Archive for June, 2023

As seen around … South Holland

This from 312FirePhotos:

New apparatus updates for South Holland, Illinois

Engine 43 – 2022 Spartan Metro Star / SpartanER 1500-750 Serial# 221104-01
This engine will replace the former Engine 43, a 2009 Pierce Velocity, and will become Engine 44. The former Engine 44, a 2001 HME/Smeal, will become Engine 143 and the 1999 HME/3-D will be assigned as the training engine. 
 
Ambulance 43 (new and not yet in service)
2023 Ford F-550 / 2009 Medtec remounted by Osage Ambulance.
Serial# 8508(Medtec), Serial# R-196(Osage)
The box for this new ambulance was purchased from Calumet City, Illinois
Ambulance 43 (Current) is a 2016 Ford F-550/Osage, Serial# J-2284
#chicagoareafire.com; #312FirePhotos; #SouthHollandFD; #FireTruck; #SpartanER; #Spartan; #MetroStar;

312FirePhotos

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312FirePhotos

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Palatine FIre Department news

#chicagoareafire.com; #palatineFD;

click to download

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Skokie Police Department news

Excerpts from abc7chicago.com:

The heroic efforts of two Skokie police officers were captured by bodycam footage when officers Alfonso Hernandez and Rogelio Cantu worked earlier this month to resuscitate an infant near the 8100 block of North Keating.

The officers’ biggest fear did not stop them from giving chest compressions in just minutes, soon leading to tears from the infant.

Officers said the infant is continuing to do well.

 

thanks Rob

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Rockford Fire Department news

Excerpts from FirefighterNation.com:

Firefighter Miguel Holland, 49, of Rockford faces charges of aggravated driving under the influence and reckless homicide after a fatal fire truck crash on March 6 at Whitman and North Church streets that involved a Rockford fire engine and a Ford Focus. The driver of the Ford, Marta Esquivias, 57, died at the hospital from injuries sustained in the wreck.

At the time of the crash, Holland told investigators that the fire engine was traveling about 35 miles-per-hour in the 30 mile-per-hour zone when the Focus entered the intersection, and he tried to avoid the collision but could not. He told investigators he had not used any product containing tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) in over a week.

Winnebago County State’s Attorney J. Hanley said a speed deceleration report generated by the Pierce fire engine showed the apparatus was traveling at 47 miles-per-hour when the brakes were applied just before the crash. He said Holland submitted a blood and urine sample that showed THC levels of 19.0 +/- 4.0 ng/mL – above the legal limit of 10 for operating a motor vehicle. Holland faces up to 33 years in prison on the three charges.

thanks Dennis

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New engine for the East Hazel Crest FD (more)

From Bill Schreiber:

East Hazel Crest Engine Company 17 chassis update
#chicagoareafire.com; #rosenbaueramerica; #FireTruck; #EastHazelCrestFD;

Rosenbauer photo

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Rosenbauer photo

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Peoria Fire Department news

Excerpts from nbc5chicago.com:

A harrowing rescue involving a five-year-old jumping to safety during an apartment fire in Peoria was caught on body-camera footage earlier this week.

According to officials, Peoria County deputies at 10:25 p.m. Tuesday responded to an apartment fire at the Edgewood Apartment complex in the 2700 block of Radan Court. Upon arrival, deputies reported flames coming out of the building, and family of four trapped on the third floor.

In a press release, the Peoria County Sherriff’s Office says deputies attempted to make entry into the building, but that flames had overtaken the hallway. Video and photos from the scene posted to the Sherriff’s office Facebook page show officers attempting to enter a stairwell engulfed in flames.

According to the release, deputies worked with citizens and used a blanket to catch a five-year-old, who had been trapped on the third floor by the blaze.

Body-camera video from the scene shows neighbors and fire officials urgently directing the child to jump out of a window, shouting “Now! Now!” The video goes on to show the group eventually catching the child safely in the blanket.

According to officials the three other family members in the apartment were also rescued from the fire. The cause of the blaze is still under investigation.

thanks Rob

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Chicago Fire Department news (more)

Excerpts from nbc5chicago.com:

Separate juries on Wednesday found Devin Barron and Jaylen Saulsberry guilty of first-degree murder in the shooting of retired Chicago FD Lieutenant Dwain Williams, who Cook County prosecutors said was confronted at gunpoint by a carjacking crew in December 2020 as he left a gourmet popcorn shop.

The jury in Barron’s trial returned their verdict about five hours after deliberations began and immediately after the jury in Saulsberry’s trial retired to begin their own discussions. It took less than two hours for the second panel to reach its decision.

When their trials began last week, there were three defendants and three separate juries.

