Saturday, November 28, 2009

Another House explosion Video

Here is another house explosion video posted on You Tube on the 27th -  I have seen my share of these types of incidents both natural gas and propane. Sometime they catch fire and some time they don’t. This time the structure caught. Bushnell is south west of Peoria Illinois. You will have to watch the video on You Tube the embed video below has been disabled.

Here is the write up on You Tube: The home at 519 Washington St. was leveled by a gas explosion around 2:30 p.m. The blast was heard little over seven miles away and also caught one other house on fire, leaving a large crater in the roof. It was not known if those occupants were home when the fire started.
No injuries were reported, but an ambulance was called for a firefighter reportedly having chest pains.
The occupant of the house Bradl Thompson, was outside with his dogs at the time. His wife was believed to be at work at the time.
Houses on the gas line and sewer system were also evacuated as well as those at least one block away on either side according to Bushnell Police Chief Merv Hilliard. At about 6:30 p.m. police said residents were being allowed back into their homes.
Firefighters from Macomb, Emmet-Chalmers, Good Hope and Adair fire departments were called in to help the Bushnell-Prairie City Fire Department battle the two fires.  You Tube

More on the story and pictures at - House explodes in Bushnell - Galesburg, IL - The Register-Mail Firefighters from Macomb, Emmet-Chalmers, Good Hope and Adair fire departments were called in to help the Bushnell-Prairie City Fire Department battle the two fires. and www.galesburg.com/homepage/x215410257/House-explodes-in-Bushnell
Map picture

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

2009 Wisconsin Act 28 - Discourages Cuts to Fire Departments

Could be good or bad , depending on the conditions within some communities. But should be a benefit for most. this could spread? You never know, other states could look at this and see if it works or not??? It does not reflect any expenditures that were derived from grants.

A new state law that is giving special protection to emergency services such as fire and police. Under the new law, dubbed "maintenance of effort for emergency services," municipalities and counties risk reductions in shared revenue from the state if they cut spending for emergency services below 2009 levels. But some city administrators are unhappy, saying the law prevents them from tackling wasteful spending at some fire departments.

What is maintenance of effort for emergency services?

2009 Wisconsin Act 28 requires counties and municipalities, beginning in 2010, to maintain their 2009 level of spending on emergency services. If a county or municipality fails to comply, DOR may reduce that county’s or municipality’s payment of shared revenues by an amount determined by DOR. (See Sections 79.07, 79.035 and 79.043, Wis. Stats.)

http://www.revenue.wi.gov/faqs/slf/act28faq.html

79.07
79.07 Expenditures for emergency services.


79.07(1)
(1) Except as provided in sub. (3), beginning in 2010, the amount that each county and municipality spends each year for emergency services, as defined by the department of revenue to include only emergency services funded from payments received under ss. 79.035 and 79.043, shall be no less than the amount that the county or municipality spent in 2009 for emergency services, not including one-time expenses and capital expenditures. Each county and municipality shall report the amount it spent for emergency services in 2009, and the amount of its one-time expenses and capital expenditures, to the department of revenue at the time and in the manner prescribed by the department.


79.07(2)
(2) The department of revenue may adjust any amount reported under sub. (1) to more accurately reflect the amount that the county or municipality submitting the report spent for emergency services and to ensure that excluding one-time expenses and capital expenditures as provided in sub. (1) does not compromise the level of service for providing emergency services.


79.07(3)
(3) A county or municipality may decrease the amount it spends for emergency services below its 2009 amount, with the department of revenue's approval, if the decrease in expenditures is a result of operating more efficiently, as determined by the department. For purposes of this section, any decrease approved under this subsection shall permanently decrease the base amount of expenses for emergency services provided in the county or municipality requesting the decrease by the amount of the decrease.


79.07(4)
(4) If a county or municipality fails to comply with this section, the department of revenue may reduce the county's or municipality's payment under ss. 79.035 and 79.043, in an amount determined by the department.

