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Oak Brook’s Connie Xinos: A profile of the Illinois lawyer who takes on firefighters & 11-year-old girls.

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 Click here and here for our previous coverage of this story

Burt Constable, a columnist with the Daily Herald, knows something about Connie Xinos. Xinos, of course, is the man who wants to fire one Oak Brook, Illinois firefighter a month until the Village officials get the concessions they want. Constable has followed the antics of this outspoken critic of those in public safety and those in elementary school.

The writer has now penned (or should it be keyboarded) his latest column about Xinos. It has the title Mr. X earns rep by ripping poor, library and firefighters. It starts with a description of the Grinch (“it could be that his head wasn’t screwed on just right”) from Dr. Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole Christmas. Here are excerpts:

Constantine “Connie” Xinos says things that could lead some people to see him as the meanest man in all of Oak Brook. But Xinos seems as comfortable wearing that reputation as he is tooling around his gated community in his Mercedes-Benz.

Xinos, a 70-year-old attorney who hasn’t won a villagewide election but has been president of his home association since 1983, attacked the girl with such meanness that it made her little friend cry. He knew he was ticking off professional librarians and people who like libraries and 11-year-old girls, and he liked it.

“I wanted that kid to lose sleep that night,” Xinos, with a smile most unpleasant, told me during a two-hour, profanity-filled interview last year in his car.

This was not his first dip into the pool of publicly spewed vile. Once, when Oak Brook considered a subsidized housing unit for seniors, Xinos successfully campaigned against it by proclaiming, “I don’t want to live next to poor people. I don’t want poor people in my town.”

Now, as Oak Brook, which levies no property taxes to pay for village services, looks at ways to cuts costs in these harsh times, Xinos goes after village firefighters.

“Firemen, like cops, are street people. They only understand civilized force. That’s what they understand. Fire ‘em!” Xinos said at a recent meeting, suggesting the village fire one firefighter every month until the firefighters retreated on salary and benefits.

But he didn’t just want to put a village employee out of work. He fantasized about ruining the lives of firefighters, their wives, kids and pets.

“She’ll leave him. He’ll be out of the house,” Xinos said, envisioning the demise of the family. “The dog will be dead and the kids will be out on the streets.”

Up close & personal with firefighters in the Philippines. Commercial fire in Davao City.

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It is well worth watching this close-up view of firefighters in Davao City in the Philippines as they tackle a fire on St. Ana Avenue.  next to the National Food Authority Warehouse

MCI: At least one dead in Maryland bus wreck.

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From WUSA9.com:

One person is dead after a commercial “Wolf’s” bus has overturned under the northbound sky ramp onto the I-270 spur, according to officials.

Fire rescue spokesman Captain Oscar Garcia tells 9 News Now that the accident happened at about 4:02 pm, and at northbound lanes of 270 spur between Rockledge and Montrose roads.

Garcia says the preliminary information is that the bus went off an area of the sky ramp.

Garcia says crews on the scene are assessing 10-15 patients, at least two or three that have serious, life threatening injuries.

Are two feet better than one for forcible entry? Not in this case. Early video from Vancouver, BC garage fire.

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The photographer is an early arrival on this detached garage in an alley in Vancouver, BC. What really caught my eye on this one begins at 1:55 on the video. Synchronized, but unsuccessful forcible entry on the second garage door. Sometimes even teamwork doesn’t get the job done.

Live coverage of Memorial Weekend events. Honor the nation’s fallen firefighters by joining the Fire Hero Network.

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Important NFFF links:

Carry live telecasts on your website or blog

Embed the NFFF widget on your website or blog, honoring a fallen firefighter each day

Chicago Fire tickets, October 8

On Saturday and Sunday the Nation will honor 105 firefighters who died in the line-of-duty. Once again, thanks to WUSA9.com, the U.S. Fire Administration’s PREPnet and Motorola, Inc., you will be able to watch Saturday’s Candlelight Service and Sunday’s Memorial Service live on the Internet. I have hosted these telecasts since 1996 and for about the last 10-years WTOP Radio’s Hillary Howard (Mrs. STATter911) has been the co-host. Of course, we would like to see you in Emmitsburg for the weekend events, but if you can’t make it, join us on the web.

