Archive for October, 2014

Norwood Park FD receives local grant

The Norwood Park-Harwood Heights News has an article about a grant for the fire department:

Two new defibrillators will bring cutting-edge technology to the Norwood Park Fire Department and the residents of Norridge, Harwood Heights and unincorporated Norwood Township thanks to a $30,000 grant from the Norwood Park Township.

The department had planned to order one of the new devices this year and another next year, but was able to step up that timetable thanks to the township, Chief Kevin Stenson said. The monitor-defibrillators have wireless transmission capabilities and are half the size and half the weight of those currently used “but a lot more powerful, thanks to its advanced capabilities,” Stenson added. “Once a person is in cardiac arrest, it’s a matter of life and death.”

The new devices will allow the department to assess patient needs more quickly and then wirelessly transmit critical information to a receiving hospital so clinicians are prepared when the ambulance arrives, he said.

Those manning the 10-pound machines, which are built to military standards, now may set different parameters for such criteria as age and gender.

Firefighter Rick Ford said the new equipment is similar to what the department now uses. “These have a lot more features, and more accuracy with blood pressure and other vital signs,” he said. “These will make patient care even better.

Stenson said the new units not only will help the department save lives, but also make the lives of the first responders a great deal easier by having so many life-saving capabilities in one unit. “With this upgraded technology, we believe we are better equipped to protect the lives of our citizens whom we are honored to serve,” he said.

thanks Dan

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Chicago Still & Box Alarm fire, 10-26-14

This from Steve Redick:

Sunday, Jackson & Cicero. Fire involved 2 buildings, both seemed vacant from what I could see. Lots of truck work, fire in knee walls. Some decent shots of some k12 saw work on forcible entry. The rear shot shows what may be at or near the point of origin and you can see how fire was in both structures.

 

Chicago fire truck at fire scene

Steve Redick photo

back of building after fire

Steve Redick photo

Chicago fire truck at fire scene

Steve Redick photo

Chicago fire truck at fire scene

Steve Redick photo

Chicago fire trucks at fire scene

Steve Redick photo

firemen force entry into storefront

Steve Redick photo

firemen force entry into storefront

Steve Redick photo

black smoke pours from the roof of a commercial building

Steve Redick photo

black smoke pours from the roof of a commercial building

Steve Redick photo

All the images can be seen on my site: www.ksc711.smugmug.com

This from Josh Boyajian:

Here are some quick shots from the Still and Box today @ 312 s Cicero Ave. I arrived about 15 min into this fire. Not to many good fire shots due the the sun, but I got some nice action shots of some guys.
-Josh
black smoke pours from the roof of a commercial building

Josh Boyajian photo

Chicago fire truck at fire scene

Josh Boyajian photo

Chicago firefighter after battling a fire

Josh Boyajian photo

Chicago firefighter after battling a fire

Josh Boyajian photo

fireman with saw cutting into door

Josh Boyajian photo

Chicago firefighter after battling a fire

Josh Boyajian photo

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CFD relocates Special Duty Units (more)

 

Chicago Fire Department Operational Memo Chicago Fire Department Operational Memo

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CFD hiring practices in the news … again

 

The Chicago Suntimes has an article about the racial consistency of recent CFD hiring:

The Chicago Fire Department has hired 300 firefighters and 162 paramedics this year to reduce runaway overtime, but the hiring spree didn’t do a thing to bridge the racial divide in a department that has long been lily-white.

Only 33 of the 462 new hires —seven percent — are African-American.  The overwhelming majority—338 or 73 percent—are white. The list also includes 81 Hispanics or 17 percent of the pool.

Chicago Fire Commissioner Jose Santiago said Friday he hopes to reverse that trend on Dec. 13 and 14 when 23,375 applicants in three separate shifts arrive at McCormick Place to take the city’s first firefighters entrance exam in nearly a decade.

After an aggressive outreach, the applicant pool includes a better mix. It’s 44 percent white, 24 percent Hispanic, 22 percent black and 14 percent women.

