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Raw video from Maryland 3-alarm fire. Vito Maggiolo on the scene in Takoma Park as Prince George’s and Montgomery crews go to work early this morning.

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The raw video above is courtesy of Vito Maggiolo. Thank you Vito.

An early morning fire destroyed the building that used to house the Allen Theater in Takoma Park, Maryland. Until the fire. the old movie house was the home of Gussini, a clothing and shoe store at 6822 New Hampshire Avenue.

Picture by Bill McNeel. Click the image for more of Bill's photos.

Picture by Bill McNeel. Click the image for more of Bill's photos.

The fire was reported at 2:28 Saturday morning. It quickly went to three alarms. More than 120 firefighters from Prince George’s County and Montgomery County worked to put out the flames.

The building is a total loss. The cause of the fire is still under investigation.

According to the website Cinema Treasures, the Allen Theater opened in 1951 with a stage show, an orchestra and the movie “At War With the Army” starring Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis. It closed in 1990, when it was converted to retail stores.

From the book Maryland's Motion Picture Theaters. Click the image for more history of the state's movie houses.

From the book Maryland's Motion Picture Theaters. Click the image for more history of the state's movie houses.

The Allen Theater in more modern times. Click the image for the Google Maps Street View.

The Allen Theater in more modern times. Click the image for the Google Maps Street View.

The must see tragic video from fire in Russia that kills more than 100. Witnesses say fireworks set ceiling on fire with results similar to The Station nightclub blaze. NIST report & video from 2003 fire.

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A longer version of this video can be found here.

From Firegeezer: Karaoke nightclub fire in Indonesia kills 20

From the AP:

Russia’s top investigative body says the number of people who died in a nightclub fire in the Urals city of Perm has risen to 109.

The Investigative Committee says 98 died on the spot and 11 others later died in hospitals.

The victims crushed each other to death and suffocated after the fire tore through the popular Lame Horse nightclub in Perm late Friday, filling the crowded barracks-like building with thick black smoke.

The Investigative Committee said Saturday that some 130 people were injured and many remain in critical condition.

Authorities said they arrested the registered owner of the club and the manager.

Officials said the club managers ignored repeated demands from authorities to change the club’s interior to comply with fire safety standards. “They have neither brains, nor conscience,” Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said, urging a tough punishment for the culprits.

Officials said most of the dead suffocated or were crushed at the exit

“The fire spread very quickly,” said Marina Zabbarova, chief investigator for the local prosecutor’s office. “Panic arose which led to a mass death of people.”

Svetlana Kuvshinova, who was in the nightclub when the blaze broke out, told the AP it started after three fireworks fountains spewed sparks, igniting the plastic ceiling.

“The fire took seconds to spread,” she said. “It was like a dry haystack. There was only one way out. They nearly stampeded me.”

A video recorded by one of the clubgoers and run by Russian television stations showed flames engulfing the ceiling decorated with willow twigs as a host shouted in a casual tone: “Ladies and Gentlemen, guests of the club, we are on fire. Please leave the hall!”

This is a NIST re-creation by Daniel Madrzykowski of the 2003 Station Nightclub fire. Read the NIST report: Volume 1. Volume 2.

Russia records nearly 18,000 fire deaths a year, several times the per-capita rate in the United States and other Western countries. Nightclub fires have killed thousands of people worldwide.

Ten people died when an entertainer’s clothing was ignited during a so-called “fire show” at a Moscow club in March 2007.

In February 2008, a fire in the Golden Rock nightclub in the Siberian city of Omsk killed four people. Officials said the blast might have been caused by natural gas.

A nightclub fire in the U.S. state of Rhode Island in 2003 killed 100 people after pyrotechnics used as a stage prop by the 1980s rock band Great White set ablaze cheap soundproofing foam on the walls and ceiling.

What looks like an innocent picture of the picture takers, causes lots of controversy. Firefighters posing for cell phone photo at Winnipeg house fire is under investigation.

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Free Press photo by Boris Minkevich

When Free Press photographer Boris Minkevich took this shot on Thursday evening at a house fire on Redwood Avenue in Winnipeg, he thought it innocent enough. He told Free Press reporter Bartley Kives , "There were numerous firefighters waiting for the apparatus to be set up. This only lasted a moment. I perceived it as an innocent thing I would do myself. I've been to a lot of fires."