Monday, November 23, 2009

News from NFPA - NFPA 1600 and 14 NFPA first responder codes and standards receive DHS designation as “Qualified Anti-Terrorism Technology”

NFPA 1600, Standard on Disaster/Emergency Management and Business Continuity Programs and 14 other NFPA codes and standards have been designated by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) as “Qualified Anti-Terrorism Technology” (QATT) under the Support Anti-terrorism by Fostering Effective Technologies Act of 2002 (SAFETY Act). This is the first block of standards to receive this designation by DHS. Under the provisions of the SAFETY Act, these standards were also certified as “Approved Product(s) for Homeland Security”.

In September of 2008, NFPA was the first standards development organization to receive this designation for its codes and standards development process.

According to DHS, the SAFETY Act encourages the development and deployment of new and innovative anti-terrorism products and services by providing liability protections. Designation as a QATT and certification as an approved product for homeland security under the SAFETY Act provides legal protections for the NFPA codes and standards development process and now these 15 individual codes and standards as applied to anti-terrorism.

The 15 standards are listed below. They address emergency preparedness, first responder competencies and professional qualifications, personal protective equipment and specialized tools. NFPA 1600 is also one of three standards that DHS has announced it intends to adopt for application to the PS-Prep Program, a voluntary private sector preparedness program designed to improve the ability of private sector entities to withstand and recover from disasters including terrorism.

NFPA 472 Standard for Competence of Responders to Hazardous Materials/Weapons of Mass Destruction Incidents

NFPA 473 Standard for Competencies for EMS Personnel Responding to Hazardous Materials/Weapons of Mass Destruction Incidents

NFPA 1006 Standard for Technical Rescuer Professional Qualifications

NFPA 1600 Standard on Disaster/Emergency Management and Business Continuity Programs

NFPA 1851 Standard on Selection, Care, and Maintenance of Protective Ensembles for Structural Fire Fighting and Proximity Fire Fighting

NFPA 1852 Standard on Selection, Care, and Maintenance of Open-Circuit Self-Contained Breathing Apparatus (SCBA)

NFPA 1936 Standard on Powered Rescue Tools

NFPA 1951 Standard on Protective Ensembles for Technical Rescue Incidents

NFPA 1971 Standard on Protective Ensembles for Structural Fire Fighting and Proximity Fire Fighting

NFPA 1981 Standard on Open-Circuit Self-Contained Breathing Apparatus (SCBA) for Emergency Services

NFPA 1982 Standard on Personal Alert Safety Systems (PASS)

NFPA 1991 Standard on Vapor-Protective Ensembles for Hazardous Materials Emergencies

NFPA 1992 Standard on Liquid Splash-Protective Ensembles and Clothing for Hazardous Materials Emergencies

NFPA 1994 Standard on Protective Ensembles for First Responders to CBRN Terrorism Incidents

NFPA 1999 Standard on Protective Clothing for Emergency Medical Operations

“NFPA is pleased to have these standards recognized as anti-terrorism technologies which are important in protecting first responders to terrorist events and also in improving the ability of our infrastructure to mitigate and recover from such events while protecting people and property”, said James M. Shannon, NFPA president.

Federal protections under the DHS designation and certification are retroactive and recognize NFPA’s technologies “earliest date of sale” as September 11, 2001.

All NFPA safety codes and standards are developed through a process accredited by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI). The more than 250 technical committees responsible for developing and updating all 300 codes and standards include approximately 4,000 volunteers, representing enforcing authorities, installers and maintainers, labor, research and testing laboratories, insurers, special experts, consumers and other users.

