Archive for April 11th, 2017

Chicago Fire Department news

Excerpts from npr.org:

In a lot of cities across the country there’s a good chance that [when] you call 911 for an ambulance, a firetruck — with a full fire crew including a paramedic — will arrive. But that doesn’t mean they can deliver the emergency care you might need.

In Chicago, like many cities, the fire department oversees both firefighters and paramedics.

When a medical call comes in, dispatchers prefer to send ambulances. But there are half as many of those as there are firetrucks. And fire department spokesman Larry Langford says those ambulances can be super busy. Meanwhile, firetrucks are often much less busy and parked in firehouses, just minutes away from any given emergency. So the 911 dispatchers make a choice.

“They save valuable time by sending the closest vehicle, which is usually a firetruck that has at least one paramedic” Langford says.

That sounds logical until you ask why Chicago’s fire department still has twice as many firetrucks as ambulances, especially when the department gets 20 times more medical calls than fire calls.

Getting answers can be difficult. That has a lot to do with the political power of fire departments and their unions — and the challenge of trying to change that.

Chicago’s not alone in facing these challenges. Most cities are seeing big drops in fire calls and big jumps in medical calls. But few are really reforming their departments to meet this changing landscape.

Portland State researcher Phil Keisling thinks that’s a mistake. He looked at why fire departments don’t just admit that they’re mostly medical services these days.

“And I keep getting answers that are really not a whole lot more than, ‘Well, that’s the way we’ve always done it,’ ” he says. Keisling says that’s not a good answer “in a world that has limited resources and you want to try to optimize the resources you’ve got.”

As more cities see the drawbacks of using giant firetrucks for medical issues, they’re facing calls for reform. That’s what Misty Bruckner found when she researched the problem at the Public Policy Center at Wichita State. While she didn’t find agreement on everything, she said there was some consensus.

“I think everybody can agree that the ladder truck responding to someone who may have a sprained ankle is not the best use of our public resources,” she says.

Langford disagrees. And he thinks people shouldn’t get so hung up on what kind of vehicle arrives.

[but] firetrucks aren’t equipped to transport to a hospital. Only ambulances are. And this transport part can be crucial, according to veteran Chicago Paramedic Rich Raney.

“When you get a stroke patient or a trauma patient, the most important thing is that they be transported to the hospital as quickly as possible,” he says.

Each city runs its emergency services differently, so solutions are going to vary. In Chicago, for example, paramedics want more ambulances and staffing.

New York and Wichita recently started deploying medics in SUVs for less urgent calls. And Washington, D.C., is trying something called nurse triage lines. They let callers talk through their problems with a nurse on the phone. But Keisling says some proposals should also look at moving resources from large firefighting staffs.

“And it’s not anti-firefighter, it’s not anti-union, and it’s not anti-government,” he says. “It’s just, why aren’t we taking limited resources and deploying them in a smarter way?”

While there’s no agreement on exactly what that smarter way is going to be, most agree it doesn’t involve sending a firetruck to treat someone with heartburn.

thanks Dan

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Chicago Ridge Fire Department history

This from Mike Summa:

This was the Chicago Ridge’s E6523, a 1981 Chevy/Indiana Fire Apparatus 250/100 mini pumper.  Enjoy and please comment.
Mike Summa
Chicago Ridge FD history

Chicago Ridge FD E6523, a 1981 Chevy/Indiana Fire Apparatus 250/100 mini pumper. Mike Summa photo

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New squad for Clarendon Hills

Production photos of the new squad being built for the Clarendon Hills FD by Pierce so#30266

 

fire truck being built

fire truck being built

Pierce photo

fire truck being built

Pierce photo

fire truck being built

Pierce photo

fire truck being built

Pierce photo

fire truck being built

Pierce photo

fire truck being built

Pierce photo

 

thanks Scott

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Great Chicago Flood Mutual Aid Response

This from Dave Weaver:

4/13/92 Great Chicago Flood Mutual Aid Response

Fire departments from MABAS Division 13 in Kane County were requested along with many other MABAS divisions to respond with pumps to Chicago (MABAS Div. 9) to help control the Great Chicago Flood. The flood was caused by a bridge piling construction project that created a breach in an abandoned coal tunnel beneath the North Branch of the Chicago River. It was discovered the morning of Monday, April 13, 1992. Companies from departments including Batavia, Geneva, Elburn, Hampshire, Maple Park, and North Aurora, rallied at the Kane County Sheriff’s Office which was located in Geneva. The task force departed around 4:30 PM based on the time shown on the overhead light board at the I-88 York Rd. toll plaza. The convoy traveled to the staging area at the Chicago Fire Academy. I was a member of the Marywood FPD and shot this historic response to assist Chicago. Other than some precautionary EMS responses from the 1995 heat wave disaster, this was one of just a few manpower related mutual aid fire requests that Chicago has made in modern history.

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