Archive for January, 2016

Area apparatus orders

New area apparatus orders:

  • Hanover Park Fire Department; a Pierce PUC pumper with an Enforcer cab and chassis; 1,500/750. Delivery in June 2016.
  • New Lenox Fire Department; a Pierce pumper with an Enforcer cab and chassis; 1,500/750/30F. Delivery in June 2016.
  • Newark Fire Protection District; an Alexis pumper with a Spartan Metro Star cab and chassis; 1,500/1,000/20F. Delivery in August 2016.
  • Schaumburg Fire Department; a Pierce 100-foot aerial platform with a Velocity cab and chassis. Delivery in September 2016.
  • Lisbon-Seward Fire Protection District, Yorkville; an Alexis tanker with a Freightliner M2 cab and chassis; 750/3,000. Delivery in August 2016.
thanks Ron

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Working fire in Palatine, 1-25-16

570 N Smith  Fortune Kookie fire

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Working fire in Chicago, 1-10-16

From Tim Olk:

Alley garage at 63rd and Francisco, 1/10/16

alley garage on fire in Chicago

Tim Olk photo

alley garage on fire in Chicago

Tim Olk photo

alley garage on fire in Chicago

Tim Olk photo

alley garage on fire in Chicago

Tim Olk photo

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Chicago Inspector General suggests savings for CFD

Excerpts from the ChicagoSunTimes.com:

The Chicago Fire Department could save at least $1.2 million a year and potentially millions more in overtime by hiring civilians to perform 34 administrative jobs that have nothing to do with firefighting or emergency medical service, Inspector General Joe Ferguson said Wednesday.

Three years after urging Mayor Rahm Emanuel to civilianize police jobs to save up to $16.6 million a year and put another 292 police officers on the street, Ferguson outlined a similar cost-cutting recipe for the Chicago Fire Department.

After analyzing the duties and responsibilities of 555 uniformed firefighters and paramedics within the $576.7 million-a-year fire department bureaucracy, Ferguson recommended that Emanuel hire civilians to perform 34 of those jobs and eliminate the job of commissary liaison altogether.

That would save Chicago taxpayers at least $1.2 million a year, reduce annual fire department overtime that has topped $40 million in recent years and allow for a more effective deployment of personnel to improve public safety outcomes and response times to fire and medical emergencies, Ferguson said.

Two firefighters whose jobs were targeted for civilians actually served as mail carriers, even though their jobs were not always documented in position descriptions or titles, the inspector general concluded. The others were assigned to administrative duties, such as making certain that fire department scheduling complies with minimum staffing requirements mandated by the firefighters contract.

The fire department embraced Ferguson’s recommendation on 32 of the 35 targeted positions. Commissioner Jose Santiago further agreed to follow the inspector general’s recommendation to assess all positions, monitor and track temporary assignments and ensure that job descriptions reflect actual responsibilities of uniformed positions.

“There are likely to be more positions in CFD that could be civilianized,” Ferguson wrote, noting that New York and Philadelphia have civilians working as fire inspectors while Chicago still assigns those jobs to uniformed firefighters.

Such a periodic review has potential to save even more money, but only if the Chicago Firefighters Union Local 2 goes along. During the audit, the fire department tried to get a head start by civilianizing some of the jobs Ferguson was targeting, including the two mail delivery positions. But Local 2 filed a grievance.

“Delivering mail has been Local 2 bargaining members for decades. This is a unilateral work rule change not negotiated with Local 2 . . . Stop this practice immediately and return this work to bargaining unit personnel,” the grievance stated.

Tom Ryan, president of the Chicago Firefighters Union Local 2, stood his ground. “Mr. Ferguson is entitled to his opinion. But the positions referenced in his report are staffed by firefighters and paramedics and are essential to the efficient functioning of the fire department,” Ryan wrote to the Chicago Sun-Times. “These jobs are covered under our current contract and, therefore, can only be discussed in negotiations.”

Ferguson’s audit also concluded that the fire department provided at least 13 reasonable accommodations under the Americans with Disabilities Act either informally or without proper approval by the disability officer in the city’s Department of Human Resources.

