Posts Tagged Springfield Fire Department

Springfield Fire Department news (more)

Excerpts from foxillinois.com:

On Tuesday, the Springfield City Council unanimously voted the mayor’s appointment of a new fire chief. Chief Allen Reyne was formally a captain so he jumped several positions. He has been with the department for over 18 years.

Reyne takes the position after former Chief Barry Helmerichs retired earlier in April. His son and wife were a part of his pinning ceremony. He said it was an honor to take the lead of a Class 1 fire station.

thanks Dan

Tags: , , , ,

Springfield Fire Department news (more)

Excerpts from the State-Journal register.com:

Capt. Allen Reyne, a nearly 19-year veteran of the Springfield Fire Department, will be the city’s next fire chief. Reyne, 47, a captain since 2009, will replace Barry Helmerichs, who is retiring April 6.  Starting April 7, Reyne will be acting fire chief until the Springfield City Council can vote on his appointment April 17. His salary has not yet been decided.

Eight candidates within the fire department were interviewed for the position. Reyne, a Springfield resident, was the firefighters’ union president for two years starting in 2012 and has served as its secretary.

Reyne is certified to be a fire investigator at the state and international level, as well as a paramedic. He also holds certifications in hazardous waste operations, fire service management and fire service instruction. Before joining the Springfield Fire Department in 1999, he was a volunteer firefighter for the Godfrey Fire Protection District and a paramedic in St. Louis County and Springfield.

At Tuesday’s Committee of the Whole meeting, the mayor honored Helmerichs with a proclamation and named that day Fire Chief Barry Helmerichs Day. He listed some of Helmerichs’ accomplishments, including raising the department’s Insurance Services Office rating from Class 3 to Class 1. Helmerichs also emphasized advanced medical training for firefighters and improved response times.

thanks Dan

Tags: , , , , ,

Springfield Fire Department news (more)

Excerpts from the state journal-register.com:

With Springfield Fire Chief Barry Helmerichs retiring at the end of the month, the mayor is interviewing Springfield Fire Department members to find a replacement, because of a clause in the firefighters’ contract that stipulates the hire must be internal. The provision is unique to Springfield, though the practice of promoting an internal candidate for chief is not.

“All other persons assigned or appointed to positions in the Departmental structure as outlined in this Section of the Collective Bargaining Agreement shall be from within the classified fire service of the City of Springfield, Illinois,” states the contract, referring to the positions of fire chief, division chiefs and deputy division chiefs.

With the exception of six years in the late 1990s and early 2000s, the hire-from-within clause has been in the Springfield union’s contract since it began to collectively bargain with the city.

In 1997, then-Mayor Karen Hasara pushed for the requirement to be dropped from the union’s contract. She had recently recruited a police chief from outside of Illinois. Plus, the fire department was split among political factions, and the union had delivered a no-confidence vote against then-Fire Chief Russ Steil. He retired shortly after, and Hasara wanted to conduct a national search to find a replacement that would restore order.

“The community felt strongly about being able to go out and get the very best person,” Hasara said in September 1997. “It very well may be that that person comes from within the Springfield Fire Department, but to limit ourselves to that would be a mistake.”

The union was initially resistant to the change in their contract. Seventeen months after their contract expired, a new one was ushered in, without the clause but with concessions the union backed. The new chief would be chosen with the help of a selection panel, which had representation from the union. The committee reduced a pool of 54 applicants to five finalists, three of which were local.

In the end, Hasara selected James “J.D.” Knox, a 28-year veteran of the Springfield Fire Department and acting fire chief at the time he was chosen. She didn’t look outside the department again, though she hired chiefs after Knox.

The chief selection clause was resurrected in 2003, according to Tom Roate, the secretary-treasurer of the Associated Fire Fighters of Illinois. Roate was the president of the Springfield firefighters’ union in 2003.

He said Hasara told him she wanted to appoint the acting fire chief Ron Hasara, her ex-husband’s cousin, as the permanent chief without going through the selection committee process or looking at other candidates. Roate said he pushed for the clause, partly because of its historic factor. Springfield had never hired a chief outside of its ranks since a memorandum of agreement between striking firefighters and the city was reached in 1976.

By choosing a chief from the department, everyone wins. The most significant factor, though, Roate said is the incoming chief will have familiarity with the department and Springfield politics and, therefore, can hit the ground running.

Tags: , , ,

Springfield Fire Department news (more)

Excerpts from foxillinois.com:

The Springfield Fire Department is restructuring its leadership after five chiefs announced their retirement. The city said these retirements happened to keep young cadets from being laid off.

The proposed budget anticipated retirements so that they could employ new firefighters, but if the retirements didn’t happen, the cadets would most likely not be able to take an official place in the workforce. Now the restructuring includes finding a new chief, which the mayor will appoint, and be moving the positions upward, including the trainees into full-time firefighters.  There are nine cadets going through training.

Springfield’s Fire Chief Barry Helmerichs is retiring on April 6. He’s leaving along with four other chiefs. Chief Robert Marfell, Battalion Chief Raymond Gillespie, Battalion Chief Bill Carmean, and Chief Mark Hart. The retirements open over $500,000 in the department’s budget. It’s important to note, the chief said they aren’t leaving because of the budget. They say it was just their time to retire.

The city said, when it comes to the budget, they aren’t in the clear. There’s still a $2.5 million shortfall.

Tags: , , , , , , ,

Springfield Fire Department news

Excerpts from the sj-r.com:

Springfield Fire Chief Barry Helmerichs will retire at the end of the month after almost three years as chief.  Of the five division chiefs, Bob Marfell, division chief of training, retired Monday and Mark Hart, division chief of operations, will retire March 16. Along with the division chiefs, Battalion Chief Edward Gillespie retired last week, and Battalion Chief Bill Carmean will retire Friday. The three other division chiefs, Chris Richmond, Jeph Bassett and Lyndal Neighbours will not retire this year.

