Posts Tagged Joliet Fire Department

Joliet Fire Department news

Excerpts from the ChicagoTribune.com:

Joliet firefighters found the bodies of two women and an infant while searching a smoldering house after extinguishing a blaze.

Firefighters were called to the house at about 2 a.m. Saturday. When they arrived they found the house engulfed in flames. They were told by a person that he’d jumped from the second floor to escape but that there were more people inside.

Firefighters could not immediately enter the house because of the intensity of the fire. Joliet Fire Chief Greg Blaskey says when it was safe firefighters entered and found the two women and an infant on the second floor.

The cause of the fire remains under investigation by the Joliet Fire Department and the Bureau of Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives.

thanks Dan

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Joliet Fire Department news

Excerpts from the Herald-news.com:

James Lausch, an apparatus operator with the Joliet Fire Department, died on Dec. 30, 1984, at the station after fighting fires that night.

Lausch was one of 19 former area firefighters who died in the line of duty and were honored at a small ceremony Saturday at the EMS/Fire Science Training Center at Joliet Junior College.

The ceremony also was meant to unveil a small, traveling memorial with all the names, titles, and dates of death for the 19 firefighters. Eventually, Joliet Firefighter Bryan Ogrizovich, a member of the honor guard and pipes and drums, wants to erect a permanent memorial.

The planning began about a year ago for the memorial so he is using the traveling memorial to show that there is an interest in establishing a permanent one.

There are not any specific plans as of yet for the location, construction, and funding for the memorial, but Ogrizovich wants to continue honoring the fallen. This was the first time such a memorial has been held for the local fallen firefighters.

The earliest firefighter honored was William Gardiner, a Lockport volunteer firefighter who died on Dec. 17, 1897. 

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Joliet Fire Department news

From the CityofJoliet.com:

Joliet City Manager James D. Hock announces the appointment of Gregory Blaskey as the new deputy fire chief.
Deputy Chief Blaskey is a lifelong resident of Joliet and attended Joliet West High School and Joliet Junior College. This month marks his 30-year anniversary with the Joliet Fire Department. He has held the ranks of firefighter, paramedic, apparatus operator, lieutenant, and captain in addition to being the past deputy director of the Joliet Emergency Management Agency. Deputy Chief Blaskey has two sons who serve in public safety as police officers.
Joliet Fire Chief Joe Formhals stated, “There were five very qualified internal candidates who applied for the position of deputy fire chief and were interviewed by the Selection Committee. Deputy Chief Blaskey brings with him many years of experience handling labor management issues, and he is also well versed in Emergency Management. I welcome him to our team and know he will do an outstanding job.”

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Joliet Fire Department news

Excerpts from the Heraldnews.com:

 A 70-year-old man has died after his clothes caught fire Friday at his Joliet home.

Donnie Creal was pronounced dead at 12:36 p.m. Saturday at the burn unit at Loyola University Medical Center in Maywood.

At 9:45 p.m. Friday, firefighters were called to Creal’s residence in the 1100 block of Charlesworth Avenue and extinguished a small kitchen fire, according to Joliet Fire Department Battalion Chief Mike Stromberg.

“[Creal] had been sitting on his enclosed porch watching television with his chair next to a propane heater,” Stromberg said. “His clothing got too close, he tried to extinguish them himself, but was unable to do so.”

Creal then ran through his kitchen to get into the shower and set some packages on the counter ablaze. A neighbor called 911 and a Joliet police officer suffered smoke inhalation while removing Creal from the house.

Creal spoke with investigators in the ambulance as he was taken to Silver Cross Hospital in New Lenox. He later was transported to Loyola. The medical examiner’s office has ruled his death an accident.

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Joliet Fire Department news

Excerpts from the Heraldnews.com:

Thirty-two years after joining the Joliet Fire Department, Ray Randich retired Friday after eight years as deputy chief. Chief Joe Formhals said a recent search of the department’s roster history showed Randich served as second-in-command longer than anyone else.

