Posts Tagged Chicago Fire Department

Chicago Fire Department news

Excerpts from cbsnewschicago.com:

Five people, including three members of the Chicago Fire Department were injured when an ambulance collided with a car and crashed into a pole at the intersection of Jackson and Hamlin Boulevards, along the western border of Garfield Park on the West Side.

The three CFD members were taken to Rush University Medical Center in fair to serious condition. The patient in the ambulance was taken to Mount Sinai Hospital in fair to serious condition. The woman driving the car involved in the crash was taken to Stroger Hospital in serious to critical condition.

thanks Rob

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New truck for Chicago (more)

This from Danny Nelms:

Last truck on order  – Truck 15 FDE 378

 

#chicagoareafire.com; #FireTruck; #CFD; #EONE; #E-ONE;

#chicagoareafire.com; #FireTruck; #CFD; #EONE; #E-ONE;

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Chicago Fire Department news

Excerpts from the ChicagoSunTimes.com:

Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot was accused Thursday of scrapping a Chicago Fire Department promotion list — and saddling taxpayers with excessive overtime costs — to get even with a controversial city council member who was second in line to be promoted.

Last year, Lightfoot lashed out at Ald. Jim Gardiner over profane, threatening, and misogynistic text messages he sent to people, including Lightfoot’s political consultant and chief of staff to Finance Chairman Scott Waguespack . Lightfoot also asked then-Inspector General Joe Ferguson to investigate.

One week later, Gardiner rose on the council floor to issue a rare public apology for the embarrassment his messages caused. He received a rare rebuke from the Cook County Democratic Party and remains under federal investigation for allegedly retaliating against some Northwest Side constituents for political purposes.

Now, Gardiner is turning the tables on Lightfoot — with a recent lawsuit to back up his claim. He is a Chicago firefighter on a leave of absence from the department. He said the mayor, with whom he has clashed repeatedly, tossed CFD’s 2009 promotion list simply because he was second in line to move up to the rank of lieutenant. The list has been up since 2013. CFD policy is to exhaust the list before putting up a new one.

David Barron and Michael Lynch, two white firefighters awaiting promotion to lieutenant filed a lawsuit Aug. 30 in Cook County Circuit Court accusing the city of violating their rights by scrapping the list and suspending promotions, even though there were 40 vacancies as of April — and even more now.  That has forced firefighters to work excessive amounts of overtime while the city races to finalize a new list from a lieutenants’ exam administered by the city in 2019, the firefighters’ attorney said.

The hiring plan requires the city to document the reason for retiring the promotion list. But, in response to a Freedom of Information Request filed by one of the aggrieved firefighters, the city responded that no such document existed.

The lawsuit, which an attorney hopes to turn into a class action, seeks promotions, back pay, and lost seniority for the roughly 60 firefighters whose names appear on the now-scrapped list.

Gardiner himself faces two federal lawsuits. One accuses him of harassing, intimidating and falsely arresting a constituent who picked up a cellphone Gardiner’s ward superintendent left at a convenience store. The other accuses him of violating the First Amendment rights of 45th Ward residents by deleting their criticisms of him from his official Facebook page. The city has refused to represent Gardiner in either suit.

Though one of his obscene text messages suggested otherwise, Gardiner has maintained he has “never withheld, nor have I ever instructed or condoned my staff to withhold city services from any resident.”

It’s not the first time Gardiner and Lightfoot have clashed. Shortly after taking office, Gardiner accused the mayor of rewarding his vanquished predecessor John Arena with a $129,996-a-year job in the Department of Planning and Development.

A few months later, Arena resigned from that post after Gardiner accused him of using his job as city planner to continue fighting the man who beat him.

thanks Dennis

 

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Building explosion in Chicago, 9-20-22

Excerpts from cbsnews.com:

Eight people were injured in an apartment building explosion Tuesday around 9 a.m. in a four-story apartment building at 5601 W. West End Ave in the South Austin neighborhood.

Ten ambulances were sent to the scene, and at least eight people have been transported to hospitals. Two victims, a male and a female, were taken to Loyola University Medical Center in Maywood. Three victims, two males and a female, were taken to Mount Sinai Hospital. One female was taken to West Suburban Medical Center in Oak Park. Two males were taken to Stroger Hospital of Cook County. One of the people who was injured was across the street at the time.

The fire department brought in crews to shore up the structure to enable a search of the building, and a final search of the building was completed indicating that everyone got out. 

A Peoples Gas spokesperson said the cause of the explosion remains unknown, and  that there was no reason at this point to believe the cause is related to gas or any of our equipment. 

The U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, and the Chicago Police Department Bomb Unit were on the scene to assist with the response and investigation.  

The explosion happened on the top floor of the building on the eastern side of the structure, sending a large amount of bricks and other debris into the street, damaging at least three cars parked along the curb. The roof of at least one unit in the building collapsed as a result of the explosion, and several windows in the building also were blown out.

