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Panel to review MD fire. Two FFs remain hospitalized. New pictures, raw video of scene and interviews with chief and incident commander.

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(For more fire & EMS news from STATter 911, click here)

Watch raw video of the fire by MCFRS’s Carlos Alfaro

Watch Part 1 of Chief Tom Carr’s press conference

Watch Part 2 of Chief Tom Carr’s press conference

Watch complete interview with the incident commander, Volunteer Division Chief Alan Hinde

Two Montgomery County, MD firefighters remain hospitalized following Saturday’s fire that injured a third firefighter and killed a man living in the apartment where the fire began. On Tuesday, Montgomery County Fire & Rescue Service Chief Tom Carr announced he has formed a regional review panel to investigate all aspects of the fire at the Halpine View Apartments in Rockville.

Chief Carr says it is very clear that Captain Dwayne Dutrow, Firefighter James Heikka and Firefighter Mark Mechlin, came close to losing their lives.

Fifty-year-old Timothy Moran did die in the fire reported just before 1:00 AM. Investigators believe the fire started in Moran’s bedroom in apartment 103 of 12,819 Twinbrook Parkway. According to Carr, Moran’s burned body was discovered at the opposite end of the apartment from his bedroom. Investigators say Moran was a heavy smoker and believe that is the likely cause of the blaze.

Looking down through where the floor used to be in apartment 203 into apartment 103. All pictures courtesy of Montgomery County Fire & Rescue Service.

The three firefighters fell into that burning bedroom from apartment 203, one floor above. Chief Carr described the collapse of the bedroom floor as catastrophic and complete, extending “wall to wall and wall to wall”. Carr and investigators believe this is evidence the fire burned for a considerable amount of time before it was discovered and reported.

Chief Tom Carr said the floor collapsed “wall to wall and wall to wall”.

The panel, led by Division Chief Mike Love, will try and determine, among other things, if smoke alarms operated in Moran’s apartment. Chief Carr said, “We do not know if one sounded, we have no reports that it did”.

The initial call to 911 came from the occupant of apartment 203. Chief Carr said the smoke alarm in that apartment sounded only after the call was made.

The smoke alarms are hard wired with no battery back-up. Chief Love could not yet confirm if the alarms were the ionization type or photoelectric. Recent studies indicate ionization alarms are not as good at detecting smoldering fires and are less likely to last as long as photoelectric versions.

The complex did not have a manual-pull alarm system and was not required to have one because each building has fewer than 12 units. Chief Carr said the first firefighters on the scene discovered many residents still in the buildings, with some unaware of the fire raging next door.

Montgomery County Fire & Rescue Service released its own video taken during Saturday’s fire. It shows fire on the top two floors and through the roof of the garden-style apartment building. The video also shows crews treating Firefighter Heikka and then Firefighter Mechlin.

The panel will also look closely at fireground tactics and how crews responded to their trapped colleagues. Chief Carr praised those in charge of the fireground. He also believes the training of the injured firefighters and those coming to their rescue played a major role in the firefighters’ survival.

The inch and three-quarter hose line that fell next to FF Mechlin

Chief Carr said at the time of the collapse Firefighter Mechlin was not on the nozzle, but that the hose fell beside him. Mechlin was initially trapped under furniture that had also fallen. Carr said Mechlin was able to use the hose line for protection while attempting to free himself. Firefighter Mechlin was released from the hospital on Monday. Even though he remained in the burning room the longest, his injuries were the least severe of the three firefighters from Engine 723.

A view from apartment 103 looking up at apartment 203. The hanging, large piece of wall-to-wall carpet apparently initially blocked FF Mechlin’s view and access to the doorway.
Firefighter Heikka and Captain Dutrow landed closer to the bedroom window. With fire all around them, each fell or jumped through that window to the ground 13-feet below.
Incident commander and Volunteer Division Chief Alan Hinde, set up on Side C of the building, looked up as the “mayday” was called to see, first Heikka, and then Dutrow, fall to the ground. Chief Hinde can be heard on the recording of the fireground audio trying to get a ladder to the window, but there was no time. Hinde described seeing the firefighters emerge from the wall of flame as “surreal” and like a scene out of a movie.

According to Chief Carr the debris field from the collapse raised the floor level in apartment 103, allowing Captain Dutrow and FF Heikka to crawl or roll out of the window

Chief Love will be joined on the panel by other members of the Montgomery County Fire & Rescue Service and representatives from fire departments in the District of Columbia, Fairfax County and Prince William County.

Watch 9NEWS NOW report from 7:00 PM, Monday

Look at all of the still pictures provided by Montgomery County Fire & Rescue Service

See previous coverage from STATter 911, including fireground audio

(For more fire & EMS news from STATter 911, click here)

Mayor Riley to release report, but denies STATter 911 story; Panel to review MD fire; Is 50 too old?; PGFD on budget; Videos from PA, IN, CA, & VA

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(Updated at 12:36 PM)

Riley reverses course and will release report. Schaitberger praises Riley.