But Minkevich's job is to shoot pictures. The job of the two people in the photo is to fight fires and their boss at the Winnipeg Fire Paramedic Service isn't happy. The picture is also getting wide distribution having been published on a number of news sites in Canada and the United States.  Here are excerpts from Kives' article:

On Friday, WFPS Deputy Chief Ken Sim said his department planned to investigate in the evening, when the firefighters in question returned to work.

"Our perspective at this time is this was inappropriate," he said. "This is one of those pictures that begs the question, 'What were they assigned to do that allowed them to take the picture?' "

While firefighters are provided with cameras to document evidence, Sim said it appears the camera depicted in Minkevich's photo was a "non-issued device." Sim said his department will take "whatever action is necessary to take" once the firefighters in the photo are identified.

The president of the union representing Winnipeg firefighters shrugged off the investigation, noting the personnel in the photo could not do anything but wait until more equipment arrived to douse the blaze.

"Is it inappropriate? Probably. But we deal with life and death every single day," said Alex Forrest, president of the United Fire Fighters of Winnipeg. "I didn't get one call about (a recent) fatality and the firefighters who risked their lives trying to save someone, but I got a dozen calls about this one."

Maryland fire goes to 3-alarms overnight. Building once was Takoma Park’s Allen Theater.

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Photos of the fire by Bill McNeel. Click the image to see more at thewatchdesk.com.

Photos of the fire by Bill McNeel. Click the image to see more at thewatchdesk.com.

 UPDATE: Click here for raw video of the fire from Vito Maggiolo

MD Takoma Park old theater 2A building apparently housing a clothing and shoe store, was destroyed by fire on New Hampshire Avenue overnight. That same building was, for the first 40-years of its life, Takoma Park, Maryland’s Allen Theater.

Not a lot of details on this one yet. What is known from a variety of sources is the call originated on the Prince George’s County side of the 6700 or 6800 block of New Hampshire Avenue. Reports are that is was later determined the fire is actually in Takoma Park at 6822 New Hampshire.

Second and third alarms were sounded and there were reports of wall collapses. We hope to have more later.

The Allen Theater opened in 1951 and closed in 1990. You can read more about it at CinemaTreasures.org.

House fire last night in Missouri. Video from Sedalia.

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Read about the fire in the Sedalia Democrat

Two parts of a video from a fire last night at Deer Lake Estates outside of Sedalia Missouri. News reports indicate the fire started in the flue of a wood stove and that the homeowners initially tried to extinguish it. Firefighters from Pettis County, Green Ridge and Cole Camp were on the scene.

The fire apparently attracted the attention of a lot of drivers on nearby Highway 65 where cars were pulled over to the side of the road so people could see the blaze.

The video was done by the webmaster of a site called SedaliaBazoo.com. There are further details on that site and a bit of back and forth in the comments between a firefighter and the webmaster over how the incident was reported.

DC Fire & EMS accuser on the other side. A look at when the department’s former lawyer was named in a complaint.

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Theresa Cusick

Theresa Cusick

Watch Chief Rubin’s deposition and read the complaint in connection to Theresa Cusick’s lawsuit against the city

Read email from the Government Accountability Project about the 2004 confrontation involving Theresa Cusick

Read the 2004 article from the Washington Blade

Theresa Cusick is the former general counsel for the DC Fire & EMS Department who yesterday went public with the details of her lawsuit against the city. Cusick, who was the department’s lawyer for nine years, was let go within three months of the arrival of Chief Dennis Rubin in April, 2007. Cusick believes her dismissal was retaliation for telling Rubin one of his assistant chiefs interfered with a cheating investigation.

In a video deposition by Rubin, provided by Cusick’s attorney at the Government Accountability Project (GAP), the chief claims he got rid of Cusick after she went on an expletive filled tirade about his command staff. Cusick denies such an incident occurred.

Chief Dennis Rubin deposition from the Government Accountability Project.

Chief Dennis Rubin deposition from the Government Accountability Project.

A STATter911.com reader reminds us that Theresa Cusick was once on the other side of a complaint by a former fire department employee and according to news reports didn’t like it one bit. It was a very controversial episode in the history of the fire department.

It began with the death of Tyra Hunter in 1995, a transgender woman who died in a traffic accident. A lawsuit over Hunter’s care  included an agreement that the department will institute diversity training. Kenda Kirby was brought in to handle those duties. Kirby herself ended up in a legal dispute with the department claiming she was fired because she is a lesbian.

In a March 5, 2004 article in the Washington Blade, reporter Lou Chibbaro Jr. recounted a confrontation between Kirby, her lawyer and Theresa Cusick. Portions of that article are below. The entire article can be found here.