But in a surprise on Tuesday, the third co-defendant, Dwain Johnson, took the stand to testify against Barron and Saulsberry after Johnson accepted a plea offer from the state’s attorney’s office mid-trial that saw his murder charge reduced.

Johnson, 20, pleaded guilty to a count of aggravated battery with a firearm, according to court records. Prosecutors said they would seek the maximum 30-year sentence against him.

A fourth defendant, a teenage boy who was 15 at the time of Williams’ death, had his case adjudicated in juvenile court and also testified against Barron and Saulsberry. Prosecutors said he was back in school and had stayed out of trouble.

All four were part of a carjacking crew that targeted Williams’ Jeep Grand Cherokee SUV after they spotted it while driving.

With the 15-year-old behind the wheel of a stolen Ford Fusion sedan, the crew trailed Williams until he parked outside a store and then waited for him to return.

Barron and Saulsberry got out of the stolen Ford with guns drawn and confronted Williams as he returned to his Jeep.

Williams, a concealed-carry holder, drew his own gun and exchanged fire with the crew before they fled. Williams was shot in the abdomen and died a short time later.

Investigators were able to track the group using cellphone data and surveillance footage.

DNA evidence implicating Saulsberry was recovered from a shoe that one of the gunmen left behind as he fled, and a fingerprint on a granola bar found in the back seat of the Ford when it was recovered in Tinley Park matched Barron’s, prosecutors said.

Attorneys for both defendants spent much of their closing arguments Wednesday assailing the integrity and reliability of testimony by the teenager and Johnson.

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New ambulance for New Lenox FPD

From lifelineambulance.com:

Illinois, New Lenox Fire Protection District
Reference #: 5352
Model: Superliner Type I
Dealer: Jefferson Fire & Safety
Module Size: 171″
Headroom: 72″
Chassis Make: F-Series
Chassis Type: F550
Wheel: 4WD
Air Ride: Liquid Spring
#chicagoareafire.com; #ambulance; #LifeLineAmbulance; #NewLenoxFPD;

Life Line Ambulance photo

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Life Line Ambulance photo

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Life Line Ambulance photo

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Life Line Ambulance photo

thanks Martin

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Fire Service news

Excerpts from news.miami.edu:

Chitvan Killawala and Umer Bakali, two University of Miami graduate students, have developed a special sensor capable of detecting the real-time presence of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in the warm zone at structural fires. 

A class of chemicals that result from burning coal, oil, gas, wood, garbage, and tobacco, PAHs can bind to or form small particles in the air. In laboratory animals, they are known to cause certain cancers. 

Scientists using bulky instruments like mass spectrometers, which require industrial compressed gas cylinders, have measured levels of PAHs in samples in laboratory settings. But deploying such large devices in the field to test for the presence of the chemical is not practical. 

“As a consequence, there’s very little solid evidence on the levels of PAHs firefighters are exposed to, particularly inside the warm zone of an active fire scene where team staging activities occur and where they aren’t suited up in personal protective gear. So, our sensors help fill a void,” said Killawala, a doctoral student in biomedical engineering, who started developing the special sensor about two years ago. 

The two used small commercially available sensors designed to measure vinyl chloride, benzene, and other chemicals. “We tweaked their parameters a bit so that we could test for polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons,” Bakali explained. “The PAHs interact with the sensor and cause a voltage drop, basically a dip in the way that the sensor reads. And that gives us a readout that we can compare to a baseline when there are no PAHs present.” 

To test the effectiveness of their sensor, the two graduate students had to find a way to position it close enough to a fire without putting themselves at risk. So, they purchased a miniature remote-controlled monster truck from a hobby store, modifying its exterior and mounting their sensor on its top. 

Then, during controlled live burns at fire-training facilities in Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach, and Pinellas counties, they drove their modified mobile rover into the warm zones of structural fires. The sensors, which render a readout in just a few seconds, recorded elevated levels of PAHs, providing evidence that firefighters would be wise to don protective gear in the warm zone as a precaution. 

He and Killawala are modifying their sensor to make it more effective and are planning further testing at fire academies. 

They envision their sensor being integrated into the gear firefighters carry, allowing them to measure levels of PAHs at command posts in the warm zone. “Another avenue is just to deploy it in fire stations to measure the concentration of PAHs in the air,” Bakali said.

Firefighters with whom the two graduate students collaborated are optimistic about the sensor’s potential, according to Killawala. “And that’s actually the most exciting part of what we’re doing,” he said. “We see how much they value our data. So, that’s a huge motivating factor for us. This could help inform changes in policy and lead to better occupational safety.”

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West Dundee FD buys used aerial

This from Martin Nowak:

Sold to: West Dundee FD – IL
#chicagoareafire.com; #FireTruck; #Pierce;

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