That’s even though the department could not determine whether it had identified all uniformed members who had been granted accommodations.

“Such accommodations effectively remove firefighters and paramedics from operations, so it is critical that CFD grant and track such accommodations systematically and in compliance with city policy,” Ferguson wrote in a letter to aldermen and the mayor that accompanied Wednesday’s audit.

thanks Dan

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Rolling Meadows discusses rebuilding fire stations (more)

Excerpts from the DailyHerald.com:

Rolling Meadows officials will start interviewing project management firms next week as the next step in the city’s efforts to relocate both  fire stations … the city council last year decided to move both stations to improve emergency response times.

Seven project management firms responded to a request for qualifications, Chief Scott Franzgrote told the city council Tuesday and interviews with four of the companies will help make sure the costs estimates are all-inclusive. Rolling Meadows has Fire Station 15 at 3111 Meadow Drive, which was built in 1958, and Fire Station 16 at 2455 S. Plum Grove Road, which was built in 1980. Under the plan, both would be relocated — though it hasn’t been determined to where — to better balance the calls the department receives.

According to city documents, the cost of building two new fire stations is about $9 million, which includes all design, land acquisition, engineering, architectural and construction costs.

Deciding what to do about the city’s fire stations has been somewhat of a moving target over the past few years. In 2014, the council decided to build a third station, but reversed course last year and voted to remain at two stations, but in new locations.

thanks Dan

Excerpts from the JournalTopics.com:

As the city continues to grapple with the issue of whether to pour funds into fixing a 57-year-old fire station in need of extensive repairs, and whether to move the second station to better meet the needs of a growing community, aldermen last year gave the fire department and city staff the go-ahead to develop a plan on building and relocating the two fire stations.

The request for qualifications that went out from the city said the project will have an anticipated budget of $9,000,000. The project manager would oversee planning and implementation of the project including relocating both fire stations, evaluating station location sites, land acquisition, relocation to temporary facilities if required, creating budgets and project schedules, and coordination of relevant entities such as real estate agents, architects, consultants, engineers, contractors, vendors and more.

Rolling Meadows firehouse are Station 15 (Fogarty Station), 3111 Meadow Dr., which serves areas of the city east of Route 53, and Station 16 (Neucranz Station), 2455 S. Plum Grove Rd., which serves the city west of Route 53.

Station 15 was built in 1958 by the newly formed Rolling Meadows Fire District. At the time, it was a one-story building with two apparatus bays and a kitchen. The station was positioned in a location that represented the center of the fire district’s response area.

Franzgrote has said a new fire station is needed to meet an increasing demand for service, especially on the city’s south side, and to maintain quick response times.

More posts on this topic are HERE

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Smeal/Ladder Tower Co building first 55′ Snorkel (more)

Several readers have submitted the following information from the Interstate Emergency Vehicles, Inc.  Facebook page and the Smeal website about the first Snorkel being built by Smeal

image1

Screen Shot 2016-01-25 at 11.32.20 AM

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Vintage Chicago fire scene: 5-11 alarm in 1967

This from Steve Redick:

Here are a few news clippings from a spectacular job, 5-11 Alarm Harrison & Throop in 1967. Also, some video and radio traffic found on  ChicagoFD.org.  Jim Evans, my old boss, was the radio operator at Main that day.

 

News clipping from a spectacular 5-11 Alarm fire in Chicago at Harrison & Throop in 1967

News clipping from a spectacular 5-11 Alarm fire in Chicago at Harrison & Throop in 1967. Warren Redick collection

News clipping from a spectacular 5-11 Alarm fire in Chicago at Harrison & Throop in 1967

News clipping from a spectacular 5-11 Alarm fire in Chicago at Harrison & Throop in 1967. Warren Redick collection

News clipping from a spectacular 5-11 Alarm fire in Chicago at Harrison & Throop in 1967

News clipping from a spectacular 5-11 Alarm fire in Chicago at Harrison & Throop in 1967. Warren Redick collection

News clipping from a spectacular 5-11 Alarm fire in Chicago at Harrison & Throop in 1967

