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Is this a good law that’s a victim of bad reporting, fueled by a lawmaker’s hyberbole? Or is this an attack on the First Amendment by the Illinois house?

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Would the Illinois bill prohibit pictures like this one from Maryland's Beltway? Maybe or maybe not.

Previous coverage & discusson of cameras at incident scenes can be found here, here, here, herehere, here & here

This morning two STATter911.com readers sent me articles from Illinois that, on the surface, look like overkill or a politician's cover for a different agenda. Reading the news coverage it gives you the impression that Rep. Tom Holbrook, a Democrat from Belleville, was able to get a bill past an Illinois House committee that would ban most picture taking within 500 feet of an accident scene. 

According to the news coverage, Holbrook believes amateur photographers are just getting in the way of emergency personnel. The law maker described it this way to WBBM Radio in Chicago, “Putting your cell phone over the firemen’s shoulders as he’s using the jaws of life, maybe to get your grandmother of the front seat of her car while she’s bleeding.”

There is no doubt that there are a large number of cameras at emergency scenes these days carried by both the first responders and the public. And members of each group have done stupid things with those cameras. I pointed one out recently where a driver rode past a bunch of police cars on the shoulder of the road and under a burning overpass on the Capital Beltway in Maryland while his passenger shot video of the truck engulfed in flames that was the source of the fire. Stupid, stupid stuff.

My first reaction was this law would fight stupidity with stupidity. Lawmakers willing to solve a problem that has many other remedies by launching an assault on the First Amendment (and Mr. Holbrook I don't think the public is putting cameras on the shoulders of firefighters … yet). The Supreme Court just ruled 8 to 1 on Wednesday that those vicious idiots from the Westboro Baptist Church have the right to protest at military funerals (as much as it hurts, the Supreme Court is right), yet the Illinois lawmakers want to ban taking pictures of a scene that is in public view. Something isn't right here.

But wait, that may not be the case and if what I am finding online about this bill is correct, this may make perfect sense.

(Hold on here. Has Dave lost his mind? The man who always defends the rights of those scumbag news photographers thinks it's okay to ban picture taking? Read on folks.)

Looking at the Illinois General Assembly website I find one bill by Tom Holbrook that somewhat fits this description. It is titled "VEH CD-ACCIDENTS:NO CELL PHNES". Here's the summary:

Amends the Illinois Vehicle Code. Provides that no person may use a wireless telephone while operating a motor vehicle within 500 feet of an emergency scene except for specified purposes. Adds digital photographs and video to the definition of "electronic message" in provisions prohibiting the use of electronic communication devices while operating a motor vehicle. Effective immediately.

What I am getting from this is they want to ban the operator of a motor vehicle from taking pictures while driving when approaching an incident. Am I wrong in my interpretation? Doesn't seem to prohibit the passenger or anyone else from snapping away.

That appears to be quite a different animal from what is implied in the news coverage. I guess if you already are restricting cell phone use while driving, limiting picture taking by the driver isn't that bad of an idea. Seems it will increase safety for first responders, if nothing else.

Now, I admit my limited investigation of this may be missing some important facts. It could be my reporting that is suspect and not the articles from Illinois. But that's what I have so far. We will keep you informed if there is actually more to this and another bill that is a bit more sinister.

Chicago motel fire injures eight, including a firefighter.

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Excerpts from WLS-TV:

At least eight people, including one firefighter, were hospitalized Saturday after fire ripped through a motel on Chicago’s South Side.

Firefighters were called to the Seville Motel on the 9100-block of South Stony Island where the blaze was burning on the second floor of the two-story structure.

ABC7 is told the fire started at approximately 4:15 a.m. Dozens of firefighters responded and were having a hard time extinguishing the fire. Flames could be seen shooting from the motel’s roof as late as 8 a.m.

“As you can see right now are, the fire is still up in the roof area, and we have it under control now. It’s not going to get any worse. We got all the people out,” said Chief Michael Fox. “The fire is running the whole length of the building.”

Two videos from Central Falls, Rhode Island fire. Three-alarms on a multi-family home.

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Matthew Gregoire of ProvidenceFireVideos.com and Corey Welch of CoreyWelchVideo.com both braved the single digit temperatures for this morning’s three-alarm fire in a multi-family home in Central Falls, Rhode Island. The fire left five families homeless. Matt’s video is above and Corey’s below.

Here is some of what Matt wrote in his description on YouTube.com:

Shortly after 1:30 am on Friday March 4, 2011, calls came into the fire alarm office reporting a house fire on Hedley Ave. While companies were already tied up at a small fire a few blocks away, they released 1 company and they arrived to find the rear porch fully involved extending inside in this occupied multi family.

