Archive for May, 2015

As seen around … Oak Forest

This from Kevin Griffin:

While I was out and about I came across the Oak Forest command van often used on box alarms in Mabas 24. I believe it’s a 2000 Ford e-350, maybe older. I also snapped a shot of a 2013 Ford Interceptor EMA vehicle used on fire scenes in Oak Forest.

mobile command post

Kevin Griffin photo

mobile command post

Kevin Griffin photo

mobile command post

Kevin Griffin photo

mobile command post

Kevin Griffin photo

Ford Explorer Police Interceptor

Kevin Griffin photo

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2-11 Alarm fire in Chicago, 5/25/15

This from Eric Haak:

Here are some images from a quickly elevated 2-11 alarm fire Sunday morning in Chicago.  The incident occurred on the 6700 block of Union Avenue.  Battalion 18 was given a working fire response at about 7:15 and Engine 54 arrived moments later and confirmed they had a 2.5-story frame that was totally involved and communicating to exposures.  Battalion 18 boxed the fire on arrival and quickly reported water problems and requested a 2-11.  Eventually the occupied exposure would be fully-involved as well.  The first five engines all went to work; 54, 47, 84, 116 and 50.  Engine 84 was in spare D533 and Engine 50 was in spare D598.  Both Tower Ladders 34 and 37 were also in spares.  TL 34 was eventually put to work making it 6 hand-lines and 3 master streams in use.  The fire was struck out shortly after 8:00 and Human Services was requested for 4 adults and 6 children.

Chicago fire scene with Snorkel

Eric Haak photo

Chicago fire engine pumping at fire scene

Eric Haak photo

firemen with hose lines on chainlink fence

Eric Haak photo

Chicago fire scene with Snorkel

Eric Haak photo

Chicago fire scene with Snorkel

Eric Haak photo

Chicago fire engine pumping at fire scene

Eric Haak photo

Chicago fire engine pumping at fire scene

Eric Haak photo

Chicago fire engine pumping at fire scene

Eric Haak photo

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Controversy with CFD promotions

Excerpts from DNAinfo.com:

A group of Latino firefighters say their impending promotion to the rank of lieutenant — and the $18,000 pay hike that comes with it — is bittersweet because it was expedited based on their race. And that’s not the way they wanted to become firehouse shift bosses.

The Latino firefighters instead wanted to wait their turn. They’ve already waited six years since taking the lieutenant’s test and were prepared to wait a bit longer. But department brass bullied them into accepting the promotion ahead of some of their firehouse brothers who scored higher on the test, they told DNAinfo Chicago.

The Latino firefighters had each waived race-based promotions twice as a matter of personal pride and a surefire way to avoid serving under the stigma that they didn’t deserve the promotion on their own merit. But when they got the third promotion offer, Cmdr. Monica Porter made it clear that if they turned it down again there wouldn’t be a next time, the firefighters, who all asked to remain anonymous, told DNAinfo.com.

All of the Latino firefighters facing removal from the promotion list who spoke to DNAinfo Chicago reluctantly accepted the affirmative-action promotion and reported to the fire academy this week out of fear that not doing so might hurt their career and pocketbook. Veteran firefighters who get promoted to lieutenant initially receive about an $18,000-a-year salary increase.

Chicago Fire Fighters Union Local 2 business agent Jim Tracy said the city’s policy to threaten minorities with being removed from promotion lists goes against common sense in a department struggling to increase diversity in its leadership ranks. Last month, the union filed a grievance claiming minorities are being harassed and intimidated by the personnel department officers and exempt rank personnel by being ordered to sign papers acknowledging they refused affirmative-action promotions. They also said they’ve been told after three refusals they will be removed from the promotion list.

The formal complaint — which asked the department to “inform all members who signed refusal papers (not in rank order) they do not count against them” — was denied, and the matter is headed to arbitration.

Fire Department spokesman Larry Langford said the Latino firefighters shouldn’t feel any stigma about taking a so-called out-of-rank promotion because doing so is good for the department.

In an effort to increase the ranks of minorities in leadership roles, the department groups promotion test scores in bands, a collection of eligible applicants who scored within about 4 percentage points of each other on promotion exams. When making promotions, the fire department selects eligible candidates who all scored about the same on the test — taking into consideration an employee’s race to comply with federal consent decrees aimed at bolstering minority hiring and promotion to leadership positions. The band test score ranking system was approved by the U.S. Justice Department, which oversees the fire department’s compliance with federal consent decrees.

“I know what [the firefighters] are saying and understand their position. But this is part of the tools we’re allowed to use approved by the justice department to adjust the mix to create some good diversity in management,” Langford said.

Currently, about 70 percent of the fire department’s 571 lieutenants are white. In all, there are 99 black, 64 Hispanic and three Asian lieutenants in the department. The overall racial makeup of Chicago is 33 percent black, 32 percent white, 29 percent Latino and 6 percent Asian.

Langford said that if a higher percentage of white employees get promoted because minority candidates decline promotions, that creates an adverse impact on the city’s effort to increase departmentwide diversity.