Contacted today, GAP spokesman Dylan Blaylock, does not believe the 2004 incident is relevant to Cusick’s suit and claims against Chief Rubin and members of his command staff. Blaylock makes his case in an email to STATter911.com that you can read here.

A lawyer representing the D.C. fire department yelled at Kenda Kirby, who was hired by the department to increase diversity awareness, during a Feb. 9 fact-finding meeting by the city’s Office of Human Rights into Kirby’s complaint that she was subjected to anti-gay harassment on the job, according to Mindy Daniels, Kirby’s attorney.

Daniels said Theresa Cusick, the D.C. Fire & Emergency Medical Services Department’s general counsel, leapt to her feet, leaned across a conference table toward Kirby, and screamed when she learned that Kirby had named her as a defendant in a discrimination complaint that Kirby filed against the department last September.

Kirby’s complaint charges the department with violating the D.C. Human Rights Act by failing to adequately respond when firefighters posted a series of derogatory messages about Kirby on an Internet site for firefights. The complaint charges department officials with retaliating against Kirby by curtailing her job duties when she reported the discrimination to her supervisors.

“Look at you! Look at you!” Cusick screamed at Kirby, according to Daniels’s account. “How dare you accuse me of anything!” Daniels quoted Cusick as saying.

Kenda Kirby from the Washington Blade.

Kenda Kirby from the Washington Blade.

Daniels said a stunned Kirby sat in silence as Daniels and OHR compliance officer Julio Matta tried to calm Cusick. Cusick continued to shout at Kirby for nearly five minutes, Daniels said, before agreeing to Daniels and Matta’s suggestion to end the meeting and to reschedule it for at another time.

“She was outright abusive and uncivil,” Daniels said. “It was the most unprofessional thing I’ve experienced in over 20 years of practice.”

Cusick, when contacted Wednesday by phone, declined comment.

“I cannot discuss this at all,” she said. “I cannot talk to the press.”

Katherine Friedman, a spokesperson for the department, said the department considers proceedings such as the Feb. 9 OHR meeting to be confidential and never comments on them.

The department hired Kirby, a former volunteer firefighter in Oklahoma, to help run the department’s diversity training program, which covers gay and transgender issues. The department decided not to renew her one-year appointment, which ended last month.

Kirby charges in her complaint that Cusick failed to adequately investigate a series of anonymous, online postings by firefighters on an unofficial firefighters’ Web site that poked fun of Kirby’s appearance. The postings also questioned Kirby’s competency as a consultant for the department’s diversity training program. Someone placed a printed copy of the postings in Kirby’s office mailbox, her complaint says.

One of the postings denounced Kirby for wearing a uniform normally worn by male battalion fire chiefs, calling her “some no-nothing running around dressed like a fireman.” Kirby has said department officials selected the uniform and required her to wear it.

Another posting said, “I thought the dress uniform for women was a skirt!!!”

A third posting criticized Fire Chief Adrian Thompson for hiring as diversity trainers new battalion fire chiefs who “cannot figure out if they are male or female.”

In addition, the complaint says Kirby was informed by a deputy fire chief that department officials had deliberated in private over whether she should be required to use the male or female bathrooms at the time she was hired. The officials eventually decided, “I was not allowed to use the men’s room,” Kirby said in an affidavit accompanying her complaint.

Kirby charges in her complaint that the department’s failure to take adequate steps to identify and reprimand the department employees who wrote the online messages undermined her ability to effectively carry out her job, defamed her character, and caused her to suffer emotional harm.

The complaint says at least one of the postings shows it was sent out on a Fire & EMS Department computer server, indicating that the sender wrote it while at work.

Daniels said Kirby has since amended her complaint against the department to charge Cusick with a count of retaliation for Cusick’s behavior at the Feb. 9 OHR meeting.

“The basis of the complaint is the department acted improperly toward Kenda because of her personal appearance,” Daniels said. “Now you have Cusick shouting ‘Look at you, look at you’ at Kenda. That gets to personal appearance,” Daniels said.

Philadelphia firefighter suspended, accused of setting fire to ladder truck. Reports indicate his lieutenant told him to stop playing with fire.

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The scene of the crime from Google Maps Street View.

The scene of the crime from Google Maps Street View.

A firefighter in Philadelphia has been suspended after being accused of setting fire to the rig where he is assigned. The fire was quickly extinguished by other firefighters. Philadelphia Fire Department Commissioner Lloyd Ayres says fire investigators are looking into Paul Prendergas’ actions on Tuesday morning.