Another sudden change in plan in Charleston. Facing mounting pressure, Mayor Joseph Riley announced at noon today he will release the Routley led report into the Sofa Super Store fire on Thursday, May 15. From the Charleston Post and Courier:

Charleston Mayor Joe Riley has reconsidered his decision to withhold a highly anticipated report on the deadly June 18 Sofa Super Store fire.

“The right thing to do is to not delay the report,” Riley said at a noon news conference.

Last week, the mayor said he wanted to hold the report until two federal agencies completed their probes of the blaze.

In releasing the report Riley has received some unusual praise from IAFF General President Harold Schaitberger:

“Mayor Joe Riley showed today that he is an uncommon man among elected officials. In my almost 40years of work in the political world, it is rare to find a politician at any level who has the self-confidence to listen to all opinions, to honestly reflect on what’s in the best interests of those he represents, and to reassess a publicly announced decision regarding a high profile, emotionally charged issue.

“This union, at every level, looks forward to continuing the dialogue that has begun. For our part, we pledge to work in partnership with Mayor Riley where appropriate, to improve the safety and lives of Charleston’s fire fighters and to make the City safer for everyone.”

Read the entire statement.

Scroll down for our coverage from earlier today.

Update on injured MD FFs: One home, two in fair condition. Review panel to be announced.

In the center of this picture from the Montgomery County Fire & Rescue Service is the hose that Firefighter Mark Mechlin was still holding when he landed after falling from apartment 203 into apartment 103 at 12,819 Twinbrook Parkway. Firefighter Mechlin is home after more than two days at the Washington Hospital Center Burn Unit. Captain Dwayne Dutrow and Firefighter James Heikka are still in the burn unit in fair condition.

At 1:30 PM today Chief Tom Carr is holding a news conference to announce a “special regional fire review panel to look into all aspects of the fatal fire.” He will also release some new video of the fire. STATter 911 will have more from the conference later today.

Click here for our coverage of this very close call.

Latest on Charleston battle: Mayor denies STATter 911 report. Copy of contract between Routley and city.

The IAFF is calling for people to show up at tonight’s City Council meeting in Charleston, SC to show their displeasure over Mayor Joseph Riley’s decision to delay the release of the report on the Sofa Super Store fire from the panel led by Gordon Routley.

In the meantime, while I couldn’t get a response from a Charleston spokesperson about our report that advice from lawyers concerned about liability issues prompted the mayor’s decision, a TV station did get an answer directly from Mayor Riley. The mayor flatly denied the accuracy of the STATter 911 report, but a council member suggests liability concerns are behind the decision.

Read more from WCBD-TV’s Meryl Conant. Click the video button and watch her interviews with the mayor and the council member.

Read WCBD-TV’s Brad Franko’s blog

Read contract between City of Charleston and J. Gordon Routley

Chief Billy Goldfeder of Firefighter Close Calls and The Secret List fame is quoted in today’s Post and Courier article about the report delay. Chief Billy shared with me his entire response to the paper’s questions:

In some respects, my initial thought was a mild: well, wha’dya expect ? When you get attorneys and politicians together with such a critical issue such as a final report providing the facts on the tragic line of duty deaths of 9 Firefighters?…well, wha’dya expect they would do?

While factual information is vital for all aspects of preventing another tragic loss, in some respects I wasn’t surprised that the city has asked that it not be submitted…given some of their history. Unfortunately, what this does is raise more un-needed suspicion as to the genuine intent by the City and it’s leadership as far as truly wanting the facts and an unbiased report. As far as the report: I am very confident the report will be fair, 100% accurate and provide numerous solutions that Charleston can learn from-as well as the nations fire service.

I do know many FD’s have already used Phase 1 as a template for evaluation and improvement (at their own FD’s) and I fully expect this final report to play an even more important role. Really, there is no greater way to honor the “Charleston 9″ than to allow everyone to learn what happened-and never repeat…whatever the report suggests never repeating.

Unless I am missing something, I think the only reason to delay the report is for Chief Routley and his panel of experts to be able to meet privately and present these final facts to the families, the real survivors of the fire. By releasing this report (which I don’t think will be very different from the NIOSH and NIST reports) as soon as possible after that publicly, the sooner Firefighters within and outside of Charleston, can do to prevent repeating this horrific event in our history.

Firefighting over 50

This is the controversial topic FireGeezer teased on Monday. FossilMedic Mike Ward looks at the cardiac stats, Gordon Routley’s study (we’re turning into all Routley, all the time) and his own thoughts on the AARP crowd still doin
g the job. Click here for the column called Parking Your Firefighters.

Response from PGFD on budget issues

As we first reported on Monday things are heating up in Prince George’s County, MD over proposed budget cuts. There have been a number of cost cutting measures that are being considered.

