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Busy, busy day at and around the Inauguration

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At 5:00 PM DC Fire & EMS Department has handled more than 1200 calls for service. A normal day is around 400 to 500 calls.

Almost all of the extra calls were EMS related in connection with the Inauguration. Those included falls, hypothermia and cardiac issues. Spokesman Alan Etter says there have been around 150 transports to area hospitals.

One of those transports was a very high profile case. Senator Ted Kennedy became ill at the US Capitol. Senator Kennedy was taken by Medic 1 to the Washington Hospital Center. Medic 1 was at the US Capitol assigned to the motorcade for President Barack Obama.

The ambulances and medic units from around the region assisting DC have been kept very busy. Some units had difficulty getting to patients are out of secure areas to the large number of pedestrians.

There were about 200 ambulances in operation. The emergency calls started coming in well before sun up and before many of the mutual aid companies arrived.

While I made two visits to Inaugural command at the quarters of Engine 2, Susan Nicol Kyle and Lisa Snowden-McCray from Firehouse.com spent the day at the firehouse in Chinatown and have more details. Click here for their coverage.

Virginia firefighter killed in car crash. Joseph Quigley was a member of Dale City VFD.

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FF Joseph Quigley and FF Maria Scherer

On the way to work at 5:30 AM coming across the American Legion Bridge from Virginia into Maryland we became aware of a serious traffic accident on the nearby Clara Barton Parkway. This afternoon STATter 911 learned the person killed was a volunteer firefighter with the Dale City VFD in Prince William County, Virginia. Assistant Chief Steve Chappell just sent this press release:

It is with deep regret and sorrow that the Dale City Volunteer Fire Department announces the death of Firefighter/EMTB Joseph Quigley. Firefighter Quigley joined the Dale City Volunteer Fire Department in 2004 and was an active firefighter assigned to Fire Station 10 (Birchdale). He is survived by his parents, three brothers, and his girlfriend-member Firefighter/EMTB Maria Scherer.

At approximately 0530 hours, Firefighter Quigley was driving to work along the Clara Barton Parkway when a Ford Explorer traveling in the opposite direction crossed into his lane striking his vehicle head-on. Firefighter Quigley was pronounced dead at the scene. The United States Park Police is investigating the incident. Memorial services will be announced when available.

You may recall that Dale City lost volunteer Cecilia Turnbough during a training exercise in November.

Tribute by FF Chico Marrero, Dale City VFD

Dave is on the Inaugural beat

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If you haven’t figured it out yet I am covering the Inauguration today. Along with journalists Greg Guise and Alan Henney, we are covering fire & EMS, traffic and security issues on the north side of the parade route. Click here to see our latest information and videos.

Woman trapped by Metro train as crowds head to the Inauguration

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Watch video from Metro rescue (click here for an alternate link if that one is slow)

A 68-year-old woman somehow fell off the platform of the Gallery Place Metro as large crowds headed to The Mall for the Inauguration. DC Fire & EMS Department crews responded to the station next to the Verizon Center at 7th and F Streets, NW around 9:30 AM.

Spokesman Alan Etter says it took about 20-minutes before firefighters could free the woman. She was conscious and alert.

Gallery Place has been a hot spot this morning for large crowds heading to the Inauguration. The station sits just two block north of a checkpoint for the parade route. The station was shut down for the better part of an hour and rail traffic was disrupted.

Quick takes

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Video of the day: A dashboard camera from the Penbrook Fire Department in PA. I believe this fire was on Sunday. The description here matches the one with the video.

Investigation in Fort Wayne: Firefighters were dispatched more than a mile out of their way to a house fire where a pregnant woman and her two young sons died. The fire chief believes the delay didn’t impact the tragic outcome. Read the details here.

40-car crash leaves two dead in MD: It happened Monday in snow on I-70 coming off South Mountain in Myersville. Details here.

Fire at gun factory: We are all in Inaugural mode so I don’t have any pictures for you of the two-alarm fire at Beretta USA in Accokeek, MD. Some details are here. Accokeek has been the scene of a long series of arsons not far from Beretta. Those fires have been mostly in vacant homes. No word on the cause of this fire.

Rhode Island going after staffing requirements: Here is the lead to the story on projo.com: “With encouragement from several vocal mayors and municipal organizations, Governor Carcieri has mounted a legislative bid to keep police and firefighters unions from securing contractual requirements for minimum staffing on work shifts.” Read more.

Update on public safety cuts in Phoenix: Click here for the latest.