Read more about the fire.

FireTruckBlog.com: Ice takes out Michigan fire engine & sirens return to the Apple Blossom parade.

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Glenn Usdin has two stories today on FireTruckBlog.com that you should check out. The one above looks at this morning’s icy conditions in Michigan that sent a Clay Township engine off the road.

The other, below, talks about a change in policy for this year’s Apple Blossom Parade in Winchester, Virginia where a ban on sirens is being lifted (with some restrictions). Can you hear me now? Click the images to see the stories.

Bullet narrowly misses firefighter sleeping in Raleigh, North Carolina fire station. Women battling out on the street.

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Excerpt from WRAL-TV:

A fight between two women outside a Raleigh fire station on South Saunders Street early Thursday could have ended in tragedy when a bullet went flying into the building, just inches above a sleeping firefighter.

“He was lying in bed asleep, and all of a sudden, he heard this loud sound right behind his head,” Capt. Dale Wall, with Raleigh Fire Station 2, said. “They didn’t really know what had happened until they got up and started looking around and noticed the slug on the floor and noticed the hole through the partition.”

The bullet missed firefighter Will Smith by 6 inches.

From WFMY-TV:

Wall told WRAL they think the bullet traveled through the base of the fire station window, over the bed where Smith was sleeping, through the wall next to his bed, then through an open door and down the hallway before ricocheting off a concrete wall.

Smith said he thought a transformer had blown and was shocked to see the bullet hole six inches from where he was sleeping. Smith added that he usually sleeps on his side but wasn’t during the incident. Otherwise, he said he believes he most likely would have been shot.

Video: Glencoe, Kentucky house fire.

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Click the image for the video from Gallatin County News.

This is a house fire from Glencoe in Gallatin County, Kentucky posted yesterday to YouTube. Other than the one firefighter injured that you see on the video, we have no further details.

Reporter tries out PGFD mayday simulator. Another reason Dave’s glad he retired.

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More on the PGFD Mobile Mayday Simulator

My friend and former colleague Scott Broom at 9NEWS NOW in Washington, DC bravely let the Prince George’s County Fire/EMS Department run him through the paces yesterday on the department’s new Mobile Mayday Simulator. Scott did a nice job and gives the public a feel for what this is all about.

I imagine if I was still at the TV station the bosses would have made this my assignment. I would have been hiding and cowering in a corner somewhere refusing to go. Do you realize just how many people in PGFD would have loved to pull the lever with me above a trap door? Oops, sorry Dave. We forgot to put the mattress in this time. There would have been two people leaving the firehouse on stretchers (see the story). Photographer Greg Guise, after he got his laughing under control, would have been forced to take over the reporting role.

Reminds me very much of being invited by the late IAFF Local 1619 president, Ron Milor to the annual MDA softball tournament more than 20-years-ago and being told to bring a bathing suit. I ended up doing a stint in the dunk (notice there is no “r” in that word) tank alongside then fire chief Jim Estepp. Who knew that many firefighters had such good aim after a few beers?

You’ve seen his videos. You’ve read his blogs. Now meet the man. Personal Appearance. Tonight in Baltimore at EMS Today. One night only. Fireboy from Roanoke, AKA, THE Fire Critic.

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FireCritic.com has the details of tonight’s Meet-up in Baltimore

Previous STATter911.com animations in this series

Rhett Fleitz has announced to the world he will be at the JEMS & FireEMSBlogs.com Meetup (sponsored by Physio Control) tonight at Uno Chicago Grill – Harborplace Pratt Street Pavilion, 201 East Pratt Street, 2nd floor in Baltimore from 8:00 until 11:00. Captain Willie Wines, his chaperone, body guard and driver, is on the way to Baltimore with this true fire and EMS celebrity as I write this.

Please line up early for the self-proclaimed King of Fire & EMS blogs to sign your FireCritic.com paraphenalia. Be orderly. We don’t want Willie the Moustache to have to break bad on you. And please, please, don’t speak to the King until he speaks to you first. And whatever you do, don’t touch him (that’s protocol with royalty and he’s also very fragile). I have been assured that Willie has the fake ID so King Rhett can get in the place and won’t have to sit outside like last time.

I believe there will be some other bloggers there (including me). But we know that’s not important when the King is around.

Despite this rare and important event for his loyal subjects, STATter911.com has learned all may not be well in the Kingdom. This little video above will give you a preview of what to expect in Baltimore.

Denver fire investigator’s van set on fire while looking for clues to vehicle fires.