One of them, not funding career staffing in some stations between 3:00 PM and 5:00 PM, Monday to Friday, was strongly opposed by the cities of College Park, Greenbelt and New Carrollton, along with the Town of Berwyn Heights. The municipalities sent a letter to Prince George’s County Fire & EMS Chief Lawrence Sedgwick on April 30.

There is also a plan to reduce box alarm assignments to three engines and two trucks.

Also, companies with mini-pumpers have been told PGFD will no long maintain and insure the units. The Accokeek VFD (Station 824) says its mini-pumper is necessary for a large parcel of land immediately across the Potomac River from Mount Vernon.

We have asked PGFD Chief Spokesman Mark Brady about some of these issues. Here is his response:

Numerous staffing plans are being discussed and reviewed by the Fire/EMS Department. The proposal to adjust career staffing from some Fire/EMS Stations between 3 PM and 5 PM, weekdays, was under consideration and has been placed on hold based on the volunteer leadership of those Fire/EMS Stations concerns about providing adequate staffing during that time frame.

The 3 and 2 assignment is still under review. We review all of our staffing concepts and their compliance with NFPA standards.

A rough estimate of about 90% of structure fires we are dispatched to are routinely handled by the first arriving engine and special service. Less then 10% require more resources from the original assignment then just the first arriving engine and special service. There is a small percentage remaining of incidents that require the full assignment and beyond to handle (2ND alarms, etc.).

By adjusting the amount of apparatus dispatched provides benefits of reducing the number of crashes involving responding apparatus and the availability of fire/EMS units in a particular area. The working fire dispatch assignment would be enhanced to include additional resources such as an engine, truck/squad, ambulance, medic, EMS officer, air unit, etc, etc.

During the dispatch process a number of individuals would have an opportunity and authority to enhance the assignment. A Communications Supervisor, who normally would have an idea if the incident was going to be a “working” incident, can add additional resources based on information being received via 911, responding command officers have authority to add additional resources as well as the first arriving unit. Safety of our Fire/EMS Department members, our citizens and residents will always remain paramount.

Underground parking garages and multi-level parking garages are constructed similar to high-rise buildings – with a standpipe system. So, if you are dispatched a report of an auto fire in an underground parking garage, would you choose to respond in a mini-pumper and access the scene via that unit to the burning auto (keeping in mind the crew is not wearing PPE or SCBA and at the most has 2 personnel on-board) or would your choice be to respond with a full crew on-board a class A pumper, utilizing all PPE including SCBA, hook up to the stand pipe and advanced your line to extinguish the fire?

Don’t know where and don’t know when

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But still an interesting pair of videos..

PA house fire

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I believe this is a house fire on Lawton Avenue in Uniontown, PA.

FF sues 84-year-old woman over injuries

A Lake County, Florida firefighter is suing a homeowner who she says failed to properly cover a septic tank. FF Jennifer Roland literally ran into some …. Let me phrase that another way. The fire truck broke through the top of the tank adjacent to the driveway during an emergency call at 84-year-old Elizabeth Baker’s home. Roland suffered neck and back injuries.

The Bakers bought the property in 1954 and claim they never knew the tank was there. Read more. Watch the story.

IN landmark burns

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That’s what they are calling Steinert’s Grill and Pub in New Albany, Indiana. Click here to read more.

Click here to see other clips from this fire.

CA house fire

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This is from El Sobrante on April 14.

Fire in Finland

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This fire was on Monday in Riihimäki. Burning is a construction site for a travel center at a rail station. Click here for details.

Smokey underground

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From the Britomart Transport Centre in Auckland, New Zealand, a lot of people just stand and watch as smoke begins to fill the train platform on May 2.

Side view

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As some of you who read and watch closely may know, I usually don’t run response videos that end when the crew arrives on the scene. I make an exception for this one because the camera angle reminds me of the view you would get when riding the side of the ladder truck back in the day. It is from Prince William County, VA’s Station 508 (Yorkshire VFD). See more of their response videos here.

New details on MD floor collapse injuring 3 FFs; Charleston battle over report; A mini battle for PGFD; Stolen hydrant parts

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(Updated at 5:55 PM)

New details on collapse that sent 3 MD FFs to burn unit. Fire victim is son of a firefighter.

Watch 9NEW NOW report from Monday, 7:00 PM

Firefighter Mark Mechlin was released from the hospital Monday afternoon. Captain Dwayne Dutrow and Firefighter James Heikka are now listed in fair condition and remain at the WHC Burn Unit.

We have added a new picture and expect more to arrive soon showing the scene on Twinbrook Parkway where the three were caught in a catastrophic floor collapse. There are also more details on the layout of the building and how the three firefighters were able to escape.

Click here to see our coverage.

Timothy Moran. Courtesy Philip Sandoe.