Live Video Also Available On These Websites:
ARLnow.com | Eaglemountainfire.org | FireEngineering.com | Firefighterblog.com | Firegeezer.com | Firehouse.com | FireRescue1.com | howardfire.net www.kyrides.com | rescuingprovidence.com | Statter911.com | U.S. Fire Administration | westcoast911.com | wildfiretoday.com | www.dcfa.org
www.ehfd7.org | www.southmarengofr.org

As many of you know, since leaving my TV job in June, I have been doing work for the National Fallen Firefighters Foundation. I believe that one of the best ways you can honor the firefighters we are remembering this year is to help spread the word about the weekend. You can do so by making sure your department’s website is carrying the live coverage of the Candlelight Service & Memorial Service. It is simple to do. Just click here for an easy way to let your community see these important events. Also, let the news media in your area know they can carry the Memorial Weekend events on their websites.

There is a list above of some of those who have already committed to being a part of our Fire Hero Network. Can we add your website to this list? Just let us know by contacting me at dstatter@firehero.org.

There are many events the Foundation is involved in to raise money to help the families of fallen firefighters. Take a look at the video above from Dover International Speedway that I shot on Sunday. It was an honor to take a ceremonial lap around the track in the hose bed of a Dover fire engine with 12-year-old Joseph Tagliareni Jr. of Secaucus, NJ. His firefighter father died in 1999.

The money raised from these events helps families like the Tagliarenis. The total donated to the Foundation on Sunday was $93,000. The next NASCAR event is in February at the Daytona 500. Keep watching Firehero.org for details.

There is another important fundraiser for the Foundation coming up on Friday, October 8 in Chicago. It’s the anniversary of the Great Chicago Fire. And the current Chicago Fire (the soccer team) has a special deal to benefit NFFF. Join us in a hospitality area at Toyota Park in Bridgeview, Illinois for food and drinks two hours prior to the start of the match.  Click here to order tickets.

Connie Xinos, man who wants to fire Oak Brook, IL firefighters, has no regrets. Union wants to know why Village president didn’t speak up at meeting. Part 2 of the meeting audio.

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Entire letter to Village of Oak Brook President John Craig

Earlier coverage of this issue

The video above is the continuation of the now infamous September 22 meeting of the Village of Oak Brook, Illinois Citizens Finance Advisory Committee. It is the part where the discussion of a firefighter’s death in a neighboring jurisdiction is discussed. More on that in a moment.

As we first told you on Saturday, a member of this same group, Constantine Xinos, earlier in the meeting called for the firing of one Oak Brook firefighter each month until there are pension and staffing concessions. Xinos said, “Firemen, like cops, are street people. They only understand civilized force. That’s what they understand. You fire ‘em.” (That audio is in Part 1 at the bottom.)

Xinos, who says he likes firemen, talked yesterday with WLS-TV:

Xinos said he did not regret his statements.

“I regret nothing,” said Xinos. “You have to get people’s attention.”

It’s working. Just ask 17-year Oak Brook fire veteran and local union president George Grodek.

“We’ve dedicated our lives to the village of Oak Brook,” said Grodek. “To hear someone say because they don’t want to pay a property tax they’d like to ruin my livelihood and family’s wellbeing is just shocking.”

“I think what you heard at that meeting was frustration with a union contract that doesn’t give us a lot of flexibility,” said Oak Brook Village Manager Dave Niemeyer.

This is the same Connie Xinos who also had a public battle with an 11-year-old girl over library funding. I guess Xinos won that skirmish, because he brought the girls friend to tears. He later told the Daily Herald:

“I wanted that kid to lose sleep that night,” a grinning Xinos says Wednesday, as he invites me for a nearly two-hour interview in his Mercedes-Benz in the gated Oak Brook community where he lives. “This is the real world and the lesson, you folks who brought your kids here, is if you want something, pay for it.”

Shortly after the fire department discussion at the September 22 meeting the recent death of Hinsdale, Illinois Deputy Fire Chief Mark Johnson was brought up. This rapidly evolved into laughter as the group discussed the mortality of one of the committee members.