Firefighters sent to wrong address of triple fatal fire. Fort Wayne fire department is investigating the delay. Believes it didn't impact outcome.

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Photo from The Journal Gazette. Click here to read its story about the delay.

Watch and read story from WANE-TV about the delay

Watch story from Saturday from WISE-TV

Read Ft. Wayne Fire Department statement about the delay

Read Ft. Wayne Fire Department report issued Saturday

In Fort Wayne, Indiana reporters have learned there was a delay in getting firefighters to a house that caught fire Saturday morning just before 10:00. A 23-year-old pregnant woman and her two young sons died in the fire. Two other people escaped.

Fort Wayne Fire Department Chief Peter Kelley confirms they are investigating why there was a delay before getting the first fire truck on the scene, but Chief Kelley and the department’s spokesperson have already said they don’t believe the delay impacted the outcome. In a written statement from the department Kelley said, “We do not believe the short delay affected the tragic outcome of the fire because the house was engulfed with fire when the first two occupants escaped the structure … “.

Google Street view of 722 East Jefferson Boulevard. Click the image to see the neighborhood.

The call was dispatched for 722 West Jefferson Boulevard. The burning house was about 1.1 miles away at 722 East Jefferson Boulevard. A battalion chief discovered the correct location while responding to West Jefferson and redirected units. Fire officials cite poor information from the first caller to 911. One TV station reports there was a four minute delay in getting the first fire engine on the scene.

It is unclear if it had any impact on the confusion, but it turns out there had been a fire 12-hours earlier in the same neighborhood as the incorrect West Jefferson location.

The links above will give you the details that are know so far about the mix-up.

The Google map above shows the distance between the addresses. Click the image for more detail.

Two-alarm fire at firearms manufacturer. Outside structure extends to plant's roof at Beretta USA.

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Click the image for the Google map.

Press release from Prince George’s County Fire/EMS Department’s Mark Brady:

At about 5:15 AM, Monday, January 19, 2009, Firefighter/Medics from the Accokeek area and surrounding communities, including Charles County, battled a fire for over an hour before declaring it under control. Firefighters fought the fire at a large commercial plant for Beretta USA, Inc., a firearms manufacturer.

The first 911 call was received from a passerby travelling on Indian Head Highway and reported seeing flames coming from an area towards the rear of the building. A second 911 call was received from on-site security at Beretta who also reported a fire on the rear side of the building at 17601 Beretta Drive.

Firefighters arrived and encountered a large exterior structure, attached to the main manufacturing plant, fully involved with fire. The fire was impinging upon the main building and eventually extended into the main buildings roof structure. Firefighters stretched hoselines and worked as teams in battling and extinguishing the fire. There were teams of firefighters extinguishing the bulk of the fire on the exterior, firefighters on the interior of the main building to cut-off extension and firefighters on the roof of the main building locating and extinguishing the fire extension. Incident Commanders requested additional firefighters to back-up the initial alarm. At the height of the incident, about 70 firefighters and paramedics were on the scene.

While firefighters were working to extinguish the fire there was a partial collapse of the roof where there was extensive fire damage. Extensive overhaul of the damaged roof was performed to ensure the fire was completely extinguished.

No injuries were reported. The Fire/EMS Departments Hazardous Materials Team is on-location handling Haz-Mat issues related to the fire. There are a number of chemical products used in the manufacture of Beretta firearms.

Fire Investigators continuing to investigate the cause and origin of the fire and have placed a preliminary fire loss estimate at $250,000.

I'll be home for Christmas. Or, then again, maybe not.

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There are apparently morale issues at the Roanoke Rapids (NC) Fire Department. The complaints from within the 32-member, two-station, department have city leaders looking into Chief Gary Corbet’s policies since he took over the department 15-months-ago.

One issue that cropped up is Chief Corbet’s refusal to go along with what firefighters say was a long-standing, but apparently unwritten, policy of allowing firefighters who work Christmas Day to go home for an hour.

That was the topic of conversation between Chief Corbet, a local reporter and the City Council. Read more.

Quick takes

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Inaugural success: DC Fire & EMS and a volunteer for the National Park Service teamed up to save the life a 78-year-old man who went into cardiac arrest Sunday morning while walking toward the Lincoln Memorial where the pre-Inauguration “We Are One” concert was held later in the day. The volunteer used an AED to get the heart going. Lt. Thomas Yowell helped get the man breathing again. It seemed to work. He was talking by the time he was delivered to George Washington University Hospital.