50-year-old Timothy Moran is the resident who was killed in the fire. According to Moran’s family, Timothy Moran’s father was Charles K. Moran, a firefighter in Silver Spring who retired in the 1970s. Michele Little, Timothy Moran’s sister, has requested any donations be sent to HEROES, Inc. in the names of the injured firefighters.

Timothy Moran was a surveyor who worked on the building of the new Woodrow Wilson Bridge.

Trouble in Charleston

The decision to delay the release of the report looking into the Sofa Super Store fire is not sitting well. IAFF General President Harold Schaitberger has blasted Charleston Mayor Joseph Riley for halting the planned release of the report written by a team led by G. Gordon Routley. Schaitberger has called for citizens and firefighters to take action. You can read the IAFF statement here.

STATter 911 first reported late Friday and very early Saturday, according to sources familiar with the situation, Mayor Riley made the decision based on advice from an attorney. The attorney is apparently concerned about the potential liability from a report that is expected to be very clear about the problems and issues leading up to the deaths of nine firefighters.

We have asked a Charleston spokesperson for comment on this story.

A new battleground for PGFD

Mini Pumper 824 from AccokeekVFD.com

Budget issues are causing some pain in Prince George’s County, MD. A variety of plans have surfaced that call for a cut back in overtime, amount of equipment dispatched and the funding of certain apparatus.

While we are told some proposals may already be off the table, one issue that is moving forward is that the county will no longer pay for maintenance and insurance on mini-pumpers.

We have heard from a number of volunteer departments unhappy with this plan citing access issues at parking garages and other locations. Already the Accokeek Volunteer Fire Department (Station 824) has gone public with a challenge to Prince George’s County Fire/EMS Chief Lawrence Sedgwick on its website. We have been in contact with PGFD and will bring you a response when it is available:

On Friday, The Accokeek Volunteer Fire Department received a letter from the county stating that they will no longer be funding mini-pumpers in the county. The county letter stated that mini-pumpers “have no operational necessity”. However, since Accokeek does have a BX in addition to the Mini-Pumper, we could choose to give up the BX but only if the Mini-Pumper was re-classified as a brush truck. Obviously the county fire department does not understand its own county. Mini-Pumper 24 not only has an operational necessity, but a requirement. Approximately one third of Accokeek’s first due is comprised of the Moyaone Reserve. This is federal land that is a scenic easement of Mount Vernon. By federal law, when the area is viewed from Mount Vernon it must look the way it did when George Washington lived there. As a result of this, trees are not permitted to be cleared, and roadways are made of dirt and are extremely narrow with low overhanging limbs. The reserve contains approximately 180 homes spread over six square miles. The majority of these houses are not accessible with engines or even ambulances. This is the primary purpose of the Mini-Pumper. This unit is first due on all structure alarms and any incident during inclement weather. Without the Mini-Pumper, these houses will not be accessible.

The county also does not understand that the Mini-Pumper is not a brush truck. It has been used on occasion on brush fires, but only doing what it is designed to do (go where larger pumpers can not go). It does not go “off roading” or breaking brush. It must stay on a road surface (paved, dirt, gravel, or hard packed ground). It is entirely too heavy to be used as a brush truck. And with the loss of the BX, a large number of brush fires that Accokeek responds on will be well advanced by the time an appropriate unit arrives on the scene.

One way or another, the PG County Fire Department is willing sacrifice operationally needed equipment without understanding their own county. We invite Chief Sedgewick to come to Accokeek for a tour of our first due. We will even provide directions since you must not know where we are located.

Citizens say no to closing firehouse

In Martin County, Florida has residents very unhappy. All part of budget cuts. Read the story.

The Geeze is into heavy metal

I am a little hampered in getting a lot of things out this morning due to an Internet issue and my focus on the Rockville fire. FireGeezer is, of course, still at the stop of his game. My favorite article is his look at how brass and copper thieves stealing hydrant and standpipe parts are making it difficult for firefighters.

The Geeze has learned something from the best local TV news producers and is teasing a “controversial” column from FossilMedic Mike Ward tomorrow. I guess I will have to tune in, because he hasn’t told me what it is either. Film at 11.

One MD FF released, 2 in fair condition at burn unit. New details and pictures on the collapse and the self-rescue by three firefighters.

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Montgomery County Fire & Rescue Service photos of Captain/Paramedic R. Dwayne Dutrow (top) and Firefighter/Paramedic James Heikka (middle), Firefighter/Rescuer Mark Mechlin (bottom)

Watch 9NEWS NOW report from Sunday, 11:00 PM

Watch 9NEWS NOW report from Monday, 7:00 PM

Download fireground audio of 3-alarm fire with mayday at 12,819 Twinbrook Parkway

On Sunday, Captain R. Dwayne Dutrow was taken out of ICU, but remains in the Burn Unit at the Washington Hospital Center. Captain Dutrow is the most seriously injured of the three firefighters hurt while fighting a fire in Rockville, Maryland early Saturday morning.