Excerpts from an article by Kitty Capparella at Philly.com:

“I can guarantee the proper discipline will be handed out. This is a very serious infraction,” Ayres added. “We don’t take this lightly.

The commissioner said Prendergas was “engaged in horseplay,” allegedly lighting paper and watching it flame out inside the firehouse on Arch Street near 4th where he worked on Ladder 2.

His supervisor, Lt. Alfonso Mesete, ordered Prendergas, who is in his 20s, to stop playing with fire.

But Prendergas allegedly lit another paper and threw it into the fire truck’s engine compartment, which is normally locked, setting ablaze the motor which operates the truck and powers the firefighting equipment.

Mesete filed a report about the incident, which prompted the Visual Communications Unit to photograph the damage and a Fire Marshal to interview witnesses.

“I’m waiting for all the reports, including the cost of repairs to the truck before taking action,” said Ayres. Mechanics replaced a few parts to make the $800,000 fire truck operable.

Prendergas, who is known by officials as a “problem child,” has faced discipline in the past year, prompting his transfer from Engine 71 at Cottman Avenue and Loretto Street in the Northeast, to Ladder 2, said sources.

Called a “legacy” member of the department, Prendergas comes from a family of firefighters, said one source. “He should know better. What if Ladder 2 was called into service and couldn’t be dispatched because they were fighting a fire on their own truck?”

Quick Takes

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Gary, Indiana house fire with no hydrant: This was early this morning in the 5100 block of Washington. Water supply was reported to be an issue.

Video deposition of Chief Dennis Rubin in lawsuit over the dismissal of the DC Fire & EMS Department lawyer: A whistle blower protection group releases excerpts from the October deposition of Chief Rubin. The city is being sued by the department’s former general counsel, Theresa Cusick, who claims Rubin got rid of her after she told him about a cover-up involving an assistant chief. The chief says she needed to be gone after an expletive filled tirade about his command staff. Click here for our coverage. We have also added the complaint from Theresa Cusick’s lawsuit.

And now you know the rest of the story: Firefighter Close Calls has more on the Tennessee close call video where a man was almost run over a tanker. Apparently there was someone assisting the driver in backing up and the man who was hit has trouble hearing. Here’s the latest.

Lots of coverage of Worcester anniversaryClick here for various news stories on yesterday’s 10th anniversary of the Worcester Cold Storage fire that killed six firefighters.  Here’s the story from Firehouse.com.

Chief who was reprimanded for racial slurs has to take back reprimand of union president: You may recall the story last March of South Milwaukee Chief Jay Behling who ended up with 90-days off the job. The chief ended up later issuing his own reprimand against a lieutenant who is the union president who pushed the investigation of the racial slurs and wanted Behling fired. That discipline has been reversed. Read the details.

10 more firefighters who were not part of lawsuit to be promoted in New Haven: Ending some uncertainty, these additional promotions came from the 2003 lists. Read more.

Former firefighter and art thief pleads guilty to assault during police impersonation: You may recall the story of former Waterford, Connecticut volunteer firefighter Charles McDougal. It was learned McDougal was also an art thief on probation when he was arrested for pulling a woman over with his blue light in January and hitting here. He has now entered a guilty plea on the assault charge. Here are the details.

House siren battle: A new firehouse. A new and larger house siren. Not a good mix in one New York neighborhood. Firegeezer has it covered.

The fire chief’s deposition. Dennis Rubin responds to questions from the lawyer for the DC Fire & EMS Department’s former legal counsel.

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WARNING – THERE IS GRAPHIC LANGUAGE IN THE ABOVE VIDEO

Above is one of three clips of the deposition of DC Fire & EMS Chief Dennis Rubin. It was provided by lawyers fwith the Government Accountability Project (GAP), a whistleblower protection organization. They are representing the department’s former general counsel, Theresa Cusick. There are other excerpts from the deposition here and here. GAP has also issued its own video press release that includes excerpts from the depositions, its own interview with Theresa Cusick and a look from GAP’s perspective at some of the other department cases and issues. That video can be found here

Washington City Paper’s Jason Cherkis’ view of Chief Rubin’s discussion of the expletives he claims were used by Theresa Cusick (this is also graphic).