The man was one of 15 transports from the area between 6:00 AM and 6:00 PM. There were 80 calls for service along The Mall. Read and hear more about the department’s Inaugural planning.

And less than 12-hours earlier: The DC Fire & EMS Department rescued another senior citizen. This time is was from a house fire. We now have the raw video of the fire Saturday night in Mount Pleasant. Click here.

Hey move over buddy, there’s a big fire truck behind you: That is probably the nice translation of what the sounding of the air horn meant during the response to a vehicle fire. Wait to you see who the air horn was meant for. Check out the video.

More videos: Our roundup has clips from Indonesia, Mexico, UK, PA, and Ohio. Watch the videos.

Fire department takeover: In case some how you missed it, the news Friday from Prince William County, VA was pretty startling. For the first time a volunteer fire department has been taken over by the county. On top of that the chief and his family were evicted from fire department property where they were living. Read the story and the audit done by the county’s auditor. You will see a lot of comments about the bottom of each page.

Fire at the training academy destroys pumper: Arlington County (VA) had some bad luck Friday night at the department’s training academy. Read the details and see the pictures.

Video roundup

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Fuel depot fire

From Jakarta, Indonesia on Sunday. Read more.

From the Columbus fire

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Here is a video from the fire Saturday that destroyed 12 businesses in Columbus, Ohio. FireGeezer and the Box 15 website from Columbus have more details and pictures.

If the shoe fits

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From the UK, some women get to a shoe store fire on Sunday before firefighters do. Read the details from Oxfordshire.

Blow torch

No date on this fire involving a propane truck in Tamaulipas,Mexico.

PA house fire

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Fire from a small, but well known town in Pennsylvania. It is not because there is still a little boy trapped inside this 53-year-old body that I giggle at the phrase “the Intercourse fire chief”. I laugh because so many firefighters around the world have said pretty much the same thing about their own boss, except with language that isn’t as nice.

Arizona house fire

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Video from a neighbor of house fire in Gilbert, AZ.

Video of the day: Police vs fire – the airhorn.

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As a journalist (don’t flatter yourself, Dave) I am missing a few Ws on this one, like who, where and when. The what and why seem evident and gave me a chuckle, so I am sharing it with you.

One rescued from DC house fire. Watch the raw video.

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Click here to watch raw video from 9NEWS NOW’s Brittany Morehouse

Frantic moments for a homeowner in Northwest Washington Saturday night. The woman was able to escape a fire in her Mt. Pleasant rowhouse but her 70-year-old mother was still trapped inside.

Firefighters from the DC Fire & EMS Department were able to find the woman, who was in respiratory arrest, and bring her to safety. Here is a description of what happened in a press release from department spokesman Alan Etter:

Units responded at 10:32 PM for the report of fire coming from the first floor of the two-story rowhouse in the 1800 block of Kilbourne Place, Northwest. Firefighters arrived in three minutes to begin battling the blaze, which was evident from the front porch and seemed to be extending to the second floor. An aggressive entry into the building and subsequent fire suppression operation began putting the fire down quickly; members located a 70-year-old woman on the second floor – unconscious and in respiratory arrest. She was quickly removed from the building, as firefighters assisted with respirations. Though she had a pulse, it was unclear how long she was unable to breathe on her own. She was delivered to a local hospital in critical condition.

The cause of the fire has not been reported. Investigators indicate the house did not have working smoke alarms.

Quick takes

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A little recap of a busy start to the weekend at STATter911.com:

Fire at Arlington (VA) Training Academy: A pumper and “The Hut” bit the dust Friday night in a fire in South Arlington. Superstitious firefighters think a curse may be involved. Not sure if investigators will be able to confirm that as the source. Pictures and details.

Chief & family evicted from Virginia firehouse. Audit cites lack of volunteer oversight: We have taken a closer look at the audit of the Gainesville District Volunteer Fire Department that resulted in a Prince William County takeover of the department. It is the end of 32-years of Richard Bird’s run as chief. It also resulted in the eviction of his family, including an autistic teenager, from their home (a firehouse). The county initiated audit also questions oversight of all volunteer departments in Prince William County. Click here for our update.

Click here to read the audit and here to see Gainesville videos.

UPDATED – New video from Hudson River splashdown: Surveillance camera from three locations surfaced Friday night. We have the videos here.

Click here for the 911 calls.

In case you missed it, here is the link for FDNY audio from the incident.

UPDATED – Lessons learned from another river plane crash: The air disaster 27-years-ago this week in the Potomac River in Washington probably had more impact on what happened in New York than you realize. Read how the Air Florida Flight 90 crash influenced aviation and the fire service. We have the story, video and lots of links.

