Images by Jeff Rudolph from the Woman’s Club of Wilmette fire on Tuesday (2/17/15)
Archive for February, 2015
Images by Tim Olk from the Woman’s Club of Wilmette fire on Tuesday (2/17/15)
This from Code Photography:
Here are some photos from the Norwood Park Box Alarm at 7365 W. Leland St in Harwood Heights (2/17/15)More photos here: House Fire (2/17/15) – codephotography-Code Photography
Excerpts from the ChicagoTribune.com:
After three months of enduring frequent computer crashes and glitches, New Lenox Fire Chief Steve Engledow has had enough and is urging the Will County 911 board to dump the recently upgraded 911 system by Motorola Solutions.
System crashes and slow responses have been common complaints among dispatchers and police and fire personnel since the new Premiere One system began operating Nov. 6. The complaints are that the Premier One software shuts down or freezes up without warning and the map screen goes blank or fails to provide proper directions. Dispatchers say they have had difficulty sending information to mobile units.
The system also at times provides wrong information about the responding agency or sends the wrong personnel or equipment to a scene, according to Engledow and other local police and fire officials who attended a Jan. 29 special meeting of the county’s Emergency Telephone System Board (ETSB).
Deputy Sheriff Robert Contro said it has been an IT nightmare with the sheriff’s department’s 175 laptop computers, leaving officers at times unable to write tickets, according to a video of that meeting.
“We are very frustrated. People on the street can’t do their job,” Mokena Police Chief Steve Vaccaro said. “Police officers lives are at stake. Community safety is at stake.”
No one has been harmed yet as a result of the system failures, but the potential is there, said Steve Rauter, director of Wescom, one of the county’s busiest dispatch centers, in Plainfield.
Channahon Police Chief Jeff Wold said at the meeting that his officers were put in danger when they failed to get information from dispatchers about a domestic violence incident, in which a man was hiding in a house with a knife, because the system froze for 10 minutes.
Emotions ran high during the 2 1/2 -hour session, which gave the county’s emergency personnel a chance to air their concerns to representatives from Schaumburg-based Motorola Solutions. The company issued a statement that says, “Motorola Solutions developed a dispatch software solution to meet Will County’s requirements and is committed to continue working with our customer to resolve issues with priority resources and expertise, and meet or exceed the county’s expectations for reliability and service.”
The ETSB began looking for a new 911 system four years ago for its six dispatch centers and decided to upgrade rather than replace the existing system. It awarded a $2 million contract to Motorola, but the revised system became complicated and took two years to complete. The ETSB is withholding $900,000 of the $2 million contract until the problems are resolved.
“Motorola is working on an aggressive timetable set by the board,” said Steve Figved, ETSB’s chief administrator. “They have guaranteed this will be fixed. … I really believe they will meet that deadline.”
thanks Dan
This is the first of what will be several posts on this fire:
Wilmette companies responded to an automatic fire alarm at the Woman’s Club of Wilmette, 930 Greenleaf Avenue around 10AM this morning (2/17/15). Upon rounding the corner, smoke was visible through the roof and the alarm was upgraded to a Code 4 (working fire).
The occupants were out of the building when the fire department arrived and made an initial interior attack before being forced to withdraw. The alarm was upgraded to a Box Alarm for additional companies.
Four aerial master streams were operating; Wilmette Tower 26, Northbrook Tower 12, Evanston Truck 23, and Morton Grove Quint 4. Engines pumping included Wilmette Engine 27 and Winnetka Engine 28. Other units at the scene were engines from Lincolnwood, and Glenview, trucks from Northfield and Des Plaines, a Skokie squad, both Wilmette ambulances, the Mess Canteen, MABAS Division 3 Comm 3, and several chief officers.
Here are a few images from Larry Shapiro. Also at the scene were Tim Olk and Jeff Rudolph.
New apparatus orders
Feb 17
- The Deerfield-Bannockburn FPD has placed an order for a Pierce Dash CF PUC rescue pumper. Among the features of the new unit will be a light tower, cascade system, extrication equipment, and other supplies formerly carried on Squad 20 and Squad 19. The assignment for this unit has not yet been finalized.
- The Highland Park Fire Department has a rescue pumper being built by SpartanERV
- Homer Township Fire District purchased a 2015 Road Rescue ambulance on a Ford F-450 chassis
Excerpts from ABC7chicago.com:
A town meeting in south suburban Matteson was packed with people upset over a plan that would mean deep cuts to the police and fire departments.
Matteson is faced with an $8 million budget deficit. The village board meeting was standing-room only Wednesday night, as leaders discussed laying off 13 police officers – nearly half the force – and eight firefighters. They are also considering leaving four positions in the fire department vacant.
The cuts could take place as soon as next week. Matteson residents are worried about the impact on public safety.
“It’s detrimental, I think, to the community at large. We’re talking increased response times, less personnel at the scene of a fire,” said Scott Gilliam, president of the Matteson firefighters union.
Village officials and the police and fire unions plan to begin talks over the proposed layoffs.
thanks Dan
This from Larry Shapiro:
A driver fled the scene after hitting two cars and smashing into the stores at 76 W. Dundee Road in Buffalo Grove on Saturday (2/14/15). There were no injuries and there was no structural damage to the building.
This from Eric Haak:
The Chicago Fire Department responded to this fire in the 1900 Block of West Devon at 0330 on Sunday morning (2/15/15). It was eventually elevated to a still and box alarm and companies went defensive. What you can’t see in the images is that the building was a t-shape and had a fairly large extension off the back of the building. Police did rescue one resident who was transported to a local hospital. Temperatures were around zero degrees causing everything in the vicinity to ice over. I took the opportunity to take some images of a few engine companies I don’t often get to shoot.
This from Josh Boyajian:
here are a few quick shots from Calumet City’s Box alarm last night at 714 Green Bay Avenue. Companies were faced with water problems, negative temperatures, and high winds.