The 38-year-old Dutrow is a 17-year veteran of the Montgomery County Fire & Rescue Service. He is suffering from burns to his arms, legs, face and hands, as well as possible internal and orthopedic injuries.

Dutrow, along with Firefighter James Heikka and Firefighter Mark Mechlin, fell from the top floor to the middle floor of a burning garden-apartment building after what is being described as a catastrophic floor collapse. Both Captain Dutrow and Firefighter Heikka were then further injured after escaping through a window to the ground, approximately 14-feet below.

Firefighter Heikka is 31 and an 8-year member of the department. He has burns to the arm and leg, and facial lacerations. Firefighter Mechlin is 23 and has been on the job for just a year. His injuries are considered less serious, with a leg burn (Update: As of 3:30 PM, Monday, FF Mechlin has been released from the hospital. Captain Dutrow and FF Heikka are in fair condition.)

Timothy Moran. Courtesy Philip Sandoe.

Killed in the fire is 50-year-old Timothy Moran. Moran’s body was found in the same apartment where the firefighters landed. Montgomery County investigators say the fire started in that apartment and is believed to be accidental. According to Moran’s family he is the son of a former firefighter from Silver Spring, Charles K. Moran. The family has asked that donations be made in the names of the injured firefighters to HEROES, Inc.

On Sunday evening, STATter 911 talked with Montgomery County Fire & Rescue Service spokesman Pete Piringer who provided new details about the events leading up to the firefighters’ injuries. Piringer says all of the information is preliminary and is based on brief talks he had with the firefighters, command officers and investigators.

Side A of 12,819 Twinbrook Parkway

Piringer says the three injured firefighters were part of Engine 723, the first arriving engine company. The fire was reported just before 1:00 AM and the first units were presented with a number of occupants who were still in the building.

12,819 Twinbrook Parkway is a garden-apartment building believed to have been built in the 1960s. It is at one end of a group of three attached buildings. The building is on a slope showing two floors in the front and three in the rear. There are ten apartments with two on the terrace level, four on the first floor (apartments 101-104) and four on the second floor (apartments 201-204).

According to Piringer, Captain Dutrow led his crew with an attack line, up the interior stairway on Side A into apartment 203. Apartment 203 is essentially Quadrant C on the top floor. While attacking the fire, Piringer says the floor near the bedroom suddenly collapsed spilling all three firefighters into the fire below in apartment 103.

Piringer says this was not a small hole in the floor, but a large section of the floor that gave way.

Engine 723′s crew took a line into apartment 203, the door straight-ahead at the top of the stairs

STATter 911 talked to neighbors who were on Side C at the time of the collapse. They report a sudden increase in fire coming from apartment 103 and possibly 203. A moment later they saw two firefighters appear at a Side C window on the middle level with a great deal of fire around them.

The witnesses describe the first firefighter as rolling over the window sill to the ground, about 14-feet below. The second firefighter was having a more difficult time getting out of the window and apparently fell head first to the ground.

Piringer says that description is consistent with what he has heard, so far, about the escape from the flames by Captain Dutrow and Firefighter Heikka.

Witnesses say Captain Dutrow and Firefighter Heikka exited through the now boarded up window on the middle level, to the left of the balcony.

Firefighter Mechlin was still in the burning apartment. According to Piringer he landed with the hose still in his hands and a large piece of furniture on top of him. While trapped, Mechlin tried to spray water in the direction of the other two firefighters who he could hear toward the window. Because of the way he was trapped Mechlin cou
ld not reach his radio, but a mayday had already been called.

Mechlin was soon able to free himself. At about the same time he felt water spraying from the rapid intervention team assigned to find him. Piringer says Mechlin saw a light from one of the firefighters and made his way to the crew.

Montgomery County Fire & Rescue Service photo of collapse area showing hose that was in Firefighter Mechlin’s hands and the furniture that trapped him

Despite being exposed to the fire the longest, Mechlin’s injuries are less severe. Piringer says one theory is that the piece of furniture helped shield him from the fire.

Piringer says the dire situation had all three men thinking they may have fought their last fire, but in the end their training, experience and a little luck pulled them through.

A wider view of Side C at 12,819 Twinbrook Parkway

Schaitberger blasts Riley over report; STATter 911 – lawyers pushed delay; 2 FFs serious after MD collapse; FFs gagged; Flying bumper hurts FF

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(Updated at 12:45 PM, Sunday)

Video of the day: A terrorist attack. For the first time video has been released of the July 7th bombers deeds in London. The security camera clips were used at the trial of the men accused in the attacks. Read more.