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Glenn Usdin’s FireTruckBlog.com (below) first told us about this story yesterday. Now some more details including Denver Fire looking at the possibility of making sure fire investigators travel in pairs. A lone investigator working on two vehicle fires in a west Denver neighborhood soon found his ride in flames eary Wednesday morning.

Waiting for water: Palm Beach County helmet-cam video of burning RVs with the ambulance arriving first.

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This fire was on Tuesday in the Delray Beach, Florida area. A Palm Beach County Fire Rescue ALS unit, Rescue 45, arrived first in the 6000 block of Atlantic Avenue. The firefighters on board geared up and waited for the suppression forces to arrive. Here’s part of the description with the video:

Multiple RV and camper fire in a storage yard. R45 was first due without any additional resources for about 6-7 minutes. Closest available suppression unit was Quint 47 responding from out of zone. 

Below is the aftermath video from WPTV-TV.

Houston fire chief says mistakes were made that allowed owner to flee after day care center fire killed four children. Terry Garrison says Jessica Tata was treated as a victim. Raw video from press conference.

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Coverage earlier today with timelines from investigators & prosecutors

Houston’s fire chief stood up this afternoon amid the accusations going back and forth between his department and the Harris County District Attorney’s Office to say mistakes were made in the handling of the investigation of last Thursday’s day care center fire that left four children dead and three injured. Chief Terry Garrison told reporters he owes the families of the children an apology after the owner of the day care center Jessica Tata fled to Nigeria. Investigators determined that Tata has gone to the store at the time the fire broke out leaving the young children without supervision.

While earlier in the day HFD released a timeline showing investigators difficulty and frustration in trying to get an arrest warrant and a search warrant from the DA’s office, Chief Garrison said they put too much trust in Jessica Tata and her attorney and did not put her under surveillance:

Here are excerpts from an article from KTRK-TV:

Garrison said instead of keeping tabs on Tata’s whereabouts, the department was gathering more information to try to get an arrest warrant from the DA’s Office by interviewing the parents, witnesses and watching surveillance video from a store where Tata allegedly had been shopping around the time of the fire.

“At the time, we weighed our decision on a few things — we felt like she was a person who made a mistake and we trusted her attorney who said she was going to talk to us,” Garrison said. “We believed Ms. Tata and her attorney that she was going to be made available to talk.”

Chief Garrison says if had to do it over again, he would personally follow Tata to make sure she didn’t leave. They, after all, had a Crime Stoppers tip she was a flight risk. They thought they had probable cause to arrest her. While they debated with the district attorney for days over charges, no one was watching Tata to make sure she kept her word.

The district attorney said they could not file charges until they determined Tata did in fact leave the children alone. Witnesses told investigators the children were home alone when the fire started.

Garrison deflected any suggestion that he was frustrated with the DA’s Office for not filing charges against Tata earlier than Sunday.

“When I said I was frustrated — I’m frustrated that Ms. Tata is not here to answer to these charges,” said Garrison. “I think the DA’s office is as frustrated as any of us.”

The fire chief stated that he is proud of the fire department and that the department will evaluate its actions during this investigation.

Houston Fire Department & Harris County District Attorney at odds over daycare worker fleeing the country. HFD releases detailed timeline.

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Houston Fire Department timeline

 Harris County District Attorney’s Office timeline

Previous coverage of this story

There is a battle going on in Houston between HFD and Harris County District Attorney Pat Lykos over who is responsible for allowing the child care worker connected to last Thursday’s deadly fire to flee to Nigeria. The fire killed four children and injured three others. Investigators say the children were alone when the fire broke out because Tata went to the store.

 HFD investigators are frustrated with prosecutors who would not issue an arrest warrant or a search warrant for Jessica Tata’s van. HFD says it also warned the District Attorney’s Office that Tata was likely to leave the country. The fire department makes the case they had the same evidence that eventually resulted in the warrant in their first meeting with prosecutors. Lykos blasts those who are criticizing her office for moving slowly.

HFD Chief  Terry Garrison has issued a statement and released a detailed timeline of investigators actions and meetings with prosecutors. Lykos has also issued a timeline. Take a moment to read them.

From WFAA-TV:

The Houston Fire Department shot back at the Harris County District Attorney’s Office Wednesday, releasing a detailed chronology of events in their investigation of a fatal day care fire in west Houston.

The move came a day after District Attorney Pat Lykos said any allegations that her department moved too slowly in issuing a warrant for day care operator Jessica Tata were “outrageous.”

… at a press conference on Tuesday, March 1, Lykos said it was up to arson investigators to collect evidence against Tata.

“We do not live in a police state,” Lykos said. “While officers can certainly arrest people for crimes with their own discretion, the penal code outlines when you can arrest without a warrant. But you have to have objective facts to justify holding that person in custody.”