Read complaint from lawsuit filed by Theresa Cusick

It is a fact of life for a modern fire chief that you or your department will get sued. I have covered many lawsuits against the District of Columbia Fire & EMS Department and its leaders in my almost 30 years of reporting on the department. What I have rarely seen are the inner workings of one of these lawsuits. That changed today when the whistleblower protection organization, Government Accountability Project (GAP). released a series of clips from the deposition of Chief Dennis Rubin in early October. It is in connection with a lawsuit filed by the former general counsel for the DC Fire & EMS Department, Theresa Cusick.

We need to point out that these clips are long segments from the deposition and not the entire session with Chief Rubin. We also do not have the depositions from the other people involved in this case. The language on these videos can be quite graphic.

Cusick says she was transferred out of the agency after telling Chief Dennis Rubin about a cover up involving one of his top aides. Theresa Cusick spent nine years as the department’s lawyer and was moved out of her job three months after Rubin’s arrival in April of 2007.

Above is my report from 9NEWS NOW at 6:00 PM. It includes the interview with Theresa Cusick and Assistant Chief Larry Schultz.

In the lawsuit and in an interview with STATter911.com, Cusick claims she attempted to inform Chief Rubin that Assistant Chief Brian Lee had interfered with an investigation of a cheating allegation involving a fire investigator. Cusick says that same investigator was being tapped to handle the department’s internal affairs investigations under the direction of Chief Lee. According to Cusick she first approached this issue with Chief Lee when he was the interim chief of the department before Rubin’s arrival.

In the video deposition clips, Chief Rubin claims he got rid of Cusick because of a confrontation they had. Rubin describes Cusick as giving him an expletive filled description of problems she was having with his three assistant chiefs. Cusick denies such a confrontation occurred.

Assistant Chief Larry Schultz, who is named in the lawsuit, told us the department can’ t talk about the lawsuit involving Cusick because it is a personnel matter. Cusick was originally transferred out of the fire department and to the Office of the Attorney General. Cusick was later forced to take a lower paying job with the city, where she currently works.

Cusick and her attorney, Richard Condit, claim the problems extend beyond this case. GAP is handling or consulting on other lawsuits and claims from department employees who were dismissed or disciplined.

While not addressing the lawsuits, but speaking in general,  Chief Schultz tells STATter911.com, “This is a clear and formulated attack by four or five people to railroad, (and) to change the focus of all the positive things that have gone on here since Chief Rubin’s arrival.” 

Schultz points out, that in making changes, they have had to deal with a small number of employees who were taking taxpayer’s money and not performing. Schultz cites a survey showing a 94-percent satisfaction rate with the job the department is doing under the administration of Chief Rubin and Mayor Adrian Fenty.

Cusick believes Chief Rubin does not like dissenting opinions, is dismissive of women and calls him an absentee chief who is on the road.

Schultz says he probably challenges the chief more than anyone else the department. According to Schultz, “One thing he certainly does is take that type of criticism and other things very, very, well. He’s a very humble person.”  Schultz believes there is no one in the department more concerned about diversity issues than Chief Rubin.

STATter911.com asked Chief Rubin about his travel schedule in October after a sprinkler demonstration injured a firefighter. The chief bristled at the idea his speaking engagements have anything to with problems in the department.

On this topic Assistant Chief Schultz said, “I think he is like me, we get opportunities since the department is going so successfully now, to go out and brag about our department. Ninety-nine percent of the time he’s here at 6:00 in the morning and he goes home at 7:00 at night only to eat dinner and then spend the rest of the night at every ANC (Advisory Neighborhood Commission meetings) around the city.”

Quick Takes

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A story you will want to see: They moved out of North Providence’s fire station on Douglas Avenue yesterday. Part of the Rhode Island city’s budget cutting. Mayor Charles Lombardi wants to see the property make money for the city. Captain John Cagno, in uniform and standing at the door of a fire department vehicle, makes it very clear he trusts his judgment and 28-years of experience that closing Engine 3 is a bad move. The mayor cites a study saying things will be just fine and is moving ahead in restructuring the fire department. Late yesterday a judge has ordered a temporary reopening of the station so the court can hear arguments in the union’s legal bid to stop the closing.  This all follows an emotionally charged council meeting that Firegeezer has covered.

The answer to the question most asked of Dave Statter over the last two days: Number 1. (If you don’t know the question, don’t worry about it or click here.)

Christmas is back on in North Andover, Massachusetts. Officials now think better of ordering firefighters to remove the 50-year-old Merry Christmas sign from the front of the fire station. Click the image for the latest from WBZ-TV.

