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UPDATED: Is the ‘public safety officer’ model behind the handcuffing of a fire captain inside a Colorado jail? Union & Leadville officials think it’s part of a power grab by the Lake County sheriff.

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CO Leadville deputy Captain Dailey

Left to right: Deputy Arin Hart, Battalion Captain Dan Dailey, Deputy Steve James, Cell phone image provided to the Herald Democrat.

More position papers and meeting notes

NEW INFORMATION – Neighboring chief is worried about dispute’s impact on mutual aid

NOTE: At the bottom of this entry we have added The Denver Post’s concise summary of the relationship between the two departments in dealing with the future of fire/EMS coverage in the county.

Deputy Steve James outlines experience in fire & EMS

Read Sheriff Ed Holte’s position on the future of public safety in Lake County

LLCFR Chief Bob Harvey’s views

When we first told you that an on-duty Leadville, Colorado fire captain was cited last Saturday for obstruction by a Lake County Sheriff’s Department deputy in connection with a domestic violence case we pointed out there were few details. Still, we were pretty certain there was a lot more to this story. And there sure is.

Two articles on the web today give more insight into the detention of Battalion Captain Daniel Dailey, the second in command of the Leadville/Lake County Fire Rescue. While one article says that Capt. Dailey wasn’t arrested, the other indicates he was handcuffed and spent 75-minutes inside a holding cell at the Lake County Jail, the same facility where the call occurred.

Let’s start with the Herald Democrat which found itself in receipt of the cell phone image above.

Here is an excerpt from an article by Ann E. Wibbenmeyer:

According to Sheriff Ed Holte, the ambulance only was requested for a 25-year-old woman who had come to the sheriff’s office to report a domestic violence incident.

It was a requested resource, said Holte, as the deputy wanted medical clearance for the woman.

CO Lake County Sheriff Holte

According to the Lake County website, Sheriff Edward J. Holte has been serving the citizens since 1978.

When the fire crew arrived on scene first, “to provide patient care,” said Dailey, Deputy Steve James and Deputy Arin Hart prevented the firefighters access to the patient.

The deputies repeatedly told the firefighters to leave, but the firefighters continued forward toward the patient.

Again the deputies asked them to leave, saying this time that they would arrest them if they did not leave.

Dailey responded that he would rather be arrested than leave a medical scene.

He was handcuffed and put in the holding cell of the jail under the charge of obstructing a peace officer.

The other two members of the fire crew left the scene after threats of being arrested as well.

By showing up on a scene without being dispatched, said Holte, “they disregard our authority and abilities. It’s like a slap in the face.”

The ambulance crew, which showed up in the process of Dailey’s being arrested, did eventually transport the woman to the hospital.

In the process, the crew called the fire department back for a medical assist. The now two-man crew responded again to the jail, with an escort from Leadville Police Officer Dave Wineman.

The Herald Democrat says Dailey was eventually picked up from the jail by Leadville Police Chief Mike Leake. Because of this dispute, the Leadville Police Department is now going to accompany the fire department to provide security on all of its calls.

Also, the Lake County Commissioners were in emergency executive session earlier in the week to handle a personnel matter “following this incident”.

Now, let’s switch to KMGH-TV’s story where the firefighter’s union and Leadville city officials claim the motive behind the actions of Sheriff Holte and his people is a power grab. They indicate that Holte and Emergency Manager Jeff Foley want  “public safety officers” to do law enforcement, fire and EMS, taking over the Leadville Fire Department in the process.

This article by Alan Gathright has Sheriff Holte not being available for comment, but has a statement from his office. It indicates that the ambulance crew from Saint Vincent Hospital was already examining the patient and that deputies had  told the firefighters they weren’t needed.

Here’s more:

“The sheriff’s department is free to disagree with us, but he is not free to arrest those who disagree with him,” International Association of Fire Fighters 9th District Vice President Randy Atkinson said in a Thursday statement demanding the resignation of the deputy involved in the incident.

Deputy Steve James tried to stop Dailey and two other firefighters from entering the building, because he “was of the opinion that there were enough personnel on the scene and that the addition of the three firemen would serve no purpose other than to further upset the victim and her children,” the sheriff’s office statement said.

Complicating matters: “The victim of the crime was refusing medical treatment, but the investigating deputy felt (she) needed to be looked at,” the sheriff’s statement said.

When Dailey “insisted on administering medical care,” as fire union officials put it, he was cited for “obstruction of a governmental operation,” a misdemeanor. Dailey was briefly “detained,” but was not arrested.

“Preventing a first responder from administering care to a victim is unforgivable,” Atkinson said. “The Lake County Sheriff’s Department should issue an immediate apology to the victim and to the Leadville Fire Department, and the deputy whose terrible judgment led him to arrest Captain Dailey should step down because he is unfit to serve the public.”

The fire union leaders noted that the deputy who cited Dailey is involved in cross-training sheriff’s staff to become firefighters.