NFPA has been a worldwide leader in providing fire, electrical, building, and life safety to the public since 1896. The mission of the international nonprofit organization is to reduce the worldwide burden of fire and other hazards on the quality of life by providing and advocating consensus codes and standards, research, training, and education. Visit NFPA’s Web site at www.nfpa.org

Saturday, November 21, 2009

NOW DECLARED AN LODD from 1997

1997 EMS RUN EXPOSED FIREFIGHTER TO DISEASE-LOST HIS LIFE LAST WEEKEND-NOW DECLARED AN LODD

from www.firefighterclosecalls.com news 

1997 EMS RUN EXPOSED FIREFIGHTER TO DISEASE-LOST HIS LIFE LAST WEEKEND-NOW DECLARED AN LODD

Saturday, November 21, 2009  As a St. Paul firefighter, Ramon "Ray" Hain came in contact with a patient's body fluids in 1997. According to an article in the Pioneer Press, Doctors think he contracted a rare disease that weakened his heart. Hain, of Roseville, got a heart transplant in 1998 but had to retire in 2000 from t...  [  more  ]  

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Crane smashed through a house - oops

Crane Smashes House | PressDemocrat.com | The Press Democrat | Santa ...

Nobody was injured when a crane smashed through a house in northwest Santa Rosa Monday afternoon in a failed attempt to remove an oak tree.

Nobody was injured when a crane smashed through a house in northwest Santa Rosa Monday afternoon in a failed attempt to remove an oak tree

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

NFPA launches new Web pages

 

To streamline access to technical document information

Details on more than 300 codes and standards available

November 16, 2009 – The National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) introduced improved document information Web pages to make finding information on its more than 300 codes and standards easier. This project was developed based on feedback received from a survey of NFPA’s technical committee members, the volunteers responsible for developing and revising NFPA documents, and other participants in the process.

“The new ‘Doc Info’ pages provide one central location for all the information that pertains to each of our more than 300 NFPA technical documents,” said Chris Dubay, NFPA’s vice president of codes and standards and chief engineer. “This major advancement is part of a continuing effort to use technology to enhance our code development system as well as make it easier for people to find the information they’re seeking.”

In addition to new search capabilities, users will be able to navigate and find additional details by selecting one of three tabbed sections:

  • Document information
    Document scope, archived revision information on current and previous editions, and the ability to view ("read-only") and purchase current and previous editions.
  • Next edition
    Information about the current revision cycle, Report on Proposals (ROP), Report on Comments (ROC), Notices of Intent to Make a Motion (NITMAMs).
  • Technical Committee
    Committee name and scope, NFPA staff liaison, list of committee members, information on how to apply to a committee. 

More improvements planned in the near future will include information on upcoming Technical Committee meetings as well as agendas and minutes.

See full list of NFPA documents. (Document information pages can be viewed by clicking on any document.)

NFPA has been a worldwide leader in providing fire, electrical, building, and life safety to the public since 1896. The mission of the international nonprofit organization is to reduce the worldwide burden of fire and other hazards on the quality of life by providing and advocating consensus codes and standards, research, training, and education. Visit NFPA’s Web site at www.nfpa.org.

Here's a link - If you haven’t seen it, of cant’ find it from your cable provider

There is a Fox reality channel show on called the The Academy that goes behind the scenes of the 18 week fire academy of the Orange County Fire Authority. You can watch the episodes via the web HERE. looks like a military boot camp for the fire service.

http://www.foxreality.com/theacademy/#/index

image

Monday, November 16, 2009

Must be Doing Something Right

Unlike other suburban fire departments it looks like Tinley Park fire department has held off going completely full time, and saving the tax payers a bundle on the cost of protection. They are still having to go to some paid members to staff some of the stations. This recent article on the the department shows that it can be done. Tinley Park Article from Southtownstar.com Tinley Park Fire Department unique in Southland

Here are some excepts from the article: It's a revered town of some 60,000 people, but unlike towns with such large populations, Tinley Park doesn't have a full-time fire department.

The village relies on part-time firefighters - men and women who, for the most part, work other jobs.  http://www.tinleyparkfire.org/

Map picture

The Tinley Park Fire Department has a yearly budget of $3 million, according to village officials. If the village were to move to a full-time department, it would need a budget of about $8 million, Maher said.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Yet another battle over the Unions over volunteer firefighters