Christmas is back on in North Andover, Massachusetts. Officials now think better of ordering firefighters to remove the 50-year-old Merry Christmas sign from the front of the fire station. Click the image for the latest from WBZ-TV.

Now don’t go out on a limb: Five house fires in detached homes in one Detroit neighborhood yesterday evening are being called suspicious.  Read the story and watch the video.  

Arrest in fire we showed you yesterday: We topped yesterday’s Quick Takes with a fire in some closely built homes in Pendleton, Indiana. Now a woman has been arrested for starting the fire. News reports indicate that despite a restraining order she returned to her former home and set it on fire.  Here’s the story

Cindy Schuenke still battling: It has been a while since we caught up with Cindy Schuenke and her efforts to ride a fire engine again in Overland, Missouri, four years after burns that almost killed her. She is appealing her second firing. Here is the latest. Click here for a previous story.

Remembering six in Worcester: On the tenth anniversary of the Worcester Cold Storage fire there is a lot to read about that night. Click here, here, here and here to read more about the loss of Thomas Spencer, Tim Jackson, Jay Lyons, Jeremiah Lucey, Paul Brotherton and Joe McGuirk. Also, here is the link we brought you earlier in the week of the material Firefighter Close Calls put together about the fire.

Firehouse.com has people on the scene and will be filing stories and video today from Worcester. Here is the link.  They also have more with retired District Chief Mike McNamee about his difficult decision to stop the search and not risk more lives.

New Haven promotion ceremony set for next Thursday: It was made official at the Board of Fire Commissioners meeting on Tuesday and the firefighters are already getting paid at the new rank. They will receive their badges on December 10 at 3:00 PM. Click here for more.

Staffing goes to court: Click here for an update on the minimum staffing battle in Lockport, New York.

118 years of service: The Washington Post profiles Ray Lankford and Vernon Horsmon, two 83-year-olds who are still active in their departments in Calvert County, Maryland.

Raw video from Missouri house fire: This fire in the early morning hours of Tuesday was on Honeysuckle Lane around the corner from Battlefield Fire Protection District’s Station 1. According to the description with the video there were hydrant problems which delayed the fire attack. News reports indicate the fire started in the kitchen and there was enough water, but the closest hydrant was 1300 feet away.

Merry XXXXXXXXX. Firehouse in North Andover, Massachusetts forced to remove a simple holiday sign.

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Firegeezer Bill Schumm’s view on the dispute

A fight is underway in North Andover, Massachusetts. First it was over a menorah on the town common. Now the target is a sign at the fire station that reads “Merry Christmas”.  The firefighters were ordered to remove the sign, up for a week, after people complained.

Here are excerpts from an article by Crystal Bozek at the The Eagle Tribune:

Fire Chief William Martineau said the sign was made by firefighters some 50 years ago and was never an issue before.

The sign is now sitting in the basement and there’s only one decoration hanging from the station — a Happy New Year sign.

Happy New Year is still okay. Click the image to see WBZ-TV's version of the story.

Happy New Year is still okay. Click the image to see WBZ-TV's version of the story.

This is the second holiday controversy in two weeks for the town.

Andover Rabbi Asher Bronstein has threatened a lawsuit against North Andover after the selectmen would not let him place a menorah on the town common for all eight days of Hanukkah.

Selectmen voted on Nov. 23 to allow the menorah for one day. They argue that their new town common policy only allows displays to stay up for one day, no matter what they are. That way all groups have equal time and there is no discrimination.

Town officials said yesterday that the menorah fight is what caused Merry Christmas to be outlawed at the fire station for the first time in five decades.

 

A look back: Tampa Fire Department in 1986.

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These two videos were posted on Tampa Fire Rescue’s YouTube account. Here’s the description:

In 1986 Tampa Fire Department produced a show for government access television which ran on the newest and hottest thing in home entertainment, cable TV. This show, hosted by Fire Inspector Todd Spear, gives you the Tampa Fire Department “news of the day” for 1986.

Quick Takes

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Too close for comfort: That was the name of a series I did for TV five-years-ago looking at home separation. The issue is illustrated very well in the above video taken Monday in Pendleton, Indiana. Three detached homes were burning when the first firefighters arrived. There is more video from the fire here. Click here for a news clip. Also, click here and scroll down for my videos from 2004 and the NIST testing on home separation.

New – Firefighter burned battling blaze in own home: Williamsburg, Virginia firefighter Mike Trombley and his wife had just put up the Christmas decorations in their Gloucester home on Friday. The next thing they knew the living room was on fire. After hustling the family out of the house, Trombley tried to keep the fire in check while waiting for the fire department. Read the story.