When asked whether Tata should have been arrested on Thursday or Friday, Lykos said she had “no opinion,” but implied that investigators had not collected sufficient evidence quickly enough.

Lykos blasted anyone critical of the job her office had done, characterizing the public statements as “unprofessional” and “counterproductive.” 

Fire & police radio traffic from scene of firefighter shot in Bellmore, New York.

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Previous coverage of this story

This is the radio traffic from last night’s shooting scene in Bellmore, New York posted by firefighterdispatch on YouTube. It combines police and fire/EMS transmissions and is not in real time (pauses between transmissions are omitted). A 20-year-old firefighter has non-life threatening wounds after the person in the crash opened fire on arriving first responders. Police shot and killed the gunman.

 

Video: Mayday simulator for Prince George’s County, Maryland.

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Read report on Herrington Drive fire

More from Backstep Firefighter

The Prince George’s County Fire/EMS Department made the video above to show off its Mobile Mayday Simulator. The simulator was developed in part as a reaction to lessons learned from a report into the April, 2009 fire at 87 Herrington Drive in Largo that left a firefighter critically injured. PGFD PIO Mark Brady issued a press release with details on the simulator and its development. Here are excerpts:

The Technical Services Battalion, under the command of Major Adon Snyder, has developed a mobile “mayday” simulator, accompanied by a classroom lecture, which can be easily brought to any Fire/EMS station or training facility. A 40-minute classroom session with power point presentation and practical evolution comprise this training program. The practical portion starts with participants raising their heart rate to about 140, a rate consistent with response and initial activity at an incident scene. It is also the heart rate where decision making could be adversely affected. Raising the heart rate is accomplished by participants donning full personal protective equipment (PPE) and self contained breathing apparatus (SCBA) then carries a stand-pipe pack for approximately 5 to 10 minutes. The firefighter then places their cloth covered face piece on and begins to breathe air. The firefighter, with no visibility, is then instructed to follow a 100 foot section of hoseline. The firefighter follows the hoseline and is led up a ramp and then up steps to a simulated second floor and then experience a sudden floor collapse.

The firefighter, following General Orders and valuable lessons learned in the classroom portion of the drill, must then demonstrate the correct survival skills and mayday procedure.

The mobile mayday simulator was constructed inside of a fire department utility box truck. The conversion of the interior box of the utility truck includes elements required for participants to ascend steps onto an upper floor landing and a collapsible floor which will allow participants to feel the unexpected jolting experience of a floor collapse. The firefighter has been previously instructed to ensure their SCBA and PPE are still in place and then transmit, by way of their portable radio, a correct MAYDAY message.

The drill is designed not only for firefighters but also incident commanders that will receive the radio mayday message and act accordingly. Scenarios can be modified to include non-working radios, dislodged facepiece, etc. The mobile mayday simulator has been used at select stations in order to collect data and evaluate the program. The program has received very positive feedback from both evaluators and participants. A train-the-trainer program is now being developed and will soon be made available to all personnel.

UPDATE: Firefighter shot on Long Island at Bellmore crash scene. Police in Nassau County shoot & kill gunman.

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Firefighter Close Calls  

Bellmore FD

A firefighter was shot in the back Tuesday night on Long Island while responding aboard an ambulance to a vehicle collision. It happened around 10:00 PM on Bellmore Avenue at Claxton Avenue in Bellmore. Police returned fire striking and killing the gunman. The firefighter is reported to have non-life threatening injuries. 

From LIHerald.com

Nassau County Police said officers were forced to shoot down and kill the assailant, who began firing at Bellmore firefighters after he crashed his Ford pickup into a telephone pole. 

Police have not yet identified the shooter. “We don’t know who this individual is,” said Lt. Kevin Smith. The coroner, he said, will identify the man. 

Police do not have a motive for the shooter’s attack. Authorities said they found several guns inside his pickup. 

From WABC-TV:   

A car apparently lost control and struck a light pole. A Bellmore Fire Department ambulance responded, and the firefighter EMT’s approached the vehicle to see if the driver needed help, and he opened fire on them.   

From News12 Long Island:  

Officials say the 20-year-old Bellmore firefighter was transported to Nassau University Medical Center where he underwent surgery Tuesday night. Witnesses say that the shooter fired 15 to 16 shots, striking at least one person.   

From WNBC-TV:  

Once they arrived at the accident scene, the driver who crashed the car into a light pole, began to shoot at first responders, sources told NBCNewYork.com. Nassau Police shot at the driver and struck him at least once, according to sources. As many as ten shots may have been fired during this incident. A first responder was shot and two officers may have suffered injuries unrelated to the shooting. 