“Without question, the arrest of Captain Dailey by Deputy James — a fired volunteer firefighter who is training members of the sheriff’s department to become firefighters — stems from the sheriff’s anger over our resistance to his attempted takeover of the Leadville Fire Department,” Leadville Local 869 President Zac Pigati said.

“It is all a giant power grab,” Leadville Mayor Bud Norris said of the long-running conflict over whether to merge the fire agency into a new county public safety department.

The mayor called detaining Dailey, who spent an hour in jail, “a real abuse of police powers and an abuse of dispatch protocols that are being used as a political tool.”

Norris stressed that the protocol is to have fire medical crews respond to emergencies at the county jail, adding that the sheriff cannot unilaterally change the protocol.

The mayor said sheriff’s dispatcher’s reluctance to call fire EMT’s may have contributed to one death.

“We had an incident where a lady’s dad was visiting (Leadville) and had a heart attack,” Norris said. “She called 911 and she was doing CPR.” Sheriff’s dispatchers did not dispatch fire department “until much later.”

“A sheriff deputy only responded. By the time an ambulance got there, the guy had died,” the mayor said.

Firefighter are saying there will be a protest rally on Monday. It sounds like there will be a lot more to this story.

Fire and explosions in Leadville earlier this year where the two departments worked together. Deputy Steve James spoke to reporters about fire department opertations during the January 22 incident.

Added on Friday morning (4/2)- The Denver Post’s Mike McPhee has a story on the detention of Captain Dailey. In it is a nice summary of how Leadville and Lake County are dealing with the issue of fire/EMS coverage:

Currently, Leadville provides fire protection throughout the county with nine paid firefighters and six volunteers.

Holte, a retired Colorado State Patrol trooper who was elected to his first term as Lake County sheriff almost four years ago, wants his deputies to be trained as firefighters, allowing them to essentially replace the Leadville Fire Department and take over county fire services, according to Leadville Mayor Bud Elliott.

The mayor, however, wants to continue the city’s agreement with the county to provide fire protection, said Fire Chief Robert Harvey.

“We’re very well trained in basic life support and certified to administer IVs,” Harvey said.

The intergovernmental agreement between Leadville and Lake County expires at the end of December. But for two years now, Holte has had emergency dispatchers, who work for him, sending deputies first to all emergency calls, including medical calls, Elliott said.

“Dispatch is being used as a political tool by the sheriff,” Elliott said. “When he tells dispatch not to send anyone but a deputy, say, to a fire to assess the situation first, the community isn’t being served well. So far, they’ve had only campfires to deal with, but this is a catastrophe waiting to happen.”

Watch raw video of large pallet fire in Phoenix. Blaze caused explosions. Damaged buildings & vehicles.

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Article by Chelsea Smith and Jolie McCullough, The Arizona Republic:

The fire that started Wednesday and consumed thousands of wooden pallets and damaged buildings was under control and cleaned up by 2 a.m. Thursday morning.

Almost 100 firefighters worked on the second-alarm fire in Phoenix for nearly eight hours

The fire started in stacks of the wooden pallets that surrounded an industrial building near 43rd Avenue and Roeser Road in Phoenix, Public Information Officer for the Phoenix Fire Department, Captain Tony Mure, said.

Firefighters arrived at the fire around 6 p.m Wednesday afternoon and according to Mure, they were able to tame the fire around 9:30 p.m.

The crew also heard explosions while trying to calm the flames. Mure said that is likely because there are chemicals and solvents in industrial areas.

The pallets surrounded the building and Phoenix Fire Department Chief Frank Salomon said pallets are used to hold barrels containing chemicals and can be dangerous. Once the pallets burn, the smoke can be very dangerous to breathe in because of the chemicals.

Firefighters were at the scene mopping up ashes and making sure all the fire was out until around 2 a.m.

A couple of buildings, a tractor trailer and multiple fork lifts were damaged due to the fire, Mure said.

Employees of the companies were in the building at the time.

No injuries with employees or firefighters were reported.

The fire was hard to put out apparently due to the high winds and the shortage of water in hydrants, Mure said.

43rd Avenue between Broadway Road and Southern Avenue were closed down while the fire was still burning.

Quick Takes

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Old home in Nashville burns – plus lots more video: It is described as an early 1900s home with narrow hallways. The fire, in the Belmont area of Nashville, is reported to have started on the outside of the 10,000 square foot house, near some shrubbery on Tuesday afternoon. This is one of a number of videos WUSA9.com‘s Emily Cyr posted to our player just to the right. Other clips include firefighters making rescues during Warwick, Rhode Island flooding (watch the security guard lock up just before he gets a ride out), the remains of a house that burned to the ground in Lorton, Virginia yesterday, a cabinet shop that burned in Baldwin Park, California and an interview with Tricia Rodriguez, Pasadena, California’s first female fire captain. Look to the right to the player for even more new videos from around the country. >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

Did flesh eating bacteria play role in premature death determination?: That’s the word from sources in Prince George’s County, Maryland familiar with Friday’s incident where a man was left for dead in his Glenarden home. While one part of the investigation continues, PGFD officials report the two medics have now been cleared for full duty. Here’s the story.