Police and fire together – chiefs announce retirement rather than face budget cuts: In Saratoga Springs, New York, the police chief and the fire chief announced together at an emotional news conference yesterday they were both retiring by the end of the year. Police Chief Edward Moore and Fire Chief Robert Cogan were each going to face staffing cuts of 20-percent or more. They blame city politics for not adequately addressing the needs of protecting the public in tight budget times. Read more.

Investigation underway sparked by firehouse visitor getting lost on the way to the bathroom: A rude awakening for a career firefighter in Montgomery County, Maryland. The firefighter’s bed was mistaken for a toilet by the date of a member of the Burtonsville Volunteer Fire Department. That date apparently turned into a firehouse sleepover. Internal Affairs for Montgomery County Fire & Rescue Service has the investigation. Click here to watch and read the story.

Click the image for some must see video from Tennessee as a tanker backs into a man at a church fire.

Click the image for some must see video from Tennessee as a tanker backs into a man at a church fire.

The doctor is out. DC once again looking for a new medical director: Dr. James Augustine cites health issues for his decision to pull out of the DC Fire & EMS Department after 17 months. That isn’t the only change facing the EMS side. Click here for the details.

Baltimore mayor guilty: Mayor Sheila Dixon is found guilty of taking gift cards intended for the poor. It could force her from office.  Read the details.

Woman with firefighter charged in his shooting: We told you yesterday morning about an off-duty Jacksonville, Florida firefighter found shot to death at a gas station. An 18-year-old woman with 21-year-old Emanuel Porter says she didn’t know the gun was loaded when she pointed it at him. Here are the details.

Details emerge on fire chief’s suspension: Click here to read the allegations against the chief of Kentucky’s McMahan Fire Protection District. Much of it surrounds claims of misuse of money.

Geezer burns while Statter fiddles: As I wasted my time yesterday covering the wrong turn on the way to the toilet Firegeezer was covering the important stuff. One of them is how Newark, Ohio figured out how to save money by hiring firefighters. The other is FDNY reducing some engine company staffing because of sick leave use

Ray’s latest: Click here for thehousewatch.com’s weekly installment from Ray McCormack. This one is called Tactical Safety: Night and Day, They’re Always Firemen.

Must see video: Man almost gets run over by tanker at Tennessee church fire.

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Thanks to Firefighter Close Calls for finding the video above from Unicoi County, Tennessee. It is pretty self explanatory.

The video was taken at a church fire this morning on Chestoa Pike. That story is below.

Investigation into Montgomery County, Maryland firehouse sleepover. Burtonsville VFD member’s Saturday night date discovered after she uses another firefighter’s bed as a toilet.

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STATter911.com has learned a firefighter is suspended while an investigation is underway into a firehouse sleepover. The allegations involve a volunteer at the Burtonsville Volunteer Fire Department in Montgomery County, Maryland.

According to sources familiar with the investigation, the firefighter returned to the station at Briggs Chaney Road and Old Columbia Pike with his date following a Saturday night out. She spent the night.

Her presence in the firehouse became very clear shortly before 5:00 AM on the morning of October 8. The sources say the woman was heading to the bathroom, but instead stopped along the way and used the bunk of a Montgomery County career firefighter as a toilet. That firefighter was asleep in the bed at the time.
MD Montgomery County Burtonsville

Assistant Chief Scott Graham, a Montgomery County Fire & Rescue Service spokesman, confirms that an investigation is ongoing. Graham says the fire chief’s office was notified of the incident by the chief and president of the Burtonsville Volunteer Fire Department. Montgomery County is not officially saying what allegations are being investigated.

Contacted by phone, Burtonsville Volunteer Fire Department Chief Rob Ryan says he can’t comment due to the investigation.

DC’s medical director announces his departure. Dr. James Augustine cites health reasons for his resignation.

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DC Augustine FireRescue1Dr. James Augustine has announced his resignation as medical director for the DC Fire & EMS Department after 17-months working for the department. Dr. Augustine is citing health and wellness reasons for his departure. Sources tell STATter911.com the climate in the DC area is not beneficial to a medical condition afflicting Dr. Augustine.

James Augustine was hand picked by Chief Dennis Rubin. The men worked together closely when Rubin was fire chief in Atlanta, Georgia.