Mike Ward at Firegeezer has been working hard and doing some digging on this issue. Mike found the letter from Associated Firefighters of Illinois President Pat Devaney to Village of Oak Brook President John Craig. Devaney and others identify Craig as also being at the meeting. Here’s an excerpt from the letter: 

More on home separation, lightweight construction & sprinklers. Watch 2004 NIST test & hear the views of a VA fire chief.

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Previous coverage of Manassas fire, including fireground audio & arrival video

NIST fact sheet on house to house fire spread

Discarded cigarette causes Manassas fire

I have referred to these stories many times, but the video has not been available in recent years on the Internet. WUSA9.com’s Emily Cyr took care of that problem for us today. The videos from July, 2004 relate directly to the conflagration last Thursday in Manassas, Virginia. NIST discovered that the simple and relatively inexpensive idea of adding a fire barrier under vinyl siding makes a dramtic difference in preventing fire spread when single family homes are built with little space between the structures.

All the way at the bottom of this post is a 10-minute interview conducted on Saturday by WUSA9.com’s Surae Chinn with Loudoun County, Virginia’s Interim Fire Chief Keith Brower. Like City of Manassas Fire Marshal Frank Teevan, Chief Brower was always one of the  go-to guys when I was reporting and looking for an expert on fire safety issues. Chief Brower talks at length about how residential sprinklers and the lessons learned from the NIST testing can be the difference between one home burning and a neighborhood on fire.

Quick Takes

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 Commercial fire in Falls Church, Virginia: I heard the sirens while standing outside the STATter911.com World Headquarters building on Saturday morning and was heading inside to turn on the scanner. But sad to say I immediately became distracted by some family matter and totally forgot about it. Clearly I am getting old and senile. But, despite my absence, there is video and photographic evidence of the fire on the second floor of a commercial building at 105. E. Annandale Road in Falls Church. There are some earlier photos here.

THE BIG STORY – Fire one firefighter/street person per month until they get the message: As you can imagine, there is a quite a lot of interest in and a growing number of comments about the recording we posted on Saturday from a meeting of an official committee of the Village of Oak Brook, Illinois where the firing idea was floated. The same person called firefighters and cops “street people” who only understand civilized force. Click here. It is worth your time to listen to the audio. It will give you insight into how a growing number people perceive firefighters and the money and pensions they are given to do this job. FossilMedic Mike Ward over at Firegeezer.com did a little research into the politics and the fire department in Oak Brook (and on top of it, he is apparently taking headline writing lessons from me). Make sure you click here to see what Mike discovered

Early video & audio from Manassas multi-home fire. Plus Dave showing his bias: Yes, I admit it. I am in favor of residential sprinklers and improved fire barriers for outside walls. I’m in agreement with Manassas Fire Marshal Frank Teevan that those two items can help prevent conflagrations like the one last Thursday that destroyed three-single family homes and damaged eight more. Like many, I’m not buying the arguments of NAHB. Click here for the audio & video from the fire, Dave’s rantings and ravings and lots of links to relevant studies.

Firefighter dies on Virginia’s Eastern Shore: EasterShoreFire.com has funeral arrangements and information on the death of William “Hal” Clark at a brush fire on Friday in Accomack County. Clark was president and a life member of the Atlantic Volunteer Fire & Rescue Company.  

Firefighter shocked & burned at wildfire that also disrupts 911 service: In Bodega, California, Firefighter Ben Hakala came in contact with a live power line while fighting a wildfire over the weekend. 911 service to the community was disrupted due to the fire. Click here for the story.

Fireground audio & video from six-alarm Toronto high-rise fire: The audio has multiple maydays as firefighters tried to deal with a fire on the 24th floor. Check it out.

Connecticut chiefs explain how budget issues are impacting safety: Chiefs in Wilton, Westport and Fairfield talk about standards and safety issues when operating with less than four people on a fire truck. Read the story.

Raw video from Harris County, Texas apartment fire: A woman is reported have been on the phone with 911 for eight-minutes while trapped in this burning apartment building around 10:30 Friday night. The line went dead and she didn’t make it out. The fire damaged or destroyed 24 units. Click here to read more.

‘Firefighters are street people’: A must listen to recording as the Village of Oak Brook, IL discusses its firefighter problem.