Civilian dead, 3 FFs hurt in 3rd-alarm with mayday in Montgomery County, MD

Click the image above to see aftermath video from the fire

Listen to fireground audio from this fire

Just before 1:00 AM, firefighters went on the scene with heavy fire conditions on the second and third floors, along with people trapped in a garden apartment in the 12,800 block of Twinbrook Parkway. Here is what Montgomery County Fire & Rescue Service spokesman Pete Piringer wrote in a press release Saturday morning:

Within the first 5-10 minutes of arriving, and during firefighting and initial rescue operations, it is believed that a catastrophic floor collapse occurred sending two of three firefighting crew members from the third level into the seat of the fire on the second floor (the area of origin). A ’Mayday’ distress (firefighter down) signal was immediately activated while the two firefighters immediately sought refuge by jumping through a second floor window, landing on the ground below. In doing so they sustained serious injuries. The third firefighter was able to self-rescue through the interior to the outside.

At about the same time rescues were being made by other crews who located a victim in a second floor apartment, near the front door. He was removed, but succumbed to his injuries and was pronounced dead on the scene. He is being identified as Timothy Moran, age 50. Mr. Moran was the single occupant of the second floor apartment. Fire and Explosive Investigators believe this is where the fire originated. One other resident was rescued and transported to the hospital with non-life threatening injuries. A total of four residents were rescued by firefighters.

Fire Captain/Paramedic R. Dwayne Dutrow, age 38, a 17 year veteran, was flown to the MedStar Burn Unit at Washington Hospital Center. His injuries are serious, but not life threatening. Firefighter James Heikka, age 31, an 8 year veteran was also flown to the MedStar Burn Unit. His injuries are serious, but not life threatening. Both are being admitted. Firefighters Mark Mechlin, is in his 20’s and has been with the MCFRS for about one year. He was transported by a medic unit to the MedStar Burn Unit. His injuries were less serious and he is expected to be treated and released.

Piringer reports that it wasn’t just a small hole that burned through the floor, dropping the two firefighters from the third to the second level. He says it was a large section of the bedroom and possibly living room. A lot of indication the fire had been burning for some time. According to Piringer the crew from Engine 723 and the other first arriving units were heavily engaged in life-safety issues when the floor collapsed.

Piringer says the two firefighters were forced to bail out of the second level on Side C which was a longer drop than Side A (two stories in the front and three in the rear).

Piringer tells STATter 911 the firefighters do not have respiratory burns.

Mayor delays Charleston report. Sources tell STATter 911 that lawyers advice rules the day. IAFF local and national blast Riley’s decision.

Read Sunday statement from IAFF General President Harold Schaitberger

Statement from IAFF Local 61 on delay

Governments and other PR-wise entities often release bad news, or news that may not be well received, late on Fridays. Late Friday is when Mayor Joseph Riley announced the delay in the release of the report into the Sofa Super Store. Riley told the Post and Courier the timing was a coincidence:

The city sent out a press release announcing the decision at 6:48 p.m. Friday. Riley said city officials spoke with family members of the fallen earlier Friday and they signed off on the decision. He said the wishes of the families, though reinforcing, would not have made a difference in the city’s decision to delay the report. He said the news wasn’t released to the public earlier because he “had a busy day.”

Mayor Riley says he ordered the delay because he wants to coordinate the Routley panel report with federal reports on the tragedy. As STATter 911 first reported late Friday night, according to sources, Mayor Riley is reacting to advice from an attorney handling this matter for the city who is concerned about the details of the report. We are told the attorney is worried the facts and the findings of the report could, from the city’s standpoint, adversely impact liability issues.

While reports like these are thought of as necessary by fire service leaders in an effort to learn from mistakes and prevent future tragedies, the report’s contents can make lawyer’s nervous.

We have contacted a city spokesperson for comment.

More excerpts:

Last week, Riley issued a memo to City Council explaining that the report would be delivered within the first two weeks of May. But he said Friday that a new photo from the fire recently surfaced, causing city officials to question whether more time was needed to make sure there was “no stone unturned” in the probe.

The city reviewed its contracts with the panel, which stated that the group’s investigation should “take into account” information from federal probes into the June 18 blaze. The city decided to wait until at least two of the probes are finished, Riley said. One of those investigations could take more than two months to complete.

He said the city was concerned about the possibility that the panel’s report would be seen as incomplete if subsequent federal reports showed different findings. “We have a responsibility to make sure it’s as accurate and comprehensive as possible.”

Riley said the panel’s report could be released over the summer, but he refused to commit to a definite timeta
ble.

Former Louisiana Fire Chief Gordon Routley, leader of the city-appointed panel of experts, said he saw no reason for delaying the report’s release, but the decision is out of his hands. Routley said the panel has met regularly with the other agencies investigating the fire and that its report is informed by the work and findings of those agencies. He said he did not have any concerns that the panel’s report could be contradicted or at odds with reports from those other agencies.