When Helmerichs was appointed chief in 2015, he said he would regain the city’s Class 1 rating. At the time, the city had a Class 3 ISO rating. In 2017, Springfield achieved a Class 2 rating, and in January, it a Class 1 rating, without a significant change in funds.

He is equally proud of the push for advanced medical training for firefighters. Last year, the department increased the number of people who recovered from heart attacks by 600 percent. Additionally, the department’s turnout time has dropped by 16 percent over the last two years.

Helmerichs was born and raised in Springfield, and has been with the fire department for 26 years.

Tags: , ,

Springfield Fire Department news

Excerpts from sj-r.com:

The Springfield Fire Department has joined the top half percent of all fire departments in the nation by receiving a Class 1 rating from the Insurance Service Offices, Fire Chief Barry Helmerichs announced to the Springfield City Council Tuesday.

Only 241 out of 46,000 fire departments nationwide in 2017 had a Class 1 rating. ISO scores fire departments from 1 to 10, with a majority of fire departments being graded at Class 5.

The department first achieved a Class 1 rating in 1988 but was downgraded to Class 2 in 2003, when the department decided that it couldn’t afford the upgrades ISO required. The department’s rating dropped again in 2013 to Class 3.

The Springfield Fire Department hasn’t hired more firefighters or opened any more fire stations since being downgraded, but ISO has moved from evaluating equipment to a more performance-based assessment. It looks at a city’s fire suppression capabilities by grading the fire department, the emergency communications system, the city’s water supply, and efforts toward community risk reduction. Data collected from the previous year informs the current rating.

Last year Springfield’s ISO rating increased to Class 2. The fire department worked on its response times and training, while City Water, Light and Power worked on water distribution, and the 911 call center improved its handling of calls.

“(Response times and water distribution)’s always been a challenge for us because of the area we cover,” Helmerichs said. “We cover twice (the area) as Peoria, four times as Bloomington and Champaign.”

Outreach to the community through its Adopt-A-School program and public education messages helped bump up its rating.

The ISO rating becomes effective in April. With the new rating, some insurance companies offer a better rate on fire insurance policies for residences and businesses.

Tags: , , ,

Springfield Fire Department news

Excerpts from foxillinois.com:

Springfield Fire Chief Barry Helmrichs said the department went from an ISO rating of three to a two.

Insurance Services Offices (ISO) grades fire departments on several categories; emergency communication, response time, and community involvement.

He chief said right now his department ranks within the top three percent in the country,  and if they can get a half point more onto their score this could mean cheaper insurance.

Chief Helmrichs said they’ve resubmitted information, which could lower their score even more. The latest they could hear back on their ranking is by October first.

Tags: , ,

Springfield Firefighter’s Pension Board files lawsuit

Excerpts from FoxIllinois.com:

The City of Springfield is facing a new lawsuit. This one filed by the Springfield Firefighters’ Pension Board. The board is looking for a Sangamon County judge to determine whether firefighters should be allowed to add possibly thousands of dollars to their pensions for working holidays.

Anyone who works a holiday as a firefighter gets paid double time. In 1998 the Department of Insurance said firefighters could add holiday pay to their pensions. But just a few months ago the opinion reversed, saying it violated Illinois pension code.

The board voted to stop holiday pay from applying to new firefighters’ pensions as of November.

Pension board attorney Don Craven said the pension board was likely going to face a lawsuit. The firefighter’s union could sue if the board eliminated the holiday pay pension altogether because pension benefits cannot be diminished for an employee. The city said it would sue if no action was taken because of the DOI opinion.

“The city’s going to sue us if we don’t change it; the firefighters would probably sue us if we do change it. So we’re going to ask the court what to do,” said Craven.

Some city leaders have said holiday pay should not be included in pensions because the overtime pay does not apply to everyone. Budget Director Bill McCarty has said holiday pay being added to pensions ends up costing the city tens of thousands of dollars a year.

 

Tags: , ,

Area apparatus on order

This from Josh Boyajian:

Bloomingdale FPD – 2015 E-One 100′ aerial platform quint. Cyclone ll cab and chassis, 2,000-gpm/300-gallon.
Chicago – (3) 2015 E-One 100′ RM aerial platform trucks. Cyclone ll cab and chassis, 0/0.
Genoa-Kingston – 2015 Pierce Arrow XT pumper, 1,500-gpm/1,000-gallon/30 foam.
Lockport Township – (2) 2015 Pierce Enforcer engines, 1,500-gpm/750-gallon/30 foam.
Peoria – 2015 Pierce Velocity 100′ aerial platform, 0/0.
Springfield – 2015 Pierce Arrow XT pumper, 1,500-gpm/750-gallon/20 foam.
Utica – 2015 Piece Impel pumper, 1,500-gpm/750-gallon/30 foam.
East Chicago, Indiana – 2015 Pierce Saber pumper, 1,500-gpm/750-gallon.

Tags: , , , , , , ,

New truck for Springfield FD

From Zach Cox:

Springfield Illinois will be taking delivery of this new KME 103 ladder truck within the next few days.  This truck was sold by Mac’s Fire & Safety, Inc.

 

Springfield Fire Department

New KME quint for the Springfield IL Fire Department. Zach Cox photo

This truck was on display last week at the Fire Rescue International trade show at McCormick Place. John Tobin also submitted images of the other two units that were in the KME booth.

Westminster MA Fire Department

New KME Renegade rescue pumper for Westminster, MA. John Tobin photo

Los Angeles County Fire Department fire engine

New KME Severe Service CAFS pumper for Los Angeles County. John Tobin photo

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,