Building inspection records show the building has failed its last 12 inspections since 2010, including citations in January 2017 and February 2018 for “failing to repair or replace defective or out of service smoke detectors and operate continuously.” Most recently in 2020, one violation included a failure to connect a gas appliance to a flue or vent. After an administrative hearing on building code violations in February 2020, a follow-up inspection determined all of the violations had been corrected. 

 

thanks Martin

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CFD sells surplus engine

Found at publicsurplus.com:

View Images
Final Price $4,100.00
(Reserve has been met)

Time Left Closed
High Bidder wrsco
# of Bids 
First Offer $1,500.00
 
thanks Martin

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CFD sells surplus ladder truck

Found at publicsurplus.com:

View Images
Final Price $4,800.00
(Reserve has been met)

Time Left Closed
High Bidder wrsco
# of Bids 14 
First Offer $1,500.00
 
thanks Martin

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Chicago Fire Department news

Excerpts from the ChicagoSunTimes.com:

At about 4 a.m. on Saturday, firefighters were called to the 10500 block of South Forest Avenue for a fire on the second floor of the home. A 71-year woman was found unresponsive and taken to Roseland Community Hospital, where she was pronounced dead. She was identified as Patricia Farmer by the Cook County medical examiner’s office.

 A 77-year-old man that was also in the house was listed in critical condition at the same hospital. In addition, a firefighter was taken to Little Company of Mary Hospital with a knee injury after a fall, and was listed in good condition.

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Chicago Fire Department news

Excerpts from ABC7Chicago.com:

A 3-year-old boy is in critical condition after he was pulled from Lake Michigan near Navy Pier Monday.

Police said the boy was with an adult when he fell into the lake on the north side of Navy Pier shortly after 1 p.m.

The Chicago Fire Department said the child was taken to Lurie Children’s Hospital in full cardiac arrest.

Investigators are still working to determine how the child ended up in the water.

thanks Martin

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New truck for Chicago (more)

This from Danny Nelms:

Truck 51 FDE 376 

FB Photo
#chicagoareafire.com; #FireTruck; #E-ONE; #CFD; #ChicagoFD;

photo from Facebook 

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Chicago FD ambulance stolen (more)

Excerpts from nbcchicago.com:

A Chicago man is accused of stealing a city ambulance and leading police on a 70-mile chase through several counties. But records show that neither the city nor Cook County is pressing charges for the theft – leaving only charges in Grundy County.

Newly obtained video shows the very beginning of a police pursuit after the Chicago Fire Department ambulance was stolen from outside the Chinatown firehouse on April 25. The dashcam video shows a squad car first spotting the vehicle at 5:06 p.m. on I-55, 22 minutes after it was stolen off the street.

After a prolonged pursuit, authorities said 45-year-old Chicago attorney Benjamin Herrington was eventually arrested near Dwight in Livingston County. He was taken to a hospital in Morris, which is how the case ended up on the desk of Grundy County State’s Attorney Jason Helland.

Herrington was charged with felony possession of a stolen motor vehicle and damage to government property. He has pleaded not guilty, was released on bond earlier this month and is slated to go to trial in October.

The Chicago police report filed when investigators closed the case on May 6 reveals that the damages to the ambulance required repairs totaling $7,833.44 – and that “no additional charges would be sought in Cook County.” The reason? “Grundy County’s intent to charge in their jurisdiction and Herrington’s possible mental health concerns,” the report reads. The Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office said CPD never referred the matter for charging.

“One of the criticisms I had was, ‘How does a Chicago ambulance that was stolen in Cook County end up being at the cost of the Grundy County taxpayers?’ That was a legitimate concern,” Helland said, adding that his answer to the questions he’s faced is: “When an offender puts Grundy County at risk, we’re not going to ask for another jurisdiction to successfully prosecute the case.”

“I’ve always told my prosecutors, don’t rely on other prosecutors in other counties not under our direction to do the right thing,” he added. “We don’t know the strengths and weaknesses of their cases, but if they’re committing criminal acts in Grundy County, they need to be held accountable.”

As for mental health concerns being a reason Chicago police didn’t pursue charges, Helland estimated that 75 to 80% of his office’s cases are tied in some way to substance abuse or mental health problems. And without a robust and accessible system in place to treat those issues, the responsibility often falls to the criminal justice system.

“Mental health considerations are factored into account ultimately when we have a disposition on a case,” Helland continued. “We want to make sure that once there’s a finding of guilty or a plea of guilty, that there’s a constructive sentence that, if an individual commits an offense based on a mental issue, that they have the proper rehabilitation and get the proper treatment.”

CPD declined to explain in any further detail why they closed the case without making their own arrest.

thanks Rob

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