Archive for August, 2015

Will County 911 dispatch

Excerpts from theTimesWeekly.com:

Will County must have a plan to consolidate its six 911 dispatch centers into three by next July, and everything from where those centers should be located to how they should be funded to what they should include are unanswered questions.

In fact, there are only two knowns, according to Steve Rauter, executive director of WESCOM – Western Will County Communication Center – and chairman of the Will County Emergency Telephone System 9-1-1 Board long-range planning committee:

  1. A plan must be submitted to the state by July 2016;
  2. The plan must be implemented and the work completed by July 2017.

Failure to do so could result in the state cutting off the funds the county receives from fees collected by the state from phone service carriers, Rauter said.

“We’re taking this law seriously,” he said. “The Illinois State Police are writing the enforcement rules and administrating them, and if we don’t follow them they’re not going to fund us.”

In Will County, the largest of the dispatch centers is Joliet, which answers police and fire calls for city residents, and WESCOM which is located in Plainfield and handles calls for 19 communities, including Bolingbrook, Wilmington and Braidwood in Will County.

The other centers are in Romeoville, Crete, Frankfort (servicing the Lincoln-Way communities) and Will County, which handles only emergency calls in some unincorporated areas and does not dispatch firefighters.

While the general consensus seems to be that altering Joliet or WESCOM would not make sense, there’s no guarantee that won’t change as serious discussions get started this month and next, said Will County Undersheriff Bob Contro, who represents the sheriff’s office on the Will County Emergency Telephone System 9-1-1 Board and is working with county officials on plans for a new law enforcement campus.

One of the new dispatch centers could be part of the sheriff’s office building on the Laraway Road, construction of which is to start next year, but time is tight if a decision is going to dovetail with the design phase of the project, which is to start before year’s end, Contro said.

“All I can say right now is everything is on the table,” Contro said.

The General Assembly mandate for consolidation was signed by the governor this spring. Its goal is to reduce the number of dispatch centers in Illinois in order to reduce the time needed to trigger emergency service. Calls that must be transferred between centers before police or firefighters can be dispatched lose precious time during emergencies.

The long-range goal is to have a system that is consolidated statewide, Rauter said. The state plans to hire a consultant as the first step toward accomplishing that, although financially the concept is daunting given that Illinois cannot tap federal grant money because it has diverted 911 funds in order to balance the state budget shortfall, Rauter said.

It’s also not clear how much state grant money will be available to counties to accomplish consolidation given that Illinois must also fund new systems in nine counties where 911 service is not available at all, he said. That will be determined once the governor appoints a board to oversee consolidation planning for the state – something that’s expected before the end of the month – and those board members determine exactly what’s to be included in the plans counties must submit by July 2016.

If the Joliet and WESCOM systems are chosen to be two of the three dispatch centers for Will, the remaining portion of the county would be covered by just one center.

Ideally, that center would be part of the new law enforcement campus, said County Board member Denise Winfrey (D-Joliet), who is a member of the board’s capital improvements committee.

The county could also decide it will not be involved in dispatching at all, and cede what it currently does to a new center that could be built elsewhere, Rauter said.

Beyond that, there are myriad other factors to decide, including which communities will be served by the new center, whether Joliet and WESCOM will need to pick up additional towns, how much equipment will be needed for the new building, what needs to be added to the existing centers, and how much each community pays, Rauter said.

Typically, costs are based on the volume of calls a town receives, with smaller towns paying less than larger, he said. But should communities that need a new center pay more than WESCOM communities, which helped fund a new center just three years ago, he asked.

Previous posts about issues with the 911 system in Will County are HERE and HERE

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As seen around … Bartlett

This from Steve Redick:

Bartlett & Countryside FPD fire truck

Steve Redick photo

Bartlett & Countryside FPD fire truck

Steve Redick photo

Bartlett & Countryside FPD fire truck

Steve Redick photo

Bartlett & Countryside FPD fire truck

Steve Redick photo

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Elk Grove Township FPD Box Alarm, 8-24-15 (more)

Images from Scott Peterson & Larry Shapiro of the Elk Grove Township Box Alarm 8/24/15

Scott Peterson video 1

Scott Peterson video 2

night fire scene photo

Scott Peterson photo

night fire scene photo

Scott Peterson photo

night fire scene photo

Scott Peterson photo

night fire scene photo

Scott Peterson photo

night fire scene photo

Scott Peterson photo

 

Pierce Quantum fire engine flowing at night fire scene

Larry Shapiro photo

Pierce tower ladder flowing at night fire scene

Larry Shapiro photo

firemen with big hose line at night fire scene

Larry Shapiro photo

Spartan fire engine flowing at night fire scene

Larry Shapiro photo

Pierce Quantum fire engine flowing at night fire scene

Larry Shapiro photo

Pierce Quantum fire engine flowing at night fire scene

Larry Shapiro photo

more photos are at shapirophotography.net

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Elk Grove Township FPD Box Alarm, 8-24-15

Early images from the Box Alarm at 2847 Old Higgins Road in unincorporated Cook County. The building was a vacant, commercial structure formerly the home of a concrete company.

night fire scene

reader submission

night fire scene

reader submission

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Chicago 2-11 Alarm fire with EMS Plan 2, 8-23-15 (more)

Excerpts from the ChicagoTribune.com:

Three people were hurt, one critically, in a fire Sunday morning  … that fire broke out about 7:50 a.m. in a fourth-floor unit in the 1000 block of West Catalpa Avenue in the Edgewater Beach neighborhood, Chicago Fire Department District Chief Jeffrey Horan said.