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UPDATE on 9-27: An interview with Connie Xinos the man who wants to fire firefighters. Also, listen to Part 2 & the firefighter death discussion, plus a letter from the union asking the Village president why he didn’t speak up at the meeting

Above is a recording that came directly from the official Village of Oak Brook (DuPage County), Illinois website. It is from a September 22, 2010 meeting of the Citizens Finance Advisory Committee. While I don’t know who the people are speaking, or whether they are political leaders or just village residents, it is clear what they are talking about. And it says a lot about how firefighters are now perceived during difficult economic times.

The issue under discussion is the pension for firefighters and an agreement that requires a minimum staffing on the department of 28 firefighters. The concern is the impact on the budget in lean times and how to deal with it. It is well worth listening to.

Included in the discussion is the idea of contracting out fire protection, something apparently prohibited in the current collective bargaining agreement. One of the people on the recording makes the suggestion that the solution is to order the chief of the department to fire one firefighter each month until the firefighters get the message. The person says if the chief can’t choose who to fire, they will make the choice for him and it could be the chief who may be gone. While there is no indication that this is seriously being considered, I don’t hear anyone speaking up saying this is a bad idea.

At point the person suggesting this tactic says, “Firemen, like cops, are street people. They only understand civilized force. That’s what they understand. You fire ‘em.”

The entire meeting can be downloaded by clicking here (choose the September 22, 2010 CFAC meeting). On it there is other discussion that includes mention of a recent death of a firefighter in a neighboring department.

I wish I could give you more background information on this, but all I know is what is on the recording. I haven’t been able to find any news coverage about these issues.

Fireground audio for Toronto 6-alarm fire. Two maydays during high-rise operations.

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Click here for earlier coverage & more video from this fire

FirefighterDispatch has posted some of the audio from yesterday’s lengthy battle to control a fire that began on the 24th floor of a Toronto high-rise residential building.

There are two maydays sounded on this portion of the audio. At 10:20 in the recording you will hear a firefighter who ran out of air on the fire floor. He was brought to safety by other firefighters. The second mayday was sounded for a firefighter who became separated from his crew. He was later found on the first floor. That occurs at 12:15. 

Three firefighters were among those injured during the fire.

Six-alarm Toronto high-rise apartment fire injures at least 14. Raw video & details.

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Run down of units from Toronto Fire Service Communications Centre

More video

Firefighter Nation coverage

Three firefighters are among at least 14 people hurt at a six-alarm high-rise fire in Toronto that began around 5:00 pm yesterday on the 24th floor of a residential building at 200 Wellesley St. E. More than three-hours later flames were again seen coming from a the building. At 11:00 Toronto Fire Chief Bill Stewart told reporters “We’re winning the war on this one”. Here are excerpts from an article at ctvtoronto.ca:

Stewart said one firefighter suffered a concussion, another was burned and a third suffered smoke inhalation. At least 10 had to be treated for heat exhaustion.

Stewart also said he had to order a complete evacuation of the building because he “can’t guarantee the integrity of the structure.”

At 8:30 p.m., when it seemed progress has been made, bright orange flames could be seen in the bedroom of one unit on the 23rd floor. By 10 p.m., firefighters appeared to have knocked the flames mostly down.

Stewart said “extreme fuel loading” in one apartment made the fire very difficult to fight. They rotated crews in from all over the city, he said.

The firefighters say this has been one of the “hottest,” most deep-seated fires they have ever fought, he said.

This is supposedly a time lapse video of the fire. I am not clear how this came about or if it is real.

Fireground audio from Manassas, Virginia multi-house fire. Video as first crews arrive. Home builders group says sprinklers wouldn’t have helped. FM disagrees.

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 The story above includes video of the arrival of the first units. It was shot by Darryl Childress.   

NIST fact sheet on house to house fire spread

A Tale of Two Fires or A Roof and Contents (A July, 2007 look at two house fires in Leesburg, VA.)

A column on FireGeezer.com called “Suburban Slums” by Mike Ward, a retired fire/EMS captain from Fairfax County, VA

When firefighters from the City of Manassas and Prince William County arrived on the scene on Tillett Loop yesterday afternoon two, large single-family homes were already burning. Before long, a third was on fire and others were threatened. WUSA9.com reporter Peggy Fox reports a spokesman for the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) said residential sprinklers would not have made a difference in this fire because it started on the outside of a home.   