Duluth Firefighters Union boots 3 firefighters for volunteering

http://www.duluthnewstribune.com/event/article/id/151974/
FOX 21 News: Union boots firefighters
A 23-year veteran of the Duluth Fire Department built a home in Hermantown last year decided he should serve on his new community’s volunteer fire department.
“I thought it would be nice to help them, and they’re short of firefighters up here,” he said.
Noldin volunteered for Hermantown along with two fellow Duluth firefighters. But when the Duluth Fire Union found out, the three were asked to resign their union memberships early this year. The member said he took that route rather than stop volunteering for Hermantown. Under state law, the three are still technically union members and have to pay dues, but they don’t have a voting stake in union activities.
 FULL STORY HERE
Comment
Another typical Union wanting the money from the dues and not providing any service, and giving them the boot as well? Seems you could not even mow you elderly neighbors, lawn,  they might get hurt? Can they paint their house and use a ladder off duty? Might get hurt there as well? If the neighbors house catches fire and a union members goes and makes a rescue or puts the fire out, isn’t that volunteering?  and then in violation of the union rules. Would they then be kicked out of the union then as well?
Guess that Duluth will not be eligible for the valuable SAFER awards.

Staffing for Adequate Fire and Emergency Response (SAFER) Grants of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) http://www.firegrantsupport.com/docs/2009SAFERguidance.pdf
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) should also be reviewed on the grant program’s website   http://www.firegrantsupport.com/.

Appendix 2  Grantee Responsibilities
http://www.firegrantsupport.com/docs/2009SAFERguidance.pdf
Page 32  (9) Not withstanding any provision of other laws, firefighters hired under these grants shall not be discriminated against for, or be prohibited from, engaging in volunteer activities in another jurisdiction during off-duty hours.

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Timely training material and it’s FREE – New or for review

*** FREE TRAINING MATERIAL ***

Active Shooter and 4th/5th Generation Warfare PPT, video materials and references for law enforcement:
http://www.officer.com/posa/index.jsp?siteSection=30
AND
Preparation for and Response to Mass Shooting Events for

Fire & EMS
http://www.ffsupport.org/training.html

Mass shooting events are becoming more common, and the response to them involves every public safety agency for miles around. This program details the actions that fire and EMS agencies can take to prepare themselves for this all-too-likely event, and the actions they can take when the event occurs.

It covers:

· Multi-agency planning and preparation

· Creating a prevention environment

· Command, command post and crowd control issues for this kind of event

· An overview of the tactics that agencies should be familiar with

This program is available in two formats. The 40+ PowerPoint slide presentation covers the material thoroughly, while the 45-minute video program is a verbal presentation of the PowerPoint material.
http://www.ffsupport.org/training.html

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

House lawmakers seek to remove FEMA from Homeland Security

By Katherine McIntire Peters kpeters@govexec.com November 6, 2009 Full Story HERE

On Thursday the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee approved legislation that would remove the Federal Emergency Management Agency from the Homeland Security Department and return it to independent, Cabinet-level status.

The 2009 FEMA Independence Act (H.R. 1174) was first introduced in February by Rep. James Oberstar, D-Minn., and has 29 co-sponsors. The idea of returning FEMA to the independent status it held in the 1990s, before the formation of Homeland Security in 2003, gained traction after the government's bungled response to Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

Full story at http://www.govexec.com/story_page.cfm?articleid=43991&dcn=e_hsw

Veterans Day

Veterans Day - November 11 - Office of Public and Intergovernmental ... Wide-angle view of national Veterans Day ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery's Memorial Amphitheater

Veterans Day history, ceremonies, resources ... National Veterans Day Ceremony. The Veterans Day National Ceremony is held on November 11th at Arlington National Cemetery.