News clipping from a spectacular 5-11 Alarm fire in Chicago at Harrison & Throop in 1967. Warren Redick collection

News clipping from a spectacular 5-11 Alarm fire in Chicago at Harrison & Throop in 1967

News clipping from a spectacular 5-11 Alarm fire in Chicago at Harrison & Throop in 1967. Warren Redick collection


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Antioch Rescue Squad disbands

Excerpts from the DailyHerald.com:

The Antioch Rescue Squad has officially disbanded and donated more than $491,000 in remaining funds to the village of Antioch, the First Fire Protection District of Antioch, and various charities and community groups, village officials announced Tuesday.

Antioch and the fire protection district will split a $245,746 donation, while the Antioch Open Arms Mission, the PM&L Theater, the Antioch Historical Society, and the Antioch Area Healthcare Accessibility Alliance will split another $245,746, officials said in a news release.

The donations to the fire protection district and the village would be used to provide emergency medical services handled by the Antioch Fire Department, officials said. The village board and the fire district board will announce plans for how the donated money will be used in the coming weeks.

“We appreciate the intent in which the money was put forth to assist the fire department in continuing its mission of delivering EMS to the community,” Antioch Fire Chief John Nixon said.

The Antioch Rescue Squad, a fixture in the village since 1938, ceased daily operations in May 2014 after a series of ethical and legal controversies raised troubling questions and concerns about the once-venerable volunteer organization.

The village of Antioch pulled out of its contract with the rescue squad in May 2013 and contracted with the Antioch Fire Department for ambulance service. The squad continued to serve township residents for a year until the fire protection district board did not renew its contract in May 2014. The board decided to contract rescue services with the fire department to consolidate all village and township fire and rescue services under one agency.

The Antioch Fire Department now handles fire and rescue services in Antioch and Antioch Township. It is funded by and receives oversight from the village of Antioch, Antioch Township, and the First Fire Protection District of Antioch.

After losing its contract with the fire district, squad officials donated ambulances and other emergency equipment to departments outside the Antioch area. That angered Antioch fire officials who said the equipment was purchased, in part, with funds raised by the community the squad served.

“In winding down the squad’s business, it was important to ARS’s leadership to continue the altruistic spirit of community service that has so motivated ARS’s volunteers for the 75 years they have served the residents of Antioch,” the statement read. “ARS believes this distribution of its funds will benefit the Antioch community and its residents for many years to come.”

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Tinley Park Annual Firefighter’s Benefit Dance

From the Tinley Park Firefighters Association:

Join with Tinley Park firefighters Saturday, January 30, 2016 at the Odyssey Country Club, 19110 S. Ridgeland Ave in Tinley Park for a night of entertainment, dancing, raffles, giveaways, and silent auctions alongside mingling with neighbors and fellow firefighters with all proceeds going for great causes!

Doors open at 7pm and Chicago’s own Maggie Speaks Band will be providing the entertainment from 8pm until midnight.

Proceeds go to the Tinley Park Firefighter’s Benefit fund, where 100% goes towards community events and association functions such as Tinley Wish, Burn Camp 5K, Breakfast with Santa, plus other great causes, fundraising, and research.

Advance ticket purchases available until Saturday, January 23 through Eventbrite Event are $7.00 saving you 30%.  Tickets the night of the event will be $10.00.

We hope our friends, family, community members, and fire department neighbors will join the Tinley Park Firefighters Association for the 114th annual Firefighters Benefit Dance! Follow this link:

Tinley Park Annual Firefighter’s Benefit Dance

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Chicago MVA highway response, 1-23-16

This from Steve Redick:

A few shots of what was dispatched as a pin in, EB JFK at Natoma. Nobody was pinned when I arrived. At least 1 was removed to a trauma center. Looked bad … hopefully the injuries were minor. A good view of the blocking technique.

fire trucks at highway crash

Steve Redick photo

fire trucks at highway crash

Steve Redick photo

fire trucks at highway crash

Steve Redick photo

fire trucks at highway crash

Steve Redick photo

fire trucks at highway crash

Steve Redick photo

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