While acknowledging the difficulties presented by the fire starting on the outside, Manassas Fire Marshall Francis Teevan disagrees with NAHB. In the third video on this page Teevan says that sprinklers could have slowed the spread of this fire once it hit the interior of the first house. Teevan believes it might have given firefighters a chance to get ahead of the flames.

Click the image for more photos from Darryl Childress as firefighters arrived on the scene.

NAHB is the group that will also tell you about the dangers of water damage caused by sprinklers. Have of any of you seen residential sprinkler water damage to rival the destruction that occurred on Tillett Loop yesterday? Do you think NAHB will ask the residents which option they would prefer?   

As in many previous fires in similarly built neighborhoods FM Teevan cited the usual contributing factors that, taken together, account for this conflagration: lightweight construction; exterior walls of vinyl siding over particle board; houses built too close together.   

Unfortunately these homes and neighborhoods are built to code. Efforts by Virginia’s fire service to get residential sprinklers and other meaningful changes to the building code in an effort to prevent future neighborhoods from being built to burn have been unsuccessful. They have been thwarted by the building lobby, with NAHB leading the way.   

In 2004 I looked at this issue in a two-part report called Too Close for Comfort (video at the very bottom of this page). The report was inspired by a similar fire in Prince William County six miles to the west of the one yesterday. Two years after that fire at 8659 Trenton Chapel Way, history repeated itself with another multi-home fire that began at 8671 Trenton Chapel Way. Click here for video of the 2006 fire.   

The day before the Tillett Loop fire three people died in a fire in a townhouse cluster in Lorton, Virginia. One can imagine that residential sprinklers may have prevented that tragedy from occuring. But there is something else that is relevant to this discussion. As much fire as there was in the home of origin in Lorton the fire did not spread. Remember, the other homes in Lorton adjoin the one that burned and weren’t 12 or 16 feet away as in Manassas. Of course, the difference is the Lorton structure was built in 1973 and the Manassas homes were built almost 30-years later. Is that progress?  

Maybe it’s time for the victims of these firestorms to show up on the door step at NAHB headquarters and get a first hand explanation as to why residential sprinklers and improved fire barriers on outside walls are such a bad thing. There’s more below.     

   

Here’s more on the story from WUSA9.com:   

Firefighters could not stop the blaze from burning three houses to the ground and damaging five more in Manassas. People who live nearby watched in astonishment as the fire gained momentum.   

“It was crazy. The fire jumped from house to house, the wind just blew it,” said Renee Qura.   

The flames didn’t have very far to go.   

“They are very close. Too close together, ” Qura said.   

Angel Verdun said that several years ago, they had looked at buying a home in this neighborhood, but did because her husband felt there wasn’t enough space between the homes.   

Manassas Fire Marshal Francis Teevan says the closeness of the home contributed to the fire’s rapid spread, ” We’re looking at ten to sixteen feet between these houses. Certainly if you were on lots larger, a quarter to a half acre, you wouldn’t see the type of spread that we have here.”   

And, he says, the exterior walls are within code, but have the lowest rating for fire prevention.   

“Here you have particle board over vinyl siding, which burns very fast.”   

   

The homes also have no sprinklers, they’re not required to, but the issue is under heated debate. A spokesperson for the National Home Builders Association says sprinklers cannot stop fire when it comes from outside a building and would not have helped stop the spread in this care. Teevan disagrees.   

“It came from the outside, which means it went inside. So as soon as it would hit the first barrier of sprinklers, and we have water application, we probably could have held the fire in check at that point until the fire department came and extinguished it the rest of the way,” said Teevan.   

Teevan is also the president of the Virginia Fire Prevention Association.   

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UPDATED: Arrival photos & More raw video from Manassas, Virginia fire. Three homes destroyed. Eight others damaged.

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 WUSA9.com still images

More on this story from Firegeezer.com

From WUSA9.com:

A fire that destroyed three houses and damaged eight more on Tillett Loop illustrates the danger of housing developments where houses are close together.