When firefighters arrived at the scene, they encountered smoke and flames and saw several people at upper-floor windows, Horan said. Firefighters used ladders to rescue one of the victims and to quickly contain the blaze, which damaged the top two floors of the five-story brick apartment building about two blocks west of Sheridan Road.

No firefighters were injured.

“These guys did a great job,” Horan said.

 

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As seen around … Glendale Heights

Images from Steve Redick of Glenside FPD apparatus

Glenside FPD apparatus

Steve Redick photo

Glenside FPD apparatus

Steve Redick photo

Glenside FPD apparatus

Steve Redick photo

Glenside FPD apparatus

Steve Redick photo

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Chicago 2-11 Alarm fire with EMS Plan 2, 8-23-15

Audio from the 2-11 Alarm fire and EMS Plan II at 1055 W. Catalpa on 8/23/15.

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Sexual harassment lawsuit against Country Club Hills

Excerpts from the ChicagoTribune.com:

On Dena Lewis-Bystrzycki’s first day as a Country Club Hills firefighter, the chief at the time allegedly leaned over to her and whispered a crude sexual invitation.

Some co-workers laughed. Lewis-Bystrzycki looked at one of them and asked, essentially, “Is this what I am to expect?”

“Welcome to the fire service,” the engineer allegedly responded, according to recently filed court records that detail the exchange.

Nearly two decades later, Lewis-Bystrzycki has filed a lawsuit alleging firefighters regularly watch pornography at the station, engaged in gender discrimination when she came up for a promotion and retaliated against her for reporting misbehavior.

There are only two full-time female firefighters in the department, according to the suit. Lewis-Bystrzycki, 40, is one of them. She said firefighting is in her blood as she’s following in the footsteps of several uncles, her father and grandfather.

“I was raised in a firehouse,” Lewis-Bystrzycki said in an interview.

Lewis-Bystrzycki has been a firefighter with Country Club Hills since 1998. She first sued the department in 2012, and on Wednesday she filed a supplemental complaint alleging lieutenants have admitted knowing that employees watch porn in the stations.

The lawsuit also alleges that many questions on the 2011 lieutenant promotion exam were written by the father of Carl Pycz, the male firefighter who got the job after scoring highest on the written exam.

Lewis-Bystrzycki complained at the time but was ignored, the lawsuit alleges. At one point, court records allege, Carl Pycz confronted Lewis-Bystrzycki with “a big smile and said, ‘Let the best man win.'”

Since Pycz’s promotion, the lawsuit alleges, he has retaliated against Lewis-Bystrzycki by excluding her from station meals, assigning her menial tasks and unfairly disciplining her.

Country Club Hills referred questions to its attorney, Daniel Boddicker, who said the fire chief has “terminated access to the premium movie channels” where there is nudity. He said the department is investigating the pornography allegations further.

Boddicker declined to comment on anything else but said the fire department expects to win the lawsuit.

Lewis-Bystrzycki’s attorney, Dana Kurtz, said this is one of the more egregious cases she’s seen.

“You have people in command that are doing nothing,” Kurtz said.

Court records filed earlier this month detail at least 45 instances of sexual harassment, discrimination or retaliation against Lewis-Bystrzycki dating back to the beginning of her employment. The alleged misbehavior spans nearly two decades.

In 1998, after Lewis-Bystrzycki started, a firefighter threw a ring used for sexual purposes at her.

One firefighter broke down the bathroom door in 1999 while Lewis-Bystrzycki was showering, according to the complaint.

There were a handful of incidents in 2009 where a male firefighter, and on one occasion two firefighters, climbed into Lewis-Bystrzycki’s bunk and said “cuddle with me” or something similar, court records allege.

In 2012, someone placed a sticker on Lewis-Bystrzycki’s locker with a sexual connotation, court records allege.

That same year, court records allege, Lewis-Bystrzycki came back to her locker and found a ceramic doll on top of it with its hands placed over its mouth. That indicated she should shut her mouth, court records allege.

In 2013, court records allege, Lewis-Bystrzycki was told by another firefighter that there was “an unwritten order given not to assist (Lewis-Bystrzycki) with anything.”

That incident, in particular, disturbs Lewis-Bystrzycki, she said. Fighting the case has left her “nerve-wracked, overwhelmed and scared.”

thanks Dan

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Fire Museum of Greater Chicago fundraiser

Fundraiser for the Fire Museum of Greater Chicago

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As seen around … East Dundee

This from Tyler Tobolt:

I stopped by the East Dundee FD to get some photos of the new Engine 41. Here are two photos of the new Spartan Metro Star pumper 1500/500 from Alexis.

here is a link to more photos of Engine 41

Thank you Tyler Tobolt.

East Dundee FPD fire engine

Tyler Tobolt photo

East Dundee FPD fire engine

Tyler Tobolt photo

Here is a video of the units responding to a call

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