Radio traffic after nine people shot in Washington, DC: FireSceneAudio.com has provided the radio transmissions of the drama on Tuesday night after a drive by shooting left four dead and five others wounded. Four police officers were also injured during a car crash. Click here for the fire, EMS and police audio.

More from the tragedy in Homewood, Illinois: Through a family friend, injured Village of Homewood firefighter Karra Kopas tells her story about Tuesday night’s house fire that killed Firefighter Brian Carey and left Kopas with burns. Click here. Here is our earlier coverage.

MI Fint more fires

WJRT-TV's tower cam this morning as the rash of fires continues in Flint, Michigan. Click the image for the station's coverage.

A “Dear Firebug” letter: Columnist Andrew Heller in the Flint Journal makes the case that whoever starting setting fires in the wake of layoffs in the Michigan city is not associated with firefighters. Heller wants the fire starter to knock it off before a firefighter or someone else gets killed. Read his column

And Flint continues to burn: April Fools Day is clearly not a holiday for the arsonist. Five more overnight fires. Click here for the details.

Trio of firefighters in PA charged with arson: Three young volunteers with the Friedensburg Fire Company in Schuylkill County have been arrested on arson charges. Here’s the story.

A two-year-old firehouse may close: In Dover, New Hampshire the Liberty North End Fire Station opened only two-years-ago after decades on the drawing board. It could soon close because of budget issues. Read the story.

Back touching not harassment and city comes down in favor of hazing: I haven’t had a chance to read all of the articles on a jury ruling in favor of the Austin Fire Department after Nona Allen, a new female firefighter, sued. A TV station story indicates this was all about a simple touch on the back heading toward the rig in the fire station. The newspaper story says the city made the argument that hazing of new firefighters is okay. I hope to read more.

With a nod to the calendar, a look at Firegeezer’s formative years in the fire service: This is a definite must see. In what is clearly the inspiration for the TV show Emergency! (seen Sunday afternoons exclusively on Firegeezer.com), the Geezer himself shows off the documentary that featured Bill and his best buddies as they started on their long, long careers of fighting fires and savings lives. This is very much ”old school”. Make sure you click here for this rare treat.

And speaking of Emergency!:  The County of Los Angeles Fire Museum wants help in restoring Engine 51 (the Ward LaFrance). Read more and watch the videos.

Budget busting overtime makes news again: I wish I could get time-and-a-half each time I link to a story on a jurisdiction across the country sounding the alarm about firefighter overtime. Palm Bay, Florida is the latest. Let me fill out my time sheet.

Save the tiger: In the ultimate stuck kitty story (see our posting for a more traditional one that sparked comments last weekend) FireSpecialOps.com‘s Gary Sharp looks closely at how the fire department pitched in at the San Franciso Zoo to get one out of the moat. Check it out.

Two Prince George’s County paramedics back on the job 5 days after wrongly declaring man dead. Sources indicate flesh eating bacteria played a role in the mistake.

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MD PG 846Click here and here for previous coverage of this story 

Click here to read entire PGFD statement

Two paramedics who have been on limited duty after mistakenly determining that a man was dead were cleared to return to full duty Wednesday but still face reviews that could take two months to complete. Sources familiar with the investigation tell STATter911.com that flesh eating bacteria helped give the impression the 70-year-old man had died.

The Prince George’s County Fire/EMS Department had limited the duties of the paramedics after they walked away from the unconscious George Waters at about noon on Friday. Police had found Waters in his Glenarden home and requested EMS for a possible DOA. According to a statement on Friday the paramedics, assigned to Medic 846 (Largo), concurred with police that Waters had died.

About 90 mintues later, forensics investigators saw signs of life and an EMS team was called and transported him to Prince George’s Hospital Center.

Waters died the next night. It is not known if the delay adversely impacted his condition.

The sources, who were not authorized to discuss details of the investigation, indicate Waters was suffering from necrotizing fasciitis, a rare bacterial infection that can destroy skin and soft tissues beneath it. The odor and visual impression at the scene apparently gave the indication decomposition of the man’s body had already occurred.

The official word came in a press release last evening from Chief Spokesman Mark Brady. Here are excerpts:

The Emergency Medical Services Operational Program moved swiftly to initiate a clinical Quality Assurance Review of this incident. The Jurisdictional Medical Director, Dr. Terry Jodrie, interviewed both paramedics on Friday, just hours after the incident occurred. A Provider Action Notice was issued within 24 hours of the incident requiring all EMS personnel to review the Presumed Dead on Arrival (PDOA) protocols. This includes an update that most PDOA determinations must include a medical consult between the EMS care provider and a base station physician by EMS radio or telephone.

While the two paramedics have returned to full duty with clearance of the Medical Director, the Office of Professional Standards continues their review. This comprehensive process includes a review of applicable Departmental General Orders, Standard Operating Procedures and interviews of everyone involved. These reviews could take up to 2 months before being completed.

George VanDaniker, WUSA9.com, contributed to this story.