Posts Tagged Fire Chief George Bridges

Waukegan Fire Department news

Excerpts from the ChicagoTribune.com:

The City of Waukegan and the Waukegan International Association of Firefighters Local 473 are in the midst of negotiating a replacement to a three-year contract that expired in April 2018. Part of the negotiations are over whether two of the five stations should always have five people assigned instead of at least three. The department’s Belvidere Road headquarters is manned by nine, while the other two outlying stations each have five.

The union’s advocacy for higher staffing levels is backed by an analysis of three years’ worth of data commissioned by the union, which found the lower staffing levels led to higher response times and higher demands on firefighters.

The implication that the city’s current staffing approach could lead to people dying or being injured led the mayor to ask the city’s lead negotiator to speak during Tuesday’s City Council meeting. The move comes about two weeks after two aldermen said they want to see the city increase how many firefighters are assigned to fire stations in their wards.

Currently the two stations being discussed — Station 2, off McGaw Road near O’Plaine Road and Station 5, off North Green Bay Road near West York House Road — house an ambulance and engine but sometimes only three crew members, enough to operate either unit, but not both.

That means when a call comes in for that station’s area, the crew will take the equipment applicable to the call and go, but if a second call comes in, instead of that same station responding, another station, either in Waukegan or another nearby town, will take the call.

Fire Chief George Bridges added the department shares the conviction that these follow-up incidents should be planned for and that sufficient redundancies should exist to make sure emergency services can be delivered in a timely manner. The fire department has also been supplementing the three employees at those stations with another two through overtime when possible and as long as the department can afford it, Bridges said.

To staff those stations at those levels consistently, the city would need to have 29 firefighters working each shift, up from 25. That could cost as much as $1.8 million for 12 new employees over three shifts. The real cost doesn’t have to be anywhere near the $1.8 million figure, according to the union, who has quoted a figure closer to $300,000.

The city currently budgets for 84 firefighters, and if all those positions were filled, that would work out to 28 firefighters per shift. That is one person shy of the 29 threshold. An increase in the overtime budget would cover the times when firefighters are off because they’re sick, on vacation or receiving training.

thanks Ron

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Waukegan Fire Department news

Excerpts from the ChicagoTribune.com:

The Waukegan Fire Department has seen a turnover from highly experienced firefighters to younger ones in recent years, and at the same time, they are responding to fewer fires even though the call volume continues to increase.

Fire Chief George Bridges has emphasized training over the last 10 months, and recently, the department was given the go-ahead to use an old office building at 2634 Grand Ave. for drills. The structure has been empty for a few years and is a concern for neighbors, because homeless people or drug users would sometimes break in or use a rear stairway and landing area.

The owners are Howard and Ronnie Stillman, who have purchased and rehabilitated used car dealerships in the city and another office building at McAree Court. Their plans are to tear the medical building down and offer the property for redevelopment.

According to Bridges, a third of the department’s personnel has less than 10 years of experience, and 17 percent of the firefighters have less than five years on the job.

Fire Marshall Steven Lenzi said the office building has been perfect for training because it isn’t often firefighters can practice breaking through locked doors, “and there are a lot of those,” he said. The department does have a door simulator at one of the firehouses, but it’s not the same.

The building also offered multiple connected rooms and waiting rooms that provide a sort of maze for the firefighters to go through when the building is charged with artificial smoke from a machine to the point you can’t see someone standing next to you.

Firefighters still have to use a hose as a way to find their way back out, or when there are many rooms, they leave a firefighter in a doorway and he’s called “orientated man,” said Battalion Chief Brett Stickels, who in charge of training.

The training includes live radio traffic and sending one crew to find the fire where they carry a charged waterline. Another two crews are sent in to search for 175-pound dummies.

The fire marshal added that besides giving the younger firefighters training, this recent opportunity also gave mid-career firefighters who have been promoted and have taken over leading the crews a chance to practice with them in full gear with a fully charged line and zero visibility.

Lenzi said the department has gone from 150 fires a year to just fewer than 100, but its call volume has increased 10 percent. He added that even though crews are still busy, actual fire experience is harder to come by, making simulations more critical.

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