The blaze began around 3pm when neighbors said they heard a loud bang and then saw two houses soon engulfed in flames. Those flames quickly spread to a third house. No one was inside the homes but a few cats and a few dogs died in one house.

Photos of first units arriving from Darryl Childress via WUSA9.com. Click the image for more early shots.

“It was like dominos and our house was next,” said Farrah Qura, who lives two doors down from the house that first caught on fire at 8355 Tillett Loop.

Witnesses describe flames that reached 50 feet high and were 20 feet wide. The fire was so powerful that it carried embers nearly 350 yards away.

Many neighbors spent all evening running sprinklers for fear the embers could catch fire. One family experienced a small bush fire in their front yard around 9pm, even after they watered their lawn for four hours. Columbia Gas and Electric crews banged on their doors to tell them to evacuate and then extinguished the fire.

For Jagmohan Singh, it’s a devastating blow since he just moved into his new house five months ago with his wife, son, daughter and daughter-in-law. Singh’s wife was among a handful of people who took themselves to the hospital for smoke-inhalation.

“I don’t know what we’re going to do. We just had a housewarming party on Saturday,” he said.

Raw video & fireground audio: Rochester house fire.

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Audio & pictures from Monroe County Fire Wire

This fire was at 10:15 Wednesday morning at 224-226 Otis St. No injuries were reported. Starting at 1:06 in Guy Zampatori video the electric service at the rear of the house starts arcing and sparking.

Multi-alarm fire in Manassas, Virginia. Fire heavily damaged or destroyed 5 single-family homes.

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Series of photos from InsideNOVA.com

Fire broke out this afternoon in the 8300 Block of Tillett Loop in Manassas, Virginia. Five single-family homes were heavily damaged by the fire. Two or three of those homes were destroyed. Three additional homes suffered what is being called minor damage.

There is a report of two minor injuries. The fire was reported around 3:00.

Fireground audio from triple-fatal fire in Fairfax County, Virginia. Lorton mother saves 3 children but dies trying to get to 2 others.

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 Click here for earlier coverage of this story

Still images from Lorton fire

From WUSA9.com:

A 24-year-old mother and two of her children died in a fire after the woman saved her three other children by telling them to jump out the window.

Friends identify the mother recently separated from her husband as Eileen Armstrong, known as Allie. They said she had been recently facing financial difficulties after giving birth to her two month old daughter.

Witnesses watched in horror Wednesday morning as Armstrong stood inside her burning townhouse unit on the 9600 block of Hagel Circle. She told her 6 year old son and 8 year old son to jump to the ground to safety. She then saved the infant’s life by throwing her from a second floor window into the arms of a friend outside.

But neighbors never saw her after she disappeared inside to rescue her 3 year old and 5 year old sons. Flames spread too rapidly and they watched helpless.

Video: NYPD chopper down in Jamaica Bay. Reported emergency landing.

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Click image above for video from NY1.com

Listening to this since just before 4:00 pm it sounds like all on board walked off the chopper about 50 feet off shore. Six ambulances were requested. Fire department operations seem to be winding down.

From WNBC-TV:

An NYPD helicopter made an emergency landing in Jamaica Bay this afternoon

It was believed that six officer were on the chopper, but fire officials said everyone on board was accounted for and okay.

The helicopter was near Floyd Bennett Field’s NYPD Aviation base when it made the water landing near the base’s pad, witnesses said. Emergency floatation devices were seen activated.

From WCBS Radio:

All Officers on board are said to be ok.  NYPD Deputy Commissioner Paul Browne told WCBS 880 that one person sustained minor injures.

The helicopter was reportedly coming in for a landing at the aviation base at Floyd Bennett Field when the emergency landing occurred.

Police confirmed that flotation devices needed to be activated during the incident.

Raw video: Two children & mother dead in Fairfax County, VA fire. Three more kids & adult injured.

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Images from Lorton fire courtesy WUSA9.com’s Emily Cyr

Watch noon report from reporter Peggy Fox

 UPDATED INFORMATION FROM PIO ABOUT RESCUES:

A woman and two children are dead after fire broke out at a Lorton, Virginia townhouse complex on Hagel Circle around 8:30 this morning.

