Posts Tagged Chicago LODD
radio traffic from the Still & Box Alarm fire at 9213 S. Baltimore 12/14/15
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thanks Drew
This from From Bob Daluga,
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Chicago firefighters responded to an industrial building fire in the 9200 block of S. Baltimore overnight (12/14/15). A Mayday Alert was issued with a Still & Box Alarm and EMS Plan I for a firefighter that fell through a hole in the floor. The firefighter was rescued and transported to Christ Hospital Code Red.
Excerpts from ABC7Chicago.com:
Firefighters responded to a fire in a three-story structure in the 9200-block of South Baltimore Avenue around 2:40 a.m. Monday. The building was reportedly under construction and there were several holes in the floor. While battling the blaze, a firefighter fell through one of those holes.
… a Mayday was sent out and the firefighter was found a short time later.
First responders[Paramedics] performed CPR at the scene and rushed the firefighter to Advocate Christ Medical Center in critical condition.Officials said the fire started on the second floor of the building and was extinguished by around 3:45 a.m.
Chicago Fire Commissioner Jose Santiago stated that the firefighter from Tower Ladder 34 was making a search on the second floor and fell down an open elevator shaft to the basement. They quickly made access to the basement and he was transported by Ambulance 22 to Christ Hospital where he died.
15-year veteran of the Chicago Fire Department is dead after falling down an elevator shaft while battling a warehouse fire in South Chicago, according to officials on Monday morning.
The firefighter has been identifed as Dan Capuano, 42. He was the father of three children.
Capuano was injured about 20 minutes after crews were called to a vacant warehouse at 92nd and Baltimore about 2:40 a.m., according to WGN-TV reports.
WBEX.org has a lengthy article explaining Chicago’s red ‘X’ program:
While walking around her Logan Square neighborhood Chicagoan Poppy Coleman noticed something peculiar about two rundown buildings: They bore metal signs emblazoned with a large red “X.”… she wanted to know more …
Since 2012 nearly 2,000 of these red “X” signs have popped up around Chicago. It’s not hard to find people posting in online forums, wondering aloud whether the red “X” means a building’s condemned, vacant or for sale. This program, meant to save the lives of [firefighters] and others, has run out of money.
On Dec. 22, 2010, firefighters were searching for squatters inside a burning, long-vacant laundromat on the 1700 block of East 75th Street, in Chicago’s South Shore neighborhood. As firefighters continued their sweep of the building, a wall fell and then the roof collapsed, killing firefighters Edward Stringer and Corey Ankum. Nineteen others were injured.
“When I first became alderman, one of the first visits that I paid was to Fire Chief Mark Neilsen,” said 50th Ward Ald. Debra Silverstein, who sponsored two city ordinances in response. The first ordinance, passed in 2011, required the department to catalogue buildings with bowstring truss construction, a variety that’s prone to collapse during fires.
Silverstein’s second ordinance sought to find and mark all of Chicago’s dangerous buildings. For that program they decided on rectangular metal signs displaying a big red “X”, a symbol used by fire departments in New York City and other some other cities. That iconography comes from a federal program for marking vacant structures.
Chicago doesn’t assign red “X” signs to just any vacant or abandoned building; a sign is a visual cue that a structure is structurally unsound and that firefighters should take precautions when responding to emergencies there.
Since Silverstein’s ordinance passed in June 2012, the Chicago Fire Department has put up 1,804 red “X” signs. That’s less than half of the more than 5,000 vacant properties registered in the city — itself a fraction of the estimated total of vacant and abandoned buildings in Chicago — but CFD Spokesman Larry Langford says it’s a start.
“We picked 1,800 that we wanted to get marked right away,” he says. When the program started, Chicago’s Department of Buildings sent over a list of structurally unsound properties for CFD to add to as they saw fit. The list from the Department of Buildings included a few hundred properties deemed more than 35 percent deteriorated. The department has largely left it up to aldermen and their offices to publicize the signs’ purpose.
There is a process to rehabilitate vacant and abandoned properties, but the city requires owners to obtain special permission before performing work on red x structures. Two years after the program began, however, only one building has successfully been repaired and had its red “X” legally removed.
… this program that was meant to save lives has run out of money. The city received $675,000 from the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s Assistance to Firefighters grant program to fund the red “X” program. Most of that federal grant money went to two local contractors: AGAE Contractors and M-K Signs. Data obtained by WBEZ show the city spent all of that money over thirteen months starting in June of 2012, and hasn’t put up any new red “X” signs since July 2013.
thanks Dan
The Chicago Tribune has an article about the NIOSH Report on the LODD of CFD Captain Herbie Johnson:
Chicago firefighters failed to properly coordinate and communicate their strategy for extinguishing a blaze that killed a 32-year veteran of the department last year, a federal investigation found.
The report marks the second time in as many years that the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health has cited poor communications as a contributing factor in a Chicago firefighter’s death. Though not as scathing as the findings from a December 2010 blaze that killed two firefighters, the latest NIOSH report indicates there are still questions about how the department communicates while battling fires.
