prevented Siwinski from being able to work for the CFD, even in an administrative capacity.
In making its decision, however, the board relied solely on the testimony of its second witness, a doctor without psychiatric training, the appellate decision said. That doctor did not offer an opinion on whether Siwinski has PTSD, but said she must not be disabled because she was able to carry out her duties up to her last day of work.
“The board … was not tasked with choosing between the evidence of ‘witnesses qualified in their fields’ who ‘stated their opinions and gave their reasons for those opinions,’” the appellate justices wrote, noting the second doctor “conceded he lacked relevant expertise” while the first doctor “diagnosed the plaintiff with PTSD and cogently explained why her condition resulted from her employment with CFD.”
In its review, the appellate court noted that both the psychiatric experts had testified PTSD symptoms commonly manifest long after a trauma occurs and are typically self-reported. In addition, it said, Siwinski had consistently described her symptoms to multiple people over a period of time, lending credence to her reliability.
Whether Siwinski’s experiences are common to paramedics is irrelevant, the justices said, because different people may have different psychological reactions to the same event.
The appellate court reversed the decision of the board and the decision of the circuit court that supported it. The case was sent back to the Cook County judge with directions to establish fees for Siwinski’s attorney and costs, and to the board with directions to award her duty disability benefits retroactive to her last day of employment.
This from Chi-Town Fire Photos:
Battalion 19 and companies had a very busy day. This was their third fire of the day @ 207 E 71st Street. Fire throughout a 75×75 storefront. Four 2.5” landlines were dropped and Squad 5 was put to work. Shortly thereafter, BC19 pulled a box and put Tower 34 to work in the front of the building. I got in there about 30 min into the fire.
Excerpts from ABC7Chicago.com:
Forty-eight-year-old Kathleen Gomez, a Chicago Public Schools teacher died Monday morning after a house fire in the 1800-block of South Peoria Street. Firefighters responded at about 2 a.m. and were able to extinguish the fire inside the two-story home a short time later.
The fire started in a living room on the second floor, the cause of which is under investigation. There were no working smoke detectors in the home.