At 2:30 pm Fairfax County Fire & Rescue Department spokesman Dan Schmidt says that firefighters did not rescue four people via ladder from the second floor of the burning townhome as the department originally reported. Three children were lowered from a window to bystanders by an adult male who then escaped. All four are now at the Medstar Burn Unit at the Washington Hospital Center. Schmidt says their conditions are now not considered to be life-threatening.

According to Schmidt, those brought down by ladder by firefighters were the victims who died in the fire.

Schmidt says there were heavy fire conditions on Side A on both floors when firefighters arrived.

Earlier from WUSA9.com (more to follow):

Firefighters are battling a two-alarm blaze in a Lorton town house that has already claimed three lives, including two children, this Wednesday morning.

Captain Willie Bailey, spokesperson for the Fairfax County Fire Department, confirms one adult and two children have been found dead inside the home located at 9639 Hagel Circle.

Bailey says four more burn victims, three children and an adult, have been flown to Washington Hospital Center.

Mississippi politician blasts ambulance service for staging at shooting scene waiting for cops. Says “You have got to take the risk”.

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Excerpts from story by WLBT-TV:

Jackson (MS) city councilman Kenneth Stokes thinks the city needs to change ambulance companies or go into the ambulance business.

Stokes says the victim, 25- year-old Lee Joseph Martin, had to wait 23 minutes for help because police had not secured the shooting scene. He held a news conference at the apartment complex.

“You have got to take the risk. You can’t let citizens die. Because if you are wounded, you say I’m not safe. Now if you can’t assume the risk then give it to the person who can assume the risk,” said Stokes.

AMR spokesman Jim Pollard said it is national policy that ambulances do not go into shooting scenes until they are sure the scene is secure and that is to protect emergency personnel.

Pollard says he has studied the times and found they got the call at 10:15:04, were on scene at 10:22:24, and had patient contact at 10:22:29 or seven minutes twenty-five seconds after getting the call.

A video that says thanks. A large Ohio firm credits local firefighters with saving its headquarters.

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This is an interesting one. I’m not sure I’ve seen many or any quite like it. Using security camera and aftermath footage, a large business put together a video to thank the local fire department for saving its headquarters building. The fire was on September 2 at Total Quality Logisitics in Union Township, Ohio. The firm is listed as the nation’s 6th largest freight brokerage firm.

Just in time: Raw video of dramatic helicopter rescue on Croatia’s Sava River.

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Excerpts from Sky News Online:

Ivan Plevnik was airlifted to safety as his vessel was sucked into the Sava River.

Firefighters had spent hours trying to get the 56-year-old and his boat to shore without success.

Finally a helicopter was called into action by authorities in Zagreb – but as a rescuer was winched down Mr Plevnik refused to abandon his boat.

It was only when water splashed over the side and the vessel quickly began to be sucked beneath the surface that the rescuer was able to pull the skipper to safety.

Raw video from 4-alarm fire in Seattle. One firefighter injured in blaze at vacant peanut butter plant.

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Firefighters in Seattle battled a four-alarm fire at the vacant Sunny Jim peanut butter plant yesterday leaving one firefighter injured. The fire was reported around 2:00 PM and apparently started on the second floor. Some buildings to the north of the structure were evacuated as a precaution. Here’s more from KING-TV:

An estimated 120 firefighters battled the flames. Fire Department spokeswoman Dana Vander Houwen says the fire was fought defensively because the building was empty and engulfed in flames.

“When you go defensive, you pretty much write the building off,” said Seattle Fire Chief Gregory Dean.

One firefighter was taken to Harborview Medical Center after he was hit by a piece of falling siding. At last report, he was in stable condition.

“They were trying to open up a door so they could get some hose lines in. So, they decided that they thought they could do that. He went inside that zone to try to help do that. Some of the siding came off,” said Dean.

The plant was heavily damaged by a previous fire in 1997 that was caused by roofing repairs. That fire destroyed the iconic red Sunny Jim sign that had been visible from I-5 for decades.

Fireground audio & raw video: Manhattan commuter rail lines come to a halt as FDNY deals with fire under the 138th Street bridge.