  • Holiday snapshot: Veterans Day
  • Nov. 11, the date American's observe as Veterans Day, commemorates a milestone event in history. It was at the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month, in 1918, that an armistice effectively ended World War I. The following year,…
  • In Defense of Armistice Day
  • We call it Veterans Day now, but it used to be called Armistice Day, and I can’t help wondering whether we’ve lost something by converting a holiday originally meant to celebrate the veterans of World War I into an omnibus holiday, to honor…
  • Tuesday, November 10, 2009

    Issue in the News about facial hair and first responders - again

    Don't’ they think there would be a problem if they had to wear a CBRM mask for a response???
    LAWSUIT: Frum Medics Prevented From Responding to 911 Calls

    November 10, 2009 Full article HERE

    sol.jpgBALTIMORE, MD - Three Orthodox medics assert in discrimination charges filed with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, that the Pikesville Volunteer Fire Company (PVFC) has illegally barred them from riding on calls, in violation of their religious rights and in retaliation for their involvement in an Orthodox emergency response organization. The medics - Dr. Matthias Goldstein, Brennan Gross, and Avrohom Green - were told last winter that because of their refusal to shave their beards on religious grounds, they could not ride with the company as medics. This, the PVFC claimed, was because the beards might prevent them from wearing specialized safety masks that it hopes to purchase at some future date.

        

    Last year, in a similar case in the District of Columbia involving bearded Muslim firefighters, the federal appellate court for the District of Columbia ruled that the no beard rule was improper, and that the department should accommodate the firefighters’ sincerely held religious beliefs. Judge: Facial hair OK for now - Washington Times
     

    Monday, November 9, 2009

    DHS in trials of next generation multiband radio

    Published 3 November 2009 Homeland Security

    Emergency communication interoperability is getting closer as the day of the single-band radio is coming to an end; DHS’ S&T is testing a multiband radio for emergency services

    Tom Chirhart knows a lot about radios, but over the last year, he has received a real life lesson in supply and demand. When he put out an APB on behalf of the DHS’s Science and Technology Directorate (S&T) looking for volunteers to test a new radio that allows first responders to talk to one another across different frequency bands, the line of interested agencies was long and eager. The challenge of aligning communications among different first responders — such as fire fighters, police officers, and emergency medical teams — has grown apace with the size and sophistication of response teams and plans. As the construction of public safety systems consumed all the available channels in a single radio band, the government logically opened up other bands. Radio equipment lagged behind, however, continuing to operate on just one spectrum band. This limitation did indeed create communications hurdles during the most serious emergencies — natural disasters and terrorist attacks.

    “The issue of being able to talk to each other has been such a prominent one for so long, responder agencies were jumping at the opportunity to test the new radios we were evaluating,” said Chirhart, who manages S&T’s three-and-a-half-year-old multi-band radio (MBR) research project. Starting this month, fourteen agencies across the United States will have the opportunity to try out this leading edge technology with fellow first responders through 30-day pilot projects.

    Many first responders today are stuck working in a similar prehistoric era, lugging around multiple radios on their belts, just so that they can listen and talk to other first responders at different agencies. “The value in a multi-band radio is that you don’t have to carry three or four different radios — or buy three or four radios at a cost of $4,000 each,” said Roberts, whose fire department is one of the fourteen that will participate in the pilot projects.

    Right now, the new multi-band radio to be piloted this fall rings in at about the same cost ($4,000-$6,000), size (10 inches tall), and weight (less than two pounds) of top-of-the-line single-band radios. It works on the five frequency bands currently used by state and local first responders, and, if necessary, can work on four other bands used exclusively by the federal government, the Department of Defense, National Guard, and the Coast Guard. It even provides weather reports from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The battery is expected to last in excess of 10 hours in order to meet the realities of longer shifts. It works even after being sprayed with a fire hose.

    “If the multi-band radio can be credited with ensuring that just one first responder goes home to his or her family at the end of their shift, then the whole effort has paid for itself,” Chirhart added.

    S&T hopes that the introduction of these radios will spur manufacturers to develop their own professional quality versions — much like what happened with smartphones — along with accessories like alternative batteries or GPS chips that departments can purchase separately.

    A final version of the radios could be ready for the mass market by the middle of 2010. By that time, supply should meet demand, as many companies are now jumping on the virtual bandwagon to develop these new radios. S&T launched the MBR project with the goal of stimulating the marketplace so that multiple vendors would see the value in developing this technology to provide greater options that meet public safety requirements.

    If the technology is as successful as S&T thinks that it could be, interoperability challenges, like cell phones that only make phone calls, may become forgotten relics of the past.