Randich holds a fire science degree from Joliet Junior College and was one of the first Joliet firefighters to become a paramedic, which is now a requirement. He served as chief of operations and was the secretary and treasurer for the firefighters union. He and his wife, Donna Randich, have three children.

“Zak’s a Plainfield firefighter, Lauren is a teacher and Daniel is at Western looking toward law enforcement,” Ray Randich said. “I think I’m proudest that my kids chose careers where they help and serve people. That’s what I’ve gotten [the most] out of firefighting.”

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Joliet Fire Department news

Excerpts from the Heraldnews.com:

Joliet Deputy Fire Chief Ray Randich said firefighters were called about 11 a.m. to 311 N. Hickory St. on Tuesday for a house fire. The two-story home was unoccupied and no one was injured by the blaze.

“It was a box alarm fire. With the strong winds, we had some concern the whole house would go up quickly,” Randich said.

The fire was considered under control by 2:30 p.m., according to Joliet Battalion Chief Ron Schroeder.

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Joliet Fire Department news

Excerpts from the Herald-News.com:

Krissi Carroll, wife of Shawn Carroll, a 16-year lieutenant paramedic with the Joliet Fire Department, said a routine chest X-ray showed Shawn’s cancer had returned.

In 2012, Shawn was diagnosed with liposarcoma, a rare cancer of fat tissue, but he went in remission three and a half years ago and continued to receive regular checkups. Six months ago he had a perfectly normal CT scan, but six weeks ago, he had a routine chest X-ray that was not normal.

“The next day we learned he had a tumor, about 10 centimeters, that had developed since his prior exam,” Krissi said. “He was back to work with full duties, no complications or problems. Now he’s undergoing chemo.”

The tumor is located just outside Shawn’s lungs. In a few weeks, Shawn’s doctors will do another CT to ensure the tumor is shrinking. The goal is to prevent the tumor from invading Shawn’s lungs and to reduce its size so it can be surgically removed.

“His doctor fully expects him to recover from this and be back to work within a year,” she said.

Mike Singler, a firefighter/paramedic who works at Station 1 with Shawn, said the entire department is doing everything possible to support Shawn and his family physically, mentally, emotionally and financially.

In addition to raising funds for the family – $10,000 so far between collecting at the firehouse and the GoFundMe webpage the firefighters started – Singler said firefighters have also made numerous phone calls and visits, sent emails, invited Shawn to break bread with them at work, kept him abreast of their calls, and even raked leaves and cut the grass.

“This week we’re going to get the Christmas decorations out of the attic and help his wife decorate the house,” Singler said.

It’s this support that’s keeping Shawn going. “It helped me beat cancer and I’m confident it’s going to help me beat it again,” Shawn said.

“Every day I went to work with a smile on my face even though I knew it could be a tough day,” he said. “We’re helping people in their lowest time of need. We know what we’re doing is good.”

Shawn’s cancer battle began in October 2012. Neither one heard of liposarcoma before his diagnosis.

Fortunately, the tumor was localized and encapsulated. Doctors removed it and then Shawn underwent radiation. This second round of cancer is more challenging. Shawn is experiencing some nausea and nerve pain at the tumor site as the chemo cuts off the tumor’s blood supply.

Still, Shawn’s doctors are very optimistic.

“He is only 37 years old, and it’s much easier when you’re young to fight a cancer like this,” Krissi said. “However, it’s a very aggressive cancer.”

Krissi said firefighters are at increased risk for cancer. A recent study underscores her concern. From 2010 to 2015, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health studied 30,000 firefighters and found an increased risk of certain types of cancer, mostly digestive, oral, respiratory, and urinary cancers.

Krissi and Shawn both exhort firefighters to shower and wash their gear as soon as possible after fighting a fire to reduce their exposure to dirt and chemicals.

“It’s always been a badge of honor to have dirty gear,” Krissi said, “but they need to keep those carcinogens off them.”

 

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Joliet Fire Department news

Excerpts from the DailyHerald.com:

For the first time in 30 years, things are less “Rocky” around the Joliet Fire Department. Battalion Chief Brian Plyer retired Oct. 21 after spending the past seven years of his three-decade career supervising training.