The report also describes the harrowing scene inside a burning Gage Park neighborhood two-flat on Nov. 2, 2012, where Capt. Herbert Johnson repeatedly ordered his men to safety after suffering severe burns to his hands, face and the inside of his mouth.
“He was trying to get us out but he couldn’t get himself out,” said firefighter-paramedic Mike Imparato, who yelled “mayday” — he had no radio — after Johnson fell to the floor.
Both the Fire Department and the firefighters union have reviewed the report, which does not specifically state which, if any, issues had a direct bearing on Johnson’s death. Instead it lists a series of “contributing factors” that include poor communication, staffing shortages and inefficient coordination at the scene.
A union official said the report, while an important learning tool, also shows that fires are filled with hidden dangers beyond anyone’s control.
“They got on the scene and there was minimal fire showing from the first hole in the roof,” said Thomas Ryan, president of Chicago Fire Fighters Union Local 2. “It looked as though they had it under control, then all hell broke loose. Johnson’s first instinct was to tell the members to get out. He looked out for the safety of his fellow firefighters. Unfortunately he didn’t make it out.”
Johnson, who had been promoted to captain that summer, was in the house for only six minutes when things went terribly wrong, according to investigators. As Johnson carried a hose inside, the scene commander announced over department radios that other firefighters were ventilating the building and blasting water into the attic.
Johnson, who was carrying a radio, never confirmed that he got that message. But the plan proceeded anyway. The report specifically chastises scene commanders for failing to confirm that Johnson knew the plan to attack the fire.
“Everyone has to know the strategy that is being implemented and understand their role by acknowledging via radio their position and role,” the report states.
The federal investigators also took issue with the strategy employed that day, saying that firefighters on the scene failed to consider that horizontal ventilation — doors were opened on either end of the building, and there was a hole in the roof — would cause the fire and heat to intensify and become dangerous, federal investigators said.
Around the same time as the ventilation plan was enacted, Johnson ordered firefighters on the second floor to get out of the building. His order was followed by a loud noise, as Johnson collapsed on the second floor.
The report confirms that the firefighter-paramedic who found Johnson did not have a radio and was reduced to screaming “mayday” to call attention to Johnson’s injuries, according to federal investigators. The report notes that on the day of the fire the city was still awaiting a shipment that would have provided a radio to every member of the department.
Those additional radios were recommended by NIOSH after an investigation into a December 2010 fire in a vacant South Side building that killed two firefighters. The lack of radios was cited as a contributing factor in that blaze.
Chicago Fire Department spokesman Larry Langford on Monday initially insisted that all firefighters involved in the Gage Park fire had radios. After reading the report Monday, he conceded that some firefighters at the scene did not have radios but said it would have made little difference.
“That had nothing to do with this incident,” Langford said. “Communication was not the issue in this incident from what I determined.”
Every Chicago firefighter now has a digital radio, Langford said. Most were distributed on Nov. 18, 2012, about two weeks after Johnson’s death.
Imparato, who made the mayday call without a radio, told the Tribune he yelled for about 10 seconds before help arrived. He tried to grab Johnson’s radio to call for assistance but couldn’t reach it, he said.
“Ten seconds seemed like an eternity,” he said. “I could hear footsteps on the stairs, so I knew others were coming. I was screaming ‘mayday’ the entire time.”
Imparato said he doesn’t believe a radio would have changed Johnson’s fate.
Tim Olk is at the Leak & Sons Funeral Home at 7838 S. Cottage Grove Avenue for the visitation for Chicago Firefighter Walter Patmon, Jr.
The schedule for tomorrow is:
Firefighters assemble at 9 a.m. next Wednesday at the Apostolic Church of God, 6320 S. Dorchester Ave., where a wake will be held at 10 a.m. followed by an 11 a.m. funeral service.
Interment will follow at Restvale Cemetery, 11700 S. Laramie St. in Alsip, officials said.
According to the Chicago Tribune:
Visitation and funeral services have been set for Walter Patmon Jr., a Chicago firefighter who died on duty Sunday night of natural causes.
On Wednesday officials announced services for Patmon, with visitation set for Tuesday from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. at Leak & Sons Funeral Home, 7838 S. Cottage Grove Ave.
The Chicago Fire Department walk-through ceremony will be at 6 p.m.
Firefighters will assemble at 9 a.m. next Wednesday at the Apostolic Church of God, 6320 S. Dorchester Ave., where a wake will be held at 10 a.m. followed by an 11 a.m. funeral service.
Interment will follow at Restvale Cemetery, 11700 S. Laramie St. in Alsip, officials said.
The Tribune article is HERE.
This from Martin Nowak:
Here are some pictures taken from the funeral. The rigs are near the church. Many departments from all around the state showed up.
Pictures in order:A shot of a many fire trucks.Truck 39Frankfort Engine 3 was one of the Departments.Rear of Tower 39Ambulance 8 and Tower 39Looking far down Western (I believe). Two CFD Trucks with an American flag hanging.