Audio from Arlington County FD (NOVA) from that day has now been added to the DC radio transmissions.

Inaugural preps: Before moving onto plane crash coverage on Thursday, I toured the DC Fire & EMS Department’s setup for the Inauguration. Unfortunately things got so busy I was never able to tell you about it.

Click here to read and watch the story. There is also raw video with interviews of Chief Dennis Rubin and Assistant Chief Larry Schultz.

But if you want much more detailed coverage of this major event you need to turn to the article by Lisa Snowden and Susan Nicol Kyle at Firehouse.com. You can also access my interviews through the Firehouse.com article.

911 calls from Flight 1549's landing in the Hudson

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More fire and EMS news at STATter911.com

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911 calls from the ditching of US Airways Flight 1549.

Click here for a compilation of surveillance videos showing the splashdown.

Fire at Arlington County, Virginia Training Academy has firefighters wondering if pumper is cursed

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More fire and EMS news at STATter911.com

All pictures from ACFD3.com. Click here for the website’s account of the fire, rundown of units and slideshow

At 9:35 PM Friday night firefighters were dispatched to a report of a building fire at Arlington Mill Drive in the Shirlington area of Arlington County, Virginia. Right away there was the chance this was not good news for the Arlington County government because there are a number of county facilities in the area. It turned out the one that was burning belonged to the agency that was responding: The Arlington County Fire Department.

Burning was the structure at the Arlington Fire Training Academy on South Taylor Street known as “The Hut”.

Inside “The Hut” was the E-One pumper assigned to the academy. The website ACFD3.com writes that the pumper, along with 1/3 of the structure, were burning. After knocking the fire “the fuel tank on the engine erupted into a huge fireball which could be seen from blocks away”.

The Arlington Fire Marshals Office is now investigating.

“The Hut” in happier times.

But ACFD3.com believes there could be more to the story:

Is it possible that a fire truck can be cursed? In the case of the Training Academy Engine it is very likely. Engine 111 started life in 2002 assigned to Engine 110. Shortly after entering service it was involved in a serious rollover accident on Route 110. The rig was then returned to Florida for a complete refurb. When it returned to the County the rig was plagued by electrical problems. It was assigned to the Fire Training Academy in 2006 where it served until being destroyed by fire.

Audit says Prince William County needs more oversight of volunteers. Found unqualified first responders at Gainesville. Chief & family evicted.

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More fire and EMS news from STATter911.com

From left to right, Chief Robert Bird, Assistant Chief Wanda Bird and President John McCarty Sr. Photo by The Washington Post’s Dayna Smith.

Read entire auditor’s report and resolution from the Prince William County Board of Supervisors

The day after he took over the leadership of the Prince William County Department of Fire & Rescue, Chief Kevin McGee found a note on his desk from a citizen with a complaint about the Gainesville District Volunteer Fire Department. That was 16-months ago and Chief McGee says it has been that way ever since.

In an email on Friday to career staff, Chief McGee wrote, “I have spent a great deal of time over the past few months dealing with the issues at Gainesville and it has hampered my ability to attend to other matters in the Department”.

That email, obtained by STATter 911, explained the unanimous vote earlier in the day by the Prince William County Board of Supervisors to dissolve the Gainesville department and allow McGee to take over its two stations. The board’s unprecedented move follows a report by a county auditor and Chief McGee’s own recommendation urging this drastic action.

In the email, McGee called the mess in Gainesville a “failure of the system”.

Gainesville District Volunteer EMS Assistant Chief Wanda Bird, who is also the treasurer and the wife of the volunteer chief, sees it quite differently. She told The Washington Post, “This is a railroad”.

Chief Richard Bird, who also has a son and daughter who were volunteers at Gainesville, not only has lost power after decades at the helm, but has been evicted from his family home of many years. For as long as anyone can remember the Birds have lived on fire department property. The audit found an unusual arrangement where the family, including the couple’s 19-year-old autistic daughter, literally called the fire department home.

The audit, while claiming there were no stipulations barring the living arrangement, found the special needs child “presents a liability risk to the county”.

The report, by county auditor Robin Howard, also found that company president John McCarty Sr. stored equipment from his personal business inside a fire department building. Howard wrote about this arrangement, “… again while there is no provision against that, Audit Services questions the ethical implications of personal use of public-funded space which could potentially be used for fire and rescue purposes”.