“We were prepared to come out with a comprehensive report,” he said. “But the city is the client. They are paying the bill.”

DC house fire

Picture above and description below of a Saturday evening house fire from DC Fire & EMS Department PIO Alan Etter:

Just after 7:00 PM, units responded for the 4100 block of Fessenden Street in Tenleytown for the report of a house on fire. First arriving firefighters found heavy fire showing from the rear of the two-story wood frame home. The back porch was completely engolfed, and it was evident that fire had extended to the interior of the building on both the first and second floors. An aggressive interior attack extinguished the fire on the inside of the house, while firefighters working on the exterior also brought that portion of the fire under control quickly. Witnesses reported hearing explosions, which may have been propane tanks on a grill venting. The cause of the fire remains under investigation.

Geezer has the word

And the word is “preferred”. Find out how its omission messed up the application process for a fire department’s top job. Click here. For the rest of what FireGeezer has, click here.

Underground fires in MA

From Harvard Square in Cambridge this morning.

Ambulance cameras catch tornado

This is from Suffolk, Virginia at the start of the week.

Firefighters told to put a sock in it, or else

You may recall the ongoing saga of the fire department in Oak Grove, MN that we ran on Wednesday. Questions about tactics at a recent fatal fire have made the news along with other department issues. Apparently someone doesn’t like that. It has now been made clear that kind of behavior will no longer be tolerated. The behavior I am talking about is the talking about the problems. Excerpts from the Star-Tribune:

The order, which was read to firefighters Wednesday at a scheduled drill, was confirmed Thursday by Chantell Knauss, the city administrator who wrote the one-page memo. Not all of the firefighters agreed to sign the memo, as was requested.

Referring directly to the March 5 fire and criticism of the department discussed at City Council meetings Monday and April 14, the memo states:

“All Employees, including Paid on-call Fire Department personnel, City Council members and City staff need to immediately stop talking about or commenting, publicly or privately, on tactical responses, opinions about employment matters or observations about the same.”

The memo further states that a pending investigation “will severely be compromised by continued comment and attempts to influence others with public comment.” It says employees who fail to follow the directive not to talk “shall be subject to disciplinary action, up to and including termination.”

Knauss recommended at Monday’s meeting that the city hire an investigator independent of the department. She suggested a recently retired fire chief from the south metro area who plans to charge $100 per hour for an estimated 30 hours work.

5 months for setting firehouse on fire

A former FDNY member who set a firehouse door on fire is going to jail. Here’s the story from New York 1:

Richard Capece, 31, was sentenced to five months in jail for setting fire to a door at the Engine-34 firehouse in Hell’s Kitchen back in October.

Capece and co-defendant Michael Izzo claimed it was just a prank.

Both firefighters pleaded guilty to reduced charges of reckless endangerment. The judge also ordered Capece to complete 100 hours of community service.

Izzo will be sentenced on June 19th.

VA firefighter returns after collapse

You may recall the story of Scott Hetherington from Roanoke, VA. He is the firefighter who collapsed inside a burning home last December. He was in cardiac arrest and revived by his fellow firefighters. Hetherington has now returned to the job. Click here for the story.

Moving fast

Here is the description with this video: Just north of Tatum, NM about 10 miles..Fast moving prairie/grass fire moved alongby high winds from the SW. Do not get downwind from one of these.

Check out FireGeezer’s coverage of New Mexico wildfires.

Flying bumper breaks firefighter’s leg

Watch story on exploding bumper

Salinas Rural Fire District report on 2005 incident involving exploding bumper

Another case of a bumper on a burning car becoming a projectile. This one was in Oakland, CA Thursday evening. Excerpts from KTVU-TV:

The firefighter crew had responded to a home on Halliday Avenue about 11:30 Wednesday night. The firefighters successfully protected the home from the flames, but while the car was burning, the front bumper blew off and struck the female fighter in her left leg.

KTVU News found at least three instances around the nation where similar incidents have happened. Sol Sulaiman of Oakland’s Broadway Smog and Tune-Up Center explains, “The front bumper attached to two shocks that are filled with gas, under pressure with metal housing. When it gets heated up, it could blow up.” Sulaiman says the design protects drivers in an accident.

Lieutenant David Brue with the Oakland fire department says firefighters have had discussions with vehicle manufacturers about changing the bumpers. The fire department does train its firefighters to beware of the potential for parts from burning vehicles to become dangerous airborne projecticles.

Montgomery County 3rd alarm

I’m a day late on this one. Even though I was only 4 miles away, listening to the scanner, I was stuck at a live shot for another story and couldn’t break away. Click the image above for the raw chopper video of the 3-alarm fire on Wednesday at 324 E. Diamond Avenue in Gaithersburg.

These apartments were vacant. It was strictly a defensive operation. Investigators have determined the fire was intentionally set.