In a press release announcing the departure, Chief Dennis Rubin is quoted as saying, “The citizens of the District have directly benefited from the work of Dr. Augustine.  Our world class EMS system is testimony to his leadership and innovation.  He is the real deal.  He will be missed.” 

Augustine joined the department in July, 2008 and became acting director a month later when Dr. Michael Williams suddenly resigned. Dr. Augustine was officially confirmed by the City Council one-year-ago.

The resignation of Dr. Augustine is another set back for Chief Rubin’s efforts to change the culture of EMS in the District of Columbia. Two weeks ago, the EMS training director and administrator were let go by Dr. Augustine. This is at least the third change in leadership in EMS training since Chief Rubin took over the department in April, 2007.

According to the press release, Chief Rubin believes that Augustine “has formed a lasting foundation for which we can build our future course”. Dr. Augustine is expected to leave at the end of the year.

Read DC Fire & EMS Department press release and background on Dr. Augustine

Quick Takes

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Early video of Virginia townhouse fire: You will hear a pretty good blast on this brief cip taken at a townhouse fire at 610 Olde Greenwich Circle. The early morning fire yesterday kept firefighters in Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania busy. Click here for Part 2, which lasts a bit longer.

NEW – Jacksonville firefighter shot and killed overnight: In Florida police are trying to determine who killed a Jacksonville firefighter at a service station early this morning. A spokesoman for JFRD will only confirm at this point that the victim is one of the department’s firefighters. Click here for the story.

NEW – Chief’s test is a mess: Actually it isn’t the test itself that is the problem in Lynn, Massachusetts. Finding a new chief is complicated by the fact that there was already controversy because of how the current acting chief was appointed to deputy chief in 2006.  That went to arbitration and the city lost in June. Read the details.

Promotions in New Haven a step closer: In a process that took 6-minutes, New Haven’s Civil Service review Board did what it did not do in 2004 and okayed the promotions of one Hispanic and 13 white  firefighters. Read the latest.

Don't PanicDon’t panic: You may recall after the recent death of Montgomery County, Maryland’s Scott Doyle there was information about donations that can be made to the Don’t Panic Foundation. At the time I wasn’t that clear on the purpose of the group. Now, thanks to Sam Villani, I am. The Don’t Panic Foundation was formed to help public safety professionals and their families recover from injuries that occur while off duty. You may recall that Scott Doyle’s family initially had difficulty bringing him back home after he was injured while BASE jumping in Idaho. You can click here for details or go to the website at don’tpanicfoundation.org

Decembers past: Billy Goldfeder takes a look at a month that has us remembering some tragic incidents. He focuses on 1999 and the tenth anniversaries of fires in Worcester, Massachusetts and Keokuk, Iowa that together took the lives of nine firefighters. Check out The Secret List which includes links to many stories and reports. Make sure you read the one on retired District Fire Chief Michael McNamee who made the decision not to send any more firefighters into Worcester Cold Storage and likely saved the lives of other firefighters.

Group gets what it opposes: You may recall that Habitat for Humanity International joined the National Association of Homebuilders in the opposition of residential sprinklers. Another local chapter apparently doesn’t buy that position. In Wilmington, North Carolina firefighters and Fire Technologies, Inc. teamed up to provide residential sprinklers for Habitat homes. Click here.

Not guilty plea for former Long Island chief accused of altering stats for pension: Former Hempstead Village fire chief Lester Arsell entered a not guilty plea on a 50-count indictment that accuses him of inflating the number of calls Arsell and his wife responded to as part of an effort to qualify for pension benefits. Read more

Bank robbers get stiffed: This has nothing to do with fire and EMS, but it is a story from my colleague  Scott Broom that you don’t want to miss. In Calvert County, Maryland a pair of bank robbers thought they were holding up a bank on Monday. They were about as inept as Woody Allen in the movie Take the Money and Run. Instead of a bank they found themselves inside the funeral home next door. Click here to watch the story and the interview with the funeral home manager.

Pennsylvania house fire: A second alarm was called on Saturday for a house fire in Lower Macungie Township. NewsWorking.org was on the scene and wrote this about the fire – At 1945 hours Lower Mac #30 responds to 1299 Walnut Lane for a house fire with possible entrapment. On arrival, crews find a two-story single-family Dwelling with heavy fire showing. A second-alarm was struck immediately. Tanker 25, Engines 15, 31, 7, ladder 8, Air 32 and rehab 66 respond on the 2nd alarm. Heavy fire was consuming the rear of the house and second-floor. Multiple hand lines were stretched and Truck 30 went to the roof to open up.