Robert J. Zelnick, an attorney for the volunteers, told The Washington Post’s Kristen Mack the department “never had an opportunity to respond to shortcomings or wrongdoing. It is unfair, based on one audit, not to allow us to fix the alleged deficiencies.”

Auditor Howard wrote about a consistent lack of cooperation from the volunteer leadership in providing documents needed for the audit in a timely fashion.

The audit was ordered after two volunteer firefighters were suspended by Chief Bird just 30-minutes before a company election in August. One of the volunteers was running for treasurer against Wanda Bird. Richard Bird has been chief for 32-years.

Operational issues

Chief McGee told STATter 911 on Friday that besides “lacking confidence in the volunteer leadership” he was greatly concerned about the safety of the public and the career and volunteer crews under Chief Bird’s command.

The audit discovered volunteers without the proper training. This included a member of a duty crew operating as an emergency medical technician who was not a qualified EMT. The report indicates the fire engine often responded on medical calls without an EMT on board. In the audit Chief Bird claimed it made sense to have people qualified in first aid and CPR on the scene providing help until an EMT arrives. One third of the volunteer officers were not EMTs.

The audit found “55 instances where needed certifications of volunteers were not documented”. This also included a driver of a fire truck who did not have Driver Pump Operator or Firefighter I certifications.

The report says two of the volunteers suffered hearing impairments that presented a potential safety or liability risk. The audit pointed out the hearing issue could limit the volunteer’s ability to properly assess a patient’s medical condition and safely communicate with other firefighters. According to the report, in answering these concerns, “The Assistant Chief said that the impairment can be offset by using such techniques as hand-signals and lip-reading”.

Impact on Prince William’s combined career-volunteer system

Chief McGee said on Friday his plan is to reorganize the volunteer participation at Gainesville under the county department. Previously all volunteers have belonged to one of the 12 (now 11) volunteer fire and rescue departments. In the meantime, McGee has beefed up career staffing at Gainesville.

The audit’s concerns extend beyond Gainesville. The report “concludes that the County has not exercised sufficient authority and oversight over the volunteer system, has not positioned itself to effectively manage the volunteer departments, and has failed to hold them accountable for business and financial decisions”.

STATter 911 has sent an email to the Prince William County Volunteer Fire & Rescue Association and will add any response to the report.

Concerned about career-volunteer relations following this development, McGee added in his message to career staff, “I expect each and every one of you to maintain a professional demeanor when discussing this event, treat your volunteer counterparts with respect, and assure them that their participation is both valuable and necessary, especially in these economic times”.

Obsolete videos

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The video above was posted on YouTube in December 2006 in an effort to recruit volunteers for the Gainesville District VFD. On Friday, the Prince William County Board of Supervisors dissolved the volunteer department and ordered the county fire chief to take over the operations of the two stations. Chief Kevin McGee says future volunteers at the Gainesville stations will be recruited and supervised by the county. Click here to read the audit that supported this drastic move.

Below is another Gainesville video posted in March of 2007 titled GDVFD recruits.

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New videos of Flight 1549 show impact and moments just before and after

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More fire and EMS news from STATter911.com

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UPDATED with additional video: New surveillance videos were broadcast Friday and early Saturday of US Airways Flight 1549′s decent into the Hudson River. The top one actually shows the plane hitting the water. The one immediately above from WCBS-TV shows the jet moments before it hit the water.

Below is a video the NTSB released from a US Coast Guard surveillance camera showing the jet skimming across the water. Below that is more from that Coast Guard camera.

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Volunteer fire company dissolved in VA. Prince William Co. taking over two Gainesville stations. Chief's family lived in firehouse. Read entire audit.

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More fire & EMS news from STATter911.com

Read entire 24 page audit of Gainesville District VFD operations by Prince William County director of audit services Robin Howard

Read the resolution from the Prince William County Board of Supervisors

Prince William County Department of Fire & Rescue Service Chief Kevin McGee, citing a hostile work environment, has shutdown the Gainesville District Volunteer Fire Department. Chief McGee is following the direction of the Prince William County Board of Supervisors in their vote Friday to order a takeover of Gainesville’s two stations.

McGee tells STATter 911 the supervisors reacted to an audit they ordered in September and the chief’s own recommendation. The chief said he had great concern for the safety of volunteer and career firefighters along with the safety of the public if current conditions were allowed to continue. The chief said in a telephone interview he “lacked confidence in the volunteer leadership”.