Firefighters are allowed to decline promotions twice before facing being removed from the list. Until about eight months ago, however, a firefighter’s decision to postpone a promotion was good for six months. The decision to eliminate the six-month grace period stems from the fire department’s desire to no longer allow some employees to avoid assignments that they consider undesirable.

That policy change was put in place as a way to persuade paramedics to accept promotions to the rank of paramedic-in-charge more quickly, but it applies across the board to all promotion lists, Langford said.

“This department policy balances the need to give promotional candidates some leeway to decide when they are ready to accept a new role with the need for CFD to manage its staffing,” the fire department spokesman said. “If the member does not like the assignment he or she is given, they could keep saying, no until they got what they liked. That is not the way the department operates. All assignments are for the good of the department and its mission.”

Engine 116 Fire Capt. Mauricio Rodriguez, who turned down affirmative-action promotion offers to lieutenant and captain for years — seven or eight times by his count — said applying the “three-and-out rule” to race-based promotions discriminates against minority Fire Department employees.

While fighting for his right to get promoted in rank order over his career, Rodriguez received a letter from former Fire Commissioner Ray Orozco that informed him he would not be booted from a promotion list and that waiver forms he signed were for internal tracking purposes only.

thanks Dan

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As seen around … Highland Park

New Ambulance 34 in Highland Park

Highland Park FD Ambulance 34 Horton Type I ambulance

Highland Park Ambulance 34 – 2013 Ford F-450/Horton Type I so#15656

new ambulance law tag

Larry Shapiro photo

Highland Park Dive Squad 34 and Boat 34

fire department dive rescue unit and boat

Highland Park Dive Rescue 34 – 2006 Ford F-550/2007 Rescue Vehicles of Iowa and Boat 34. ©2015 Larry Shapiro

law tag for fire truck

Larry Shapiro photo

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Norwood Park FPD Deputy Chief retires

Excerpts from the ChicagoTribune.com:

The last day of Deputy Chief John Kovalcik’s 28-year career at the Norwood Park Fire Department was marked by a farewell from the people of Norridge and Harwood Heights … on May 8 at his retirement party.

On May 26, Kovalcik will start a new job as an administrative analyst for the Des Plaines Fire Department — a position he took, he said, because he was ready for a new challenge. His new job in Des Plaines is strictly a desk job, he said, which requires mostly policies and procedures writing, along with budget management and project oversight.

“I’ll miss the family-like atmosphere we had here the most,” he said. “Being a fireman, you’re together for 24 hours straight sometimes, and you learn to depend and rely on each other for everything.”

The father of three daughters — Katie, 19, Ashley, 21, and Amy, 23 — has deep roots in Norwood Park Township. He went to Ridgewood High School, where he met his wife Laurie, and volunteered on the Pennoyer School Board for four years from 2007 to 2011.

“I’ve lived in this town since I was 2 years old, and I still live here — there’s a reason for that,” Kovalcik said. “The nice thing [about being a firefighter in Norwood Park] is that I was able to help people I knew personally — it was rewarding in that respect.”

Sometimes, the call of duty extended far beyond the township boundaries.

In 2001, it was the day after 9/11 when Kovalcik and a group of about 50 other firefighters volunteered to go to New York City. After working a 22-hour shift the night before, Kovalcik and his colleagues packed up their equipment and headed to Schiller Park, where other Chicago-area firefighters who had also volunteered to go had assembled.

The [trip] was canceled, however, because New York City was already inundated with thousands of other firefighters, mostly from the East Coast, who had already arrived at Ground Zero.

In 2005, Kovalcik spent two weeks in New Orleans with Norwood Park Fire Chief Kevin Stenson and now-retired fire fighter Carmen Rinaldi. The three traveled to Louisiana together to help with disaster relief following Hurricane Katrina. The three of them arrived three days after the hurricane hit, and spent several days outside camping in tents in dry patches of land with other fire fighters until a fire station opened up following flood-clean-up and the crews could move in.

Stationed in the French Quarter with about 20 other Illinois-area fire fighters for most of their time in Louisiana, Kovalcik and the crew spent most of their time fighting house fires and removing trees, he said.

Dan Johnson was sworn in as the new deputy fire chief of Norwood Park on May 11.

thanks Dan

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Vacant house burn down in South Holland, 5/23/15

fire truck with house fire

Tim Olk photo

houe engulfed in flames

Tim Olk photo

firemen pose with burning house

Tim Olk photo

fire truck with house fire

Tim Olk photo

fire truck with house fire

Tim Olk photo

additional photos at firescenes.net

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Blood drive for firefighter’s daughter

Today in Highland Park

Excerpts from theChicagoTribune.com:

The City of Highland Park and the Highland Park Fire Department will host a Memorial Day blood drive to support a fellow firefighter’s daughter’s continued fight against a rare cancer, from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday, May 23, at Headquarters Fire Station #33, 1130 Central Ave., Highland Park.

Kylia Abbott’s stage four neuroblastoma diagnosis came after her one-year exam in January 2014. It’s a rare cancer where malignant (cancer) cells form in nerve tissue of the adrenal gland, neck, chest, or spinal cord. Her aggressive treatment at University of Chicago Medicine Comer Children’s Hospital required nearly 20 blood transfusions.