There are still pictures on thewatchdesk.com

Audio from the fireground can be found here

New Brunswick, NJ fire

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This is reported to be from Monday on Livingston Ave. around 10:15 PM.

Apartment fire in Ontario

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This is a fire Wednesday evening on McDonnel Street in Peterborough, Ontario. Read more.

Bladensburg video

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Bladensburg VFD in Prince George’s County, MD recently had two firefighters honored by Firehouse for a 2007 rescue (Click here for William Carey’s article). Here is a video posted on YouTube of some images in and around Station 809′s first due.

South Farmingdale fire

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A house fire from April 27, two of multiple parts. Click here for the rest.

Schaitberger blasts Riley over delayed report. Calls for action. Read entire statement.

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Shortly after receiving word that people were working overtime this weekend at 1750 New York Avenue, NW to address the breaking news from Charleston, SC, this press release from IAFF in Washington arrived. We have exchanged emails with Barbara W. Vaughn, who directs media relations for the City of Charleston. So far no official response to our questions:

Mayor Riley Endangers Fire Fighter Lives
with Sofa Store Report Cover-up

IAFF and Local 61 to initiate legal, political, public pressure campaign
over Sofa Store fire report delay

Washington – International Association of Fire Fighters General President Harold Schaitberger issued this statement today about the long delay of the Sofa Super Store investigative report announced by Mayor Joe Riley late Friday evening.

“If Mayor Joe Riley is serious about keeping the fire fighters he is responsible for safe on the job, he needs to release the investigative report by the panel of experts immediately. The report is finished and all stakeholders – Charleston fire fighters, families of the fallen Nine, citizens – want it out now.

“The expert panel that produced the report said they discussed and used information from federal investigations, so that fake excuse used by Mayor Riley to attempt to indefinitely delay and bury it has been exposed as a fraudulent tactic.

“The reality is the report is said to detail flaws in the practices of the Department’s command. Any delay in releasing the report is another day the Mayor is irresponsibly risking the lives of the men and women who serve the city under the most dangerous of circumstances.

“The report is not the property of the Mayor. The report is the property of the citizens of Charleston, reflecting their own civic responsibility to their fire fighters, and releasing it now is the Mayor’s special obligation to the Nine.

“The panel should formally turn the report over to the Mayor and the citizens of Charleston without delay this Tuesday, as originally planned.

“My job is to protect the men and women of IAFF Local 61, and I have already authorized the strongest legal, political and public pressure campaign we can muster to reverse this dangerous, malicious delay.

“We will appeal directly to the citizens and ask them to express their outrage. We will appeal to the media to make sure the Mayor’s negligence regarding fire fighter safety is exposed. We will appeal to the City Council. Beginning this Tuesday, we will appeal to federal and state officials and elected leaders in South Carolina to bring pressure on Mayor Riley, and to the courts if
appropriate.”

The IAFF is the world’s largest fire fighters union, representing 288,000 fire fighters and emergency medical professionals across the United States and Canada.

Hurt feelings at airport; PA close call; Dealing with a 1973 rig; Impatient motorist papers FFs

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Old video of the day: From May 28, 1985 in New Orleans. Here’s how Norm “Doc” Zaffater describes this elementary school fire – A child spilled copying machine fluid on a heater and causes a massive fire that destroyed the school and spreads to a nearby structure. NOFD personnel worked quickly to prevent further extension of this conflagration that occurred in May of 1985.

Police-fire battle effects airport staffing

On the island of Barbados, an airport fire station has been short-staffed due to an apparent sick-out. This follows a confrontation between a veteran firefighter and airport security. Here is an excerpt from The Nation Newspaper:

The DAILY NATION understands that the officers are upset over how one of their colleagues was treated by police officers last Monday, while at Grantley Adams International Airport (GAIA).
Reports were that the fire officer was searched after he allegedly breached airport security by entering a restricted area.

The officer did not allow the search to be conducted on his person and was allegedly manhandled by police officers after he got behind the wheel of the fire truck.

A fire service source said yesterday that the fire officer involved had 17 years’ experience and was now on sick leave, and his colleagues were not pleased with how the police treated him. Twelve officers did not report for duty during the morning shift yesterday.

PA mayday

Three Crafton, PA firefighters called a mayday at a house fire on Tuesday. All three are okay after a close call. Read details.

Trying to replace a 35-year-old rig

An interesting look at how Alva, Oklahoma makes due with a 1973 quint and is working toward replacing it. Click here.

Still room at tournament

Tom Wolfe says there is still room for a dozen more teams at the 2nd Annual Fallen Firefighters Memorial Golf Tournament – DC Metro Area on June 9.

Click here to learn more.

Fake ticket has some upset

You may have seen the fake traffic tickets like the one above that people hand out to motorists who offend them. Apparently one impatient driver in Washingtonville, Ohio took offense to a fire truck and its crew at the scene of a house fire. Read the story.