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A fire underneath a 1950′s era steel and reinforced concrete railroad lift bridge over the Harlem River in Manhattan caused big problems for New Yorkers today. Here is the latest from the New York Times City Room blog:

The fire that shut down all Metro-North train traffic in and out of Grand Central Terminal was brought under control at 1:35 p.m., officials said. Regular off-peak service has been resumed on all three lines.

The fire broke out at 11:38 a.m. underneath the 138th Street Bridge, which is owned by Metro-North and which carries all three lines. There were no injuries, a spokeswoman said.

Early reports suggested that the fire might have resulted from a blown transformer at the base of the bridge, but officials said they could not yet state the cause.

The blaze occurred on wooden pilings that surround the bridge’s steel footings at the waterline. The wood is intended to protect those footings from inclement weather or runaway water vessels, such as the barges that occasionally float beneath the bridge.

NY1 has more in this update at 4:17 PM:

Metro-North service will be back to normal this evening, hours after a fire burning under the 138th street Lift Bridge by the East River temporarily suspended the trains.

New York City Fire Department officials are investigating the cause.

“If the fire gets hot enough, it can melt or substantially alter and affect the steel. It can also affect the conduits, the electric conduits that run underneath it, and that’s what’s being investigated right now,” said FDNY Deputy Chief Paul Mannix.

A man who lives under the bridge with four or five other other people said he heard a huge explosion before the fire began.

A veteran talks about the war years: John Finucane, FDNY retired, on the South Bronx in the 70s.

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This is from TheDailyBeast.com‘s original series “My New York”.

Quick Takes

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Mountain Thunder sparks a major blaze: An annual gathering of motorcyclists in the Catskills was interrupted by a fire at the dining hall of the Blackthorne resort on Saturday. Click here and here for more video and here for Firegeezer’s details about the fire

Elvis has left the building and jumped into his car with lights and siren. A must see video of a man accused of impersonating a firefighter: This is truly one of the strangest fire stories I have seen in a while. In New Zealand, Elvis Piggot was recently arrested for dressing up as a firefighter and showing up at car crashes in his vehicle decked out with lights, sirens and a fire insignia. Elvis decided to go public with his side of things. It turns out he had been a firefighter in two departments many years ago, but in both cases it ended poorly after just a few months. This is a case where telling your own story may not have been the best idea. Click here to watch this rather interesting video.

PGFD house fire video sparks debate: As if that is a surprise. We posted the video yesterday of a fire two weeks ago in Boulevard Heights, Maryland. There are already more than 35 comments about tactics. As usual, some of the remarks are interesting and well thought out. Some are just about my hose being bigger than yours. Read at your own risk

Drinking policy for volunteers scrutinized in South Dakota after arrest of firefighter: Two weeks ago a Madison, South Dakota firefighter was arrested on a DUI charge after driving a fire truck to a call. The firefighter had just finished his shift working at a local bar. The arrest has sparked controversy and has prompted a local paper to look closely at drinking policies among the state’s volunteer departments (along with a few other issues). Click here for the article.

Dave’s been a bad boy: Even though I am no longer the one digging up stories about the fire service in the Washington area, some think I shouldn’t be linking or posting stories on the blog from other news organizations that aren’t flattering to firefighters. That’s the reaction of a few after I posted the naked chef story from DC. Here’s the story and the comments.

Community shows appreciation for the work of firefighters: The firefighters and other first responders who handled the Fourmile Canyon fire in Colorado were celebrated by a grateful public with a mile-long parade through Boulder yesterday. Read more.

No parade here – union official wants to know how the public image of firefighters took a dive in the nine years since 9-11: In a battle with New Jersey’s governor over pensions and benefits a letter to the editor from the president of Fireman’s Mutual Benevolent Association Local 46 asks for the public’s support, saying they are the same firefighters who the community looked up to after 9-11. Read the letter.

Some pension relief in Arizona was ignored: Dozens of communities and fire districts in Arizona failed to apply for state tax dollars to offset some firefighter pension liabilities. Here’s the story.

$2 million and 37 firefighters could go in Gary, Indiana: It isn’t a pretty budget picture for the fire department in a city that continues to struggle with money issues. Check it out.

Newspaper profiles one of our regulars: The Southeast Missourian takes a look at Cape Girardeau, Missouri fire training coordinator John Sachen who has been known to lurk on this site. Click here.