The family is grateful for the support they continue to receive from Abbott’s colleagues-many of whom have made sacrifices of their own time to allow both him and his wife, Kelly, to be with their daughter during her treatments.

This is the second year that the fire department has supported Kylia Abbott, 2, the daughter of firefighter Nathan Abbott, with a Memorial Day blood drive. He’s a former U.S. Marine who was awarded the Purple Heart during Operation Iraqi Freedom.

For Abbott’s colleagues, the chance to again honor his daughter with a blood drive on the military’s most solemn day is the perfect fit.

“We’re in the career of service-including service to our own,” says Highland Park Fire Chief Dan Pease. “In our endless effort to save lives, we now focus on trying to help a brother and his family in their time of need.”

Kylia’s grandmother says that blood donations were the key to keeping Kylia in good health while she awaited her recent stem cell transfusion. “Kylia’s treatment is a credit not only to her doctors, but also her ability to get blood transfusions when her condition weakens her bone marrow. These blood transfusions were vital in allowing Kylia to be more alert, which in turn, helped her to fight this cancer.”

Appointments for the blood drive are preferred, but all walk-ins are welcome. Donors can schedule their appointment by calling LifeSource at (877) 543-3768, or visiting www.lifesource.org and making an appointment using group code 344D.

thanks Dan

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Naperville FD gets drone

Excerpts from the ChicagoTribune.com:

Naperville plans to put drones into use soon, although it’s unclear so far exactly how, when or where it will be done.

The city last month spent $1,200 on a drone for the fire department. But policy issues need to be considered before drones are activated by the city.

… city resident Todd Peterson, supports the devices’ use for public safety purposes. Fire Chief Mark Puknaitis emphasized the productive purposes for which the drone will be used and said significant restrictions are in place.

“In weather events where we have flooding situations and it’s very unsafe to send somebody near an area of the river, we could sent a drone – certainly not in a public area,” Puknaitis said, adding that the implements’ overhead surveillance functions also can be of great help in search and rescue operations. “Under other fire operational conditions, maybe collapses, other situations like that, we could see using this. … This not anything more than an additional tool to be used under very specific applications.”

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House fire in Deerfield, 5-22-15

This from Larry Shapiro:

Deerfield-Bannockburn firefighters were called for a house fire around noon on Friday (5/22/15) at 818 Forest Avenue. The alarm was upgraded by RED Center prior to companies arriving on-scene based on a report from police officers of smoke showing. They had fire on the first floor with smoke throughout of an older, two-story, frame house. Two lines were used and the bulk of the fire was knocked down within 10 minutes.

Units at the scene included Deerfield Engine 19 & 20, Ambulance 19, Truck 20, Battalion 20 and the chief officers plus Truck and Battalion 33 from Highland Park, Engine and Ambulance 52 from Lincolnshire-Riverwoods, Battalion 11 and Engine 10 from Northbrook, Morton Grove Squad 4, and Lake Forest Truck 421.

Here are some shots from the scene. I arrived about 15 minutes after the original dispatch.

fire truck and ambulance with chevron striping

Larry Shapiro photo

smoke from house on fire

Larry Shapiro photo

smoke from house on fire

Larry Shapiro photo

firemen raise ground ladder at house ire

Larry Shapiro photo

fireman surrounded by smoke at window

Larry Shapiro photo

Pierce fire trucks at fire scene Deerfield Bannockburn fire apparatus

Larry Shapiro photo

Deerfield firefighter at fire scene

Larry Shapiro photo

Lake Forest firefighter at fire scene

Larry Shapiro photo

fire department battalion chief

Larry Shapiro photo

Pierce fire trucks at fire scene Deerfield Bannockburn fire apparatus

Larry Shapiro photo

Stuffed fire truck at fire scene

Larry Shapiro photo

Pierce fire engine with hydraulic ladder rack

Larry Shapiro photo

More photos are at shapirophotography.net

Excerpts from the ChicagoTribune.com:

A Deerfield family survived a house fire unharmed Friday, after one family member smelled smoke, got everyone out of the house and called the fire department. The fire damage to the house, in the 800 block of Forest Avenue, was contained to one room because the door to that room was shut.

Deerfield Bannockburn Fire Protection District Deputy Chief Ray Larson said “There were people in the home including children.  The person smelled smoke, evacuated the people and called 911. That closed door was a huge factor preventing the spread of the fire. They didn’t try to open it. They just got out and called 911.”

When firefighters arrived at the two-story home, they entered through the front door, went into the room where the fire was burning and extinguished it with a hose, according to Larson. That was the only room to sustain fire damage, though smoke permeated throughout.

thanks Dan

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CFD reserve squad at the body shop

From the Fire Service, Inc. Facebook page:

fire truck after crash

Chicago FD reserve squad before body work at Fire Service, Inc.

fire truck being repaired after crash

Chicago FD reserve squad undergoing body work at Fire Service, Inc.

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