One issue cited by Chief McGee is that the family of Volunteer Chief Richard Bird lived at one of the fire stations. Some, but not all of Chief Bird’s family are members of the department. One of his children is described as a teenaged girl who is autistic. Another daughter is a volunteer sergeant.

Career personnel are assigned to the stations around the clock. In the takeover McGee plans to add career staffing. He also plans to increase volunteer participation under Prince William County. McGee says that it will be the first time volunteers will be part of the county and not individual fire companies.

The audit was ordered after two volunteers complained they were suspended 30-minutes before an election in August so they would be unable to run for office. One of the men was running for treasurer a position held by Wanda Bird, Chief Bird’s wife.

Below is the email sent to career and volunteer staff in Prince William County from Chief McGee:

Today the audit of the Gainesville District Volunteer Fire Department (GDVFD) was presented to the Board of County Supervisors (BOCS) in closed session. This was followed by an open meeting with citizen’s time allowing volunteers to give input. As a result, the BOCS has dissolved the GDVFD and has directed me to provide 24 hour fire and rescue service at Stations 4 and 24. Effectively immediately, Chief Bowman has initiated a staffing plan to assure continuous service. I will be meeting with the GDVFD membership to discuss the process that will allow them to return to an operational status.

The resolution has directed that DFR Staff, the County Executive, County Attorney and the Fire and Rescue Association review Chapter 9 and its provisions for the fire and rescue system. This process will include a monthly report to the BOCS and a full report and recommendations due on May 1, 2009.

This will be a challenging time for the fire and rescue system and I recognize that we have a large number of dedicated volunteers who contribute greatly to service delivery. I look forward to working with everyone in the system as we move forward to meet this challenge.

Regards,

Kevin

Chief Kevin McGee
Prince William County Department of Fire & Rescue

A look back to another river crash. Air Florida Flight 90 in DC had a significant impact on regional cooperation and crew resource management.

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Flight medic Gene Windsor on the skid with Pilot Donald Usher guiding the US Park Police helicopter, as the crew plucks 5 survivors from the icy Potomac River. Watch my 1992 story on the 10th anniversary of the crash of Air Florida Flight 90.

DC Fire Department radio traffic from Air Florida Flight 90 and Metrorail crashes- Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4

Arlington County Fire Department & NOVA radio traffic- Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4

Another account of the day from Arlington Fire Journal

While the circumstances are very different, a lot of people in Washington were reminded yesterday of the crash of Air Florida Flight 90 into the icy Potomac River. Tuesday was the 27th anniversary of that tragedy. Seventy-eight people, including four who were in their vehicles on the inbound 14th Street Bridge, died in that accident in the middle of a snow storm at 4:01 PM on January 13, 1982.

While the crash into the Hudson was a ditching of a commercial jet by a skilled crew after an apparent catastrophic engine failure (possibly due to a bird strike), the Potomac crash was blamed on the actions of the crew. Among the most significant findings by the NTSB were that the Flight 90 pilot and co-pilot failed to have the anti-icing system turned on prior to take off. This resulted in a sensor icing over and in turn providing high false thrust indicator readings. The jet took off with inadequate power to stay airborne. It crashed just north of National Airport.

This incident helped push the idea of crew resource management in cockpits. The concept and how it relates to the fire service was alluded to today in Chief Billy Goldfeder’s posting on The Secret List.

Five people were plucked from the icy Potomac by the US Park Police Eagle helicopter crew of Donald Usher and Gene Windsor. The video above, from a story I did for Channel 9 in 1992, was shot by photographer Bruce Bookholtz. My friend Bruce is retiring at the end of this week. Bruce also had been at National Airport before the crash doing a story on the snow storm with reporter John Goldsmith. It turned out they had shot video of Flight 90 at the gate.

One story that wasn’t publicly known until I reported it on the 20th anniversary, is that the actions of another US Park Police pilot possibly saved the day. In 1982, US Park Police did not supply a snow plow for the hanger in Anacostia Park. Pilot Ron Galey took the call about the crash. As Usher and Windsor got the chopper ready. Galey jumped into his own snow plow equipped pickup truck and cleared a path for the helicopter’s take off. Without that effort, the helicopter may have arrived too late for the rescues.

Just short of 20-years later, Galey also took the call from National Aiport’s tower for the notification that a jet had slammed into the Pentagon on September 11, 2001.

There were a number of heroes that day. This includes Arland Williams, believed to be the sixth passenger who survived the initial impact. The other survivors say Williams repeatedly passed the life ring from the helicopter to his fellow survivors. Williams drowned by the time the helicopter came back for him. The inbound 14th Street span is now named for Arland Williams.