“We had a team of firefighters, firefighter/EMT’s and paramedics who formed teams and were assigned territories throughout the city of Chicago. They were responsible for distributing information, attending job fairs. They went to events. We had a Facebook page,” said Adrienne Bryant, the Fire Department’s personnel chief.

“We also had billboards. We had ads in all of the community newspapers. We had radio. We also had 15-second ads in the movie theaters over Labor Day weekend. We did all kinds of marketing to let folks know who, what, when and where they could apply. It was a successful event.”

Santiago said he’s pleased with the “robust” recruitment to bolster minority involvement.

African-American aldermen were not appeased. Especially not after hearing some equally lop-sided breakdown for promotions. There were no African-Americans in the latest promotion to lieutenant.

“I’ve been in the City Council for seven years. These numbers look the same. I don’t know how we’re gonna achieve parity in the Fire Department,” said Ald. Pat Dowell (3rd).

Santiago replied, “Our plan has always been to go ahead and create a large, diversified pool, a base. That’s why recruitment is so important to us. In order to get to the top, we have to have large numbers. … When we get these numbers put together, they put together, they work their way to the top.”

Two years ago, Chicago borrowed the $78.4 million needed to compensate nearly 6,000 African-American would-be firefighters bypassed by the city’s discriminatory handling of a 1995 entrance exam. The borrowing compounded the cost of a settlement that was twice as high as anticipated. The city had already agreed to hire 111 bypassed black firefighters. The cash damages went to about 5,900 others who never got that chance.

Delays in settling that case were blamed, in part, for a hiring slowdown that prompted the Fire Department to wrack up $43 million in overtime spending last year and $28.3 million this year through the end of May alone.

thanks Dan

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Brush fire in Huntley, 10-25-14

This from Tyler Tobolt:

Huntley FD was dispatched to Normady and Bordeaux Dr for a brush fire when crews arrived they reported a very large brush fire and activated MABAS box on brush box #5-960A. The following companies due are (2) Huntley Engines, Cary Engine,Huntley Tender, Huntley Brush, Hampshire Brush, Union Brush, Lakewood Brush, Huntley Ambulance, Huntley Battalion Chief, Huntley Chief, Algonquin Chief, Huntley Safety, Wildland 4 – COQ: Station 1: Carpentersville Engine, Crystal Lake Ambulance: Station 3: South Elgin Engine and Genoa Kingston Ambulance
Thanks Tyler Tobolt.
brush fire scene with lots of smoke

Tyler Tobolt photo

brush fire scene with lots of smoke

Tyler Tobolt photo

brush fire scene with lots of smoke

Tyler Tobolt photo

brush fire scene with lots of smoke

Tyler Tobolt photo

brush fire scene with lots of smoke

Tyler Tobolt photo

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Chicago working fire, 10-25-14

This from Eric Haak:

Shortly before 9:00 on Saturday (10/25) morning, Tower Ladder 14 was coming down Chicago and radioed that they had smoke in the area and asked if anyone had reported a fire.  They stated that it looked like it could be an auto or a garage fire and that they were trying to track it down.  They quickly came back to report that they had a building fire on Karlov.  I arrived just after first companies.  Turned out they had a pretty good worker in the rear of an occupied 2-flat.  The residents were not home at the time.

 

firemen carry ladder towards building fire

Eric Haak photo

fireman on ladder with smoke venting window

Eric Haak photo

smoke from apartment building fire

Eric Haak photo

flames blowing out a window

Eric Haak photo

smoke from fire seen from back porches

Eric Haak photo

flames through building window

Eric Haak photo

Chicago fire truck at fire scene

Eric Haak photo

Chicago fire truck at fire scene

Eric Haak photo

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Voters to select fire district (more)

The Daily Herald has a followup article on the referendum about whether residents will move from the Elburn & Countryside FPD to the Fox River Fire/Rescue District:

A Kane County judge has agreed not to immediately certify results of a Nov. 4 referendum asking if some properties should be allowed to disconnect from the Elburn Fire Protection District. Circuit Judge David Akemann agreed to the delay Monday at the request of the Elburn fire district, which is appealing his Aug. 28 decision to allow the referendum to take place.