FireTruckBlog.com: Firefighter in rollover may not walk again; More woes for Stratford’s fleet & much more news.

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Glenn Usdin’s FireTruckBlog.com updates the story from last week of the North Carolina rig that rolled. The firefighter injured in that wreck has been given only a five-percent chance of walking again. Another follow-up from Glenn is about the fleet issues in Stratford, Connectict that continue after two pumpers were hit on I-95. Plus, plenty of other apparatus news. Click here.

Raw video: Two-alarm apartment fire in Prince George’s County, Maryland.

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A fire reported just before 1:00 PM today at 6850 Walker Mill Road. Two alarms were sounded. Here is info from PGFD’s Mark Brady:

At about 12:45 pm firefighters from the District Heights area responded to a report of an apartment fire with people trapped. Upon arrival fire/EMS units arrived at 6850 Walker Mill Road to find a 2 1/2 story in the front-3 stories in the rear+flat roof apartment building with heavy fire showing from a top floor unit.

Four occupants had sought relief from the smoke and heat in the stairwell and retreated to the balconies on the rear of the building. They were removed from the second floor by firefighters using ground ladders.

A Second Alarm was sounded bringing a total of about 60 firefighters to the scene. It required about 40 minutes to extinguish the fire. No injuries have been reported and I anticipate the building occupants will be displaced. The cause of the fire is under investigation. 

Montgomery County takes over Burtonsville VFD. Cites sex, public urination & safety concerns at MD firehouse. Volunteers call it retaliation over ambulance fee fight.

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Coverage of 2009 incident at Burtonsville VFD

From WJLA-TV:

In a move that some firefighters said is long overdue, Montgomery County took over operations at the Burtonsville Volunteer Fire Department in Montgomery County last week.

What’s allegedly taken place over the last year prompted this drastic step: Public urination, fornication, destruction of property and delays in responding to calls, according to the Montgomery County Fire Department spokesman Scott Graham.

Some firefighters at Station 15 said the situation has become so bad that no one wants to work at the station anymore.

The head of the Montgomery County Career Firefighters’ Association put it this way: “It’s a zoo and the animals have been running the zoo.”

Above is the story on the 2009 incident where a career firefighter was urinated on by a firehouse guest.

In a memo chief Richard Bowers sent out Thursday, anyone now entering the station must report to an on-duty career officer. They must also follow any orders that officers issues.

While leadership there has been put on notice, the volunteers can still carry out their duties. The department spokesman said citizens are still safe.

The man who leads the county’s volunteer fire fighters said this is retaliation for the volunteers’ activities working to oppose the county’s failed ambulance fee proposal.

Eric Bernard, of the Montgomery County Volunteer Fire and Rescue Association, admits there was a volunteer who brought a guest who urinated in a bunk bed. But he said that was dealt with in 2009.

Raw video & fireground audio: House fire in St. Mary’s County, Maryland.

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Listen to fireground audio

The video above is from a house fire on Sunday just before 6:00 PM at 45,953 East Quincy Terrace in Town Creek, St. Mary’s County, Maryland. Responding on the call were the Bay District VFD, Avenue VFD and Hollywood VFD, along with EMS from Lexington Park and Hollywood.

Here are some details on the fire from an article by FF/EMT Jeff Evans posted on the Bay District VFD website

The initial alarm units marked on the air at dispatch and Engine 91 arrived on the scene at 1801 hours advising of a Single Story Residence with Smoke Showing and laid a 3″ supply line from the intersection of Town Creek Drive. Engine 32 arrived shortly after and picked up the supply line. The crew from Engine 91 stretched an attack line in the front door where they encountered moderate smoke and fire conditions which had extended into the attic. Engine 32′s crew pulled a backup line and assisted with extinguishment. Tower 9′s crew assisted the Engine Companies with opening up and starting the Primary Searches. Truck 3′s crew threw ground ladders and was assigned as the initial RIT team which they took a position on Side “A”. Engine 74 and Squad 7 arrived and Engine 74′s crew assisted the companies operating inside and Squad 7′s crew assumed the RIT function.

Truck Company 3′s crew then split up and cut two vent holes and conducted a secondary search of the residence. Solomon’s Engine 833 arrived and were given the manpower pool which they rotated crews inside and out assisting interior crews. As crews were being rotated in and out Command asked for an additional tanker for manpower bringing Engine 63 to the scene. Water Supply 5 arrived and was instructed to setup at the hydrant a short ways from the scene and tanker Shuttles were started. Engine 93 conducted tanker shuttles to units numerous times while the fire was being brought under control.