Watch 9NEWS NOW’s Nancy Yamada’s story with Roger Olian 

The other story from that day that has always touched me is of Roger Olian. Olian was then a sheet metal worker on the way home from his job at St. Elizabeth’s Hospital. Olian saw the survivors flailing in the frigid waters before any rescuers arrived. Feeling he had to do something, Olian jumped in and swam toward the middle of the river. While he didn’t save anyone, the survivors all cited Olian’s act as giving them hope they soon would be rescued.

Olian’s actions were somewhat overshadowed by Lenny Skutnik who also jumped into the river. Skutnik grabbed survivor Priscilla Tirado who had been brought close to the shore by the helicopter, but couldn’t make it in on her own. Skutnik was recognized later that month during President Ronald Reagan’s State of the Union address. It began the tradition of honoring heroes during the event. Anyone willing to bet that US Airways Pilot Chesley Sullenberger will be honored at President Barack Obama’s first State of the Union address?

The Air Florida accident had a significant impact on regional cooperation among the fire departments in the Washington, DC area. There was much criticism about the lack of coordination between Virginia and DC emergency crews.

Among the loudest critics was Channel 9 Editorial Director Rich Adams. Rich, also a columnist for Firehouse Magazine, did many on-air editorials prodding local fire service leaders to do better regional planning. The incident has long been cited as an early catalyst for radio interoperability, two decades before the phrase became a mantra following September 11.

Within a half-hour of the crash into the Potomac, the area’s subway system, Metrorail, suffered its first fatal accident. It happened just north of the 14th street bridge in a tunnel south of the Federal Triangle station. Three people were killed and 25 were injured.

Below is part 1 of Seconds from Disaster, a National Geographic documentary on the crash of Flight 90 and the errors made in the cockpit. Click here for the other parts.

The emergency landing of United Flight 232 in Iowa on July 19, 1989 is often cited as one of the best examples of how crew resource management should be done. Pilot Al Haynes and his crew (including an off-duty pilot on board who offered a hand) were hailed as heroes in doing what might have seemed impossible in landing a severely crippled jet, saving the lives of 185 of the 285 people on board. Will Flight 1549 Pilot Sullenberger and his crew now be the ones used for the textbook example of excellent crew resource management?

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Listen to FDNY radio traffic and read timeline from US Airways crash into the Hudson River. More video and links.

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Click here to watch live coverage of Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s press conference

New image a few minutes ago on WABC-TV website (8:45 AM) is apaprently the first published of the actual crash of Flight 1549.

Above is some of the early video as the first boat reaches the downed jet

Click here to listen to FDNY radio transmissions following the crash of US Airways Flight 1549 into the Hudson River this afternoon

Rundown of FDNY unit and timeline (with notes added by Mike Ward)

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This is video captured by NY1-TV of jet in the air just before the crash landing on the Hudson.

Below are more links to coverage of the crash:

Officials in NY & NJ discuss EMS operation

Hospitals readied for patients

Read about emergency response

JEMS.com

wusa9.com slideshow

FireGeezer

Photo by Gregory Lam taken shortly after the crash. More pictures in a photo gallery from The New York Daily News.

US Airways Jet crashes into the Hudson

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A US Airways jet is in the Hudson River with a rescue operation underway. The fueselage of the jet appears to be in one piece. It is surrounded by boats and life-jacketed passengers are being brought to safety onto those boats.

The Airbus A320 crashed just after take-off from LaGuardia. It is reported to have almost 150 people on board.

Government sources are telling reporters that the jet appeared to have a hit a flock of geese and that there is no sign of a terrorist act.

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From the AP:

A US Airways jetliner crashed into the frigid Hudson River on Thursday afternoon after a collision with a flock of birds disabled both its engines, sending more than 150 passengers and crew members scrambling onto rescue boats, authorities say. No deaths or serious injuries were immediately reported.

Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman Laura Brown said Flight 1549 had just taken off from LaGuardia Airport en route to Charlotte, N.C., when the crash occurred in the river near 48th Street in midtown Manhattan.

The plane, an Airbus 320, took off at 3:26 p.m. and went down minutes later, Brown said.

“There were eyewitness reports the plane may have flown into a flock of birds,” Brown said. She added, “Right now we don’t have any indication this was anything other than an accident.”

The plane was submerged in the icy waters up to the windows. Rescue crews opened the door and pulled passengers in yellow life vests from the plane. Rescue boats and ferry boats that ply the Hudson surrounded the plane, which appeared to be slowly sinking in the near-freezing water on one of the coldest days of the year, with a temperature around 20 degrees.