If voters approve the disconnection, Akemann would be asked to certify the vote and order the disconnection. If voters decide not to, Akemann would have to dismiss the petition, according to a motion filed by the Fox River district, which opposed the stay.

The appellate court has given the districts until Feb. 10 to file motions and replies on the appeal.

Voters in a portion of Campton Hills, Wasco and unincorporated areas are being asked whether they want to join the Fox River and Countryside Fire/Rescue District instead.

The Elburn district contends, in an appeal it filed with the Illinois 2nd District Appellate Court, that the petitioners who sought the referendum didn’t adequately prove requirements for allowing the referendum. Under state law, Akemann had to judge whether the area in question would receive equal or better service.

The petition for disconnection was filed July 17. Hearings were held in August. Elburn fire district officials argued they hadn’t had enough time to prepare a case that would counter the petitioners’ claims about taxes, fees, response times, facilities and more. The Fox River district says it could respond faster to emergencies, and would charge less property taxes.

The Elburn district has also asked Akemann to vacate his Aug. 28 order, but he has not ruled on that request. Attorneys for the Fox River district argue Akemann’s decision can’t be appealed, and that the stay of judgment would eliminate the “ability to obtain relief sought by the petition for disconnection.”

The area in question is bounded roughly by Campton Hill, La Fox, Burlington, Empire, Silver Glen and Swanberg roads.

thanks Dan

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Bloomingdale and Bartlett FPD open houses

This from Tyler Tobolt:

I went to the Bloomingdale and Bartlett open houses today and here are some photos.Bloomingdale rigs changed numbers so here is Engine 21, Engine 23, Tower 23, Medic 21, Medic 23 and also Bartlett changed numbers for the battalion chief and its now Battalion 3 also they have 2 new medics. Medic 2 and Medic 1.
Thanks Tyler Tobolt
fire department battalion chief

Tyler Tobolt photo

ambulance photo

Tyler Tobolt photo

ambulance photo

Tyler Tobolt photo

Pierce fire truck photo

Tyler Tobolt photo

Pierce fire truck photo

Tyler Tobolt photo

ambulance photo

Tyler Tobolt photo

ambulance photo

Tyler Tobolt photo

Pierce fire truck photo

Tyler Tobolt photo

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New Ambulances for Chicago

Fire Service, Inc. posted these images of two new CFD ambulances for O’Hare

Wheeled Coach Type III ambulance for Chicago

Fire Service, Inc. photo

Wheeled Coach Type III ambulances for Chicago

Fire Service, Inc. photo

Wheeled Coach Type III ambulances for Chicago

Fire Service, Inc. photo

Wheeled Coach Type III ambulance for Chicago

Fire Service, Inc. photo

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New contract for Buffalo Grove firefighters

The Daily Herald has an article about a new contract for firefighters in Buffalo Grove.

After more than a year of working under an expired contract, Buffalo Grove firefighters have reached agreement with the village on a new four-year labor deal.

The village board Monday ratified the agreement with the Buffalo Grove Professional Firefighter/Paramedic Association Local 3177, for the period beginning May 1, 2013 and ending April 30, 2017.

The contract gives fire department employees represented by the union a 2 percent pay hike retroactive to May 2013 and another 2 percent raise retroactive to May 2014. The deal also allows either side to reopen the contract in March 2016 to renegotiate future salaries.

Fire Chief Terry Vavra said most of the changes in the new contract simply provide clarification of language in the old one. For example, the drug and alcohol policy was tightened to bring it more into line with the provisions for other village employees. The old policy had become “very cumbersome and very labor intensive,” he said.

The agreement also clarifies the rules for secondary employment — if, for instance, a firefighter works for another department. “Before they come to work, they have to be off any secondary employment for at least eight hours,” Vavra said.

The raises are consistent with those offered to other village employees, he said.

thanks Dan

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