Using hay and discarded pallets, Plyer probably has started more fires in abandoned houses than anyone else legally has in Joliet. Then he’s watched from the corner of the room as firefighters have come in one after another to extinguish the burning material or rescue a dummy.

Plyer grew up in Joliet and graduated from Joliet Catholic High School with plans to become a game warden. He took the fire department entrance exam after some prodding from two uncles who were on the department, and then “forgot about it for a year.”

“They called me on a Monday and said, ‘Do you want the job?’ I asked when would I have to start and they told me, ‘Wednesday,’ ” Plyer recalled. “My dad had been injured at work, and I needed a job that would support the family, so I said, ‘OK.’ ”

On May 17, 1989, crews were cleaning up at a four-story apartment building on Western and Hickory streets when the fire rekindled, and four firefighters were trapped on the roof.

“The rope to extend the ground ladder was frayed and snapped off. We had to extend the ladder 35 feet, and then it took everybody to raise it up while it was fully extended,” Plyer said.

The ladder still was about 5 feet short of the roof, but the firefighters on top of the building were able to dangle off the parapet until their feet could touch the top rung. Plyer was one of 17 firefighters named Firefighter of the Year for their efforts in that incident.

After serving in several other positions in the department, Plyer took the training chief job so he could work day shifts to spend more time with his son and daughter.

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Joliet Fire Department news

Excerpts from the Heraldnews.com:

His fellow firefighters on Company One’s B Shift felt it would be too difficult to single out one of the many times Scott Shear has saved lives over his 24-year career.

Rather, it was a routine non-emergency call last summer where Shear showed the kindness and concern for others that earned him Joliet Firefighter of the Year honors, Joliet Fire Department Chief Joe Formhals told the Exchange Club of Joliet.

A paralyzed woman had fallen and called for assistance. Apparatus Operator Shear drove the fire engine to her sparsely furnished apartment, and the crew helped her back into her wheelchair and learned she had not eaten for a few days. She told firefighters she’d hoped to go down to the corner store and buy a bag of chips for dinner.

“When the call was finished [Shear] went to a local restaurant and bought this young paralyzed woman a few days’ worth of cooked meals with his own money,” Formhals said. Shear then had another firefighter deliver the meals because he didn’t want her to make a big deal about what he had done.

“I just feel [helping] is something we all do on a daily basis and I just got singled out,” Shear said. “It’s not difficult to stop what you’re doing and help someone in a time of need.”

The Exchange Club also recognized Tuesday the winners of the annual Fire Prevention Poster Contest. The first-grade winner was Kassidy Barnes of Carl Sandburg Elementary School; the second-grade winner was Madison Fleming of Ridge Elementary School; the third-grade winner was Bella Nelson of St. Paul the Apostle Catholic School; the fourth-grade winner was Sophie Strange of Riverview Elementary School; and the fifth-grade winner was Sophia Benedick of St. Mary Nativity School. Exchange Club President and retired Joliet firefighter George Bode also acknowledged Formhals and Deputy Chief Ray Randich, who are both planning to retire next year.

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Fatal fire in Joliet

Excerpts from the Herald-news.com:

The Joliet Fire Department was dispatched at 10:37 p.m. Saturday to a home in the 2900 block of Sun Valley Court in Joliet, according to department Battalion Chief Laroy Aldridge. The residence has a Plainfield mailing address but is in Joliet city limits.

When firefighters arrived at the house, a person who was found to be a basement tenant was at the driveway and told responders firefighters there were two people inside, Aldridge said.

Crews found a man on the first floor who was pronounced dead at 11:50 p.m. at the scene, according to the Will County Coroner’s Office. A woman found on the second floor was taken to the emergency room of Presence Saint Joseph Medical Center in Joliet, where she was pronounced dead on arrival at 11:30 p.m.

Firefighters found smoke and fire on the first floor, but Aldridge said the damage was moderate and contained to the living room.

Joliet Chief of Police Brian Benton said in a statement that a preliminary investigation indicates the cause of the fire was accidental, possibly due to candles burning in the home.

 

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