Witnesses said the plane’s pilot appeared to guide the plane down.

“I see a commercial airliner coming down, looking like it’s landing right in the water,” said Bob Read, who saw it from his office at the television newsmagazine “Inside Edition.” “This looked like a controlled descent.”

New York City firefighters and the Coast Guard worked to rescue the passengers. The fuselage appeared intact, and the plane appeared to be sitting high in the water well after the crash with rescuers standing on the wings once they reached the site.

“I saw what appeared to be a tail fin of a plane sticking out of the water,” said Erica Schietinger, whose office windows look out over the Hudson. “All the boats have sort of circled the area.”

Joe Mazzone, a retired Delta Air Lines pilot, said it is not unusual for birds to strike planes. In fact, he said, when planes get ready to take off, if there are birds in the area, the tower will alert the crew.

“They literally just choke out the engine and it quits,” Mazzone said.

Quick takes

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Must see video: Police dash-cam catches backdraft. One firefighter is slightly injured as house explodes in Kernersville, NC. Click here for the video, an interview with the injured firefighter and other links.

Video from funeral and new information out of Boston: We have links to watch the video of Lt. Kevin M. Kelley’s funeral on Wednesday. Click here.

The union hired Ralph Craven to inspect the Boston Fire Department fleet. Two engine companies and a ladder were sidelined after Craven inspected six rigs. Read more.

Albany union makes stand on two-hatters: Click here to watch the message from the IAFF local in Albany to its members who volunteer in other jurisdictions.

Fat firefighter fired again: Kevin Oglivie was given three months to shape up or ship out after his initial firing caused labor unrest in the UK. He has now shipped out. The Fire Bridgades Union says that wasn’t enough time. Read the update.

Baltimore in compliance: The training academy of the Baltimore City Fire Department has been given the green light by the state for live burns. It had been shut down following an inspection after the death of recruit Racheal Wilson during a live burn at a city rowhouse. Click here for the story.

Chiefs complain about 911 center: Read why fire chiefs are not happy with the Central Maine Regional Communications Center. Click here.

Agreement very close in Louisiana: That’s the word from The Times Picayune on the battle between Jefferson Parish and the IAFF. Read details.

For the geezers out there: We have added to our compilation of old videos of Long Island firefighters in action. To go with the 1960s films, there is a multi-part PR film of the 1970s on Nassau County’s firefighting called Second to None. You know FireGeezer isn’t the only one who caters to the AARP crowd. It really is good stuff. Click here.

$1.73 million dollar grant creates problem for city: The Department of Homeland Security has issued the grant to Great Falls, Montana to increase fire department staffing. But it also requires a substantial investment from Great Falls, something city’s are struggling to do right now. Read about the dilemma.

Jimmy Daly shot this one from yesterday’s four-alarm fire in Lynn, MA. Click here to read about the fire. There is also video here and here. Jimmy’s photography can be seen here at DALY Images.

Backdraft caught on dashboard camera. One firefighter injured as Kernersville, North Carolina house explodes.

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Click here for a closer view of the dashboard camera video

Watch raw video of the fire after the explosion occurred

View a slide show of the fire’s aftermath

Interview with Firefighter Jay Coleman who was inside the home went the backdraft occurred

From our sister station WFMY-TV:

A firefighter was sent to the hospital after a fiery explosion inside a Kernersville home.

“I didn’t hear or see anything,” said Jay Coleman, a Kernersville firefighter. “I felt myself get lifted up and slammed through the door.”

Firefighters responded to a house fire on Union Cross Road just before 2 a.m. Wednesday. Two employees at the Dell Computers plant were leaving work when they spotted flames and called 911. The passersby also alerted the family inside the home.

Kernersville Fire Chief Walt Summerville said seven people were inside the house when the fire started, but all escaped without injury.

Summerville said an explosion caused the caused the roof to collapse while a fire crew was still inside the house. He believes the explosion was a back draft, which was caused by a build-up of smoke in the crawl space of the home.

All of the firefighters made it out okay, but Coleman was transported to the hospital as a precautionary measure. He was treated and released.

“I have a little bump on the back of my head,” said Coleman, who feels fortunate to have escaped the explosion with minor injuries. “I’m very thankful. I talked to God several times already.”

Summerville says all indications show the fire was started near the fireplace in the home. The fireplace was being used at the time.

Video from the funeral of Lt. Kevin M. Kelley, Boston Fire Department

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