    The fourteen organizations participating in the pilot are: · 2010 Olympic Security Committee (Blaine, Wash., and Vancouver, B.C. Canada)  · Amtrak (Northeast Corridor) · Boise Fire Department (Boise, Idaho) · Canadian Interoperability Technology Interest Group (Ottawa, ON Canada) · Customs and Border Patrol (Detroit, Mich.) · Federal Emergency Management Agency (Multiple Locations) · Hawaii State Civil Defense (Honolulu, Hawaii) · Interagency Communication Interoperability System (Los Angeles County, Calif.) · Michigan Emergency Medical Services (Lower Peninsula Areas) · Murray State University (Southwest Kentucky) · Phoenix Police Department and Arizona Department of Emergency Management (Greater Phoenix and Yuma County) · Texas National Guard (Austin, Texas) · U.S. Marshals Service (Northeast Region) · Washington Metro Area Transit Authority Transit Police (Washington, D.C.)

    Read the additional pages of this Homeland Security News Wire report here http://homelandsecuritynewswire.com/dhs-trials-next-generation-multiband-radio?page=0,0

    Friday, November 6, 2009

    Gingerbread FIREhouse Contest

    Aurora Regional Fire Museum,

    Grab your sugar, grab your spice - and run, run, fast as you can!
    The Aurora Regional Fire Museum (Aurora, IL) will host a Gingerbread FIREhouse Contest, exhibition, and charity raffle for the holidays.  All entries must depict a firefighting themed architectural structure, real or imaginary — IE: a firehouse, burning building, etc. Participants are invited to compete in one of three categories:
    • Individuals: entries made by teen-aged children (13+) and/or adults acting alone.
    • Families and Groups: a single entry that has been created by two or more individuals. (IE: a gingerbread FIREhouse made by children with adult supervision, or a FIREhouse constructed by an organization, club, or groups of adults)
    • Professionals: an entry produced by a baker, designer, architect, or any individual or group with professional baking experience.
    Gingerbread FIREhouse Contest registration forms are due on or before Friday, November. 7th, and, all gingerbread FIREhouses are to be delivered to the museum on or before Tuesday, November. 24, 2009. 

    The exhibit opens, and the entries will be judged on Saturday, November 28th.  

    Cash and prizes will be awarded for both Peoples Choice and Judges Choice in each category.
    You can read more about the contest, and register, online at: http://www.AuroraRegionalFireMuseum.org/gingerbread

    Two Recent LODD

    Notice of Firefighter Fatality: Kernersville, NC

    from USFA Firefighter Fatalities

    Chad Eric Greene of the Union Cross Fire and Rescue of Forsyth County, Inc. in Kernersville, NC has died as the result of an on-duty incident that occurred on 2009-11-04 Deputy Chief Greene completed his shift at approximately 0830hrs immediately after responding to a motor vehicle accident. After completing his shift, he left the station, dropped his son off at pre-school, and went home. When Deputy Chief Greene's wife returned home, she found him unresponsive and subsequently called 911 and began CPR. Deputy Chief Greene was transported to the NC Baptist Hospital where he was pronounced dead at approximately 1230hrs. The cause of death is pending further investigation.

    From Firehouse.com

    Pa. Firefighter Dies Following Call
    Amity Fire Company Firefighter Robert Stone collapsed and died the morning after responding to a call, according to the department's web site.
    Stone, 47, began complaining of chest pains on Nov. 3 after returning to the station and was transported to Reading Hospital. Read More...

    Monday, November 2, 2009

    USS New York

    The USS New York, a new battleship built with steel from the World Trade Center, sailed into New York harbor today on its maiden voyage and delivered a 21-gun salute near Ground Zero. Times on Line 

    Remember 343 FDNY

    A warship built with steel salvaged from the World Trade Center has arrived in New York City. Newssniffer 

    Its crew stood at attention and a 21-gun salute greeted the ship. Firefighters, bagpipers, and those who lost loved ones on 9/11 lined the shore to watch the emotional arrival. The docking holds special meaning for many families of those who died in the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. CNN