Skip to content


Archives for

See all posts in the network tagged with

Pre-arrival video: Train collides with fuel tanker in Malaysia.

2 comments

There is a good deal of early raw video after a passenger train collided with a tanker truck on its way to make a deliver at a service station near Kota Kinabula International Airport in Malaysia on Monday. There are reports of eight injuries and no fatalities. The videos seem to be in chronological order from top to bottom. The first one is shot by women in a car who just been passed by the train as they were riding on a road parallel to the tracks.

From the AP:

Officials and reports say a Malaysian passenger train has rammed into a fuel truck on Borneo island, injuring eight people and triggering a large fire.

Police say more than 100 people were riding on the train when it struck the truck, which was taking a shortcut across the tracks in Kota Kinabalu, the capital of Malaysia's Sabah state in Borneo.

The national news agency Bernama quoted Sabah police chief Hamza Taib as saying that eight people were injured.

Witnesses say the crash caused a large fire with thick smoke that was visible for several miles (kilometers).

Cameras everywhere: Three people capture house lighting off in Calgary.

3 comments

I show my age when I make too much of this, but I still sometimes shake my head in amazement over the impact of the digital video revolution. This is an example of one of those moments. Searching for fire video for the blog this afternoon, I came across the one immediately below showing a distant shot of a vacant house fire yesterday in Downtown Calgary. The video quality is not that great but what caught my eye was the flashover that occurs at 1:10 in the clip.

As I was thinking about whether it showrf enough to be of interest to anyone, I continued searching for something else to post. That's when I came across the video above. It was shot from right in front of a burning home. This one didn't say the city, but to my surprise this house also suddenly erupted in flames at the :35 point (well, not a complete surprise, even from this amateur's reading of the smoke).

For just a moment I thought how odd it was, even in our digital age, to see two somewhat violent flashovers on video in one day. But the thought only lasted a couple of seconds before it dawned on the editor of this rag that they might be the same house fire. Reading further into the descriptions I noticed they both occurred on 14th Avenue. Even an idiot like me is able to occasionally come up with the answer four, or something close to it, when asked to add two and two.

And then there is the video at the bottom. Yes, a third view of the same event. Click here for yet another angle and details about the fire.

I spent a career chasing fire engines in mostly unsuccessful efforts to capture dramatic video like this. Today, TV news operations just have to wait for the citizens to bring it to them. And often there are a variety of videos to choose from.

In the 1970s Gil Scott-Heron told us the revolution will be televised. He just didn't explain the citizens would be doing it and it would be a multi-camera shoot. 

 

Quick Takes: October 31, 2011.

1 comment

Businesses burn during snow storm in Somerville, MA: Raw video from a fire Saturday night in a row of stores in Teele Square. Click here to read more.

Some very lucky firefighters: If you haven't done so, check out the video of a wall collapse during a fire at an insulation company in Fort Wayne, Indiana yesterday. Two firefighters were right in the middle of the collapse with two others nearby. We also have the fireground audio. Click here for our coverage.

There should be a monument to Willie Snow. A must read story from Firegeezer: Bill Schumm has a story about a truly remarkable man that I urge you to read. His name was Willie Snow and he died a pauper at 80-years-old in Cincinnati, Ohio. Willie Snow is a hero who saved many lives at two of this nation's deadliest fire scenes. One was a fiery car-bus collision that killed 24 children and three adults and is still considered the worst ever drunk driving crash in U.S. history. The toll would have been higher if Willie Snow had not been on the scene. He is the same Willie Snow who, 11 years earlier, was the head dishwasher at the Beverly Hills Supper Club disaster and saved many from perishing. Take the time to learn about Willie Snow. Click here.

Pump gear & siren stop fire engine thief: Glenn Usdin's FireTruckBlog.com has the story of Sacramento firefighters interrupting the burglary of a post office. The burglar tried to make off with the fire engine, but he made two mistakes. He hit the siren and didn't know how to move it. Here's more.

Also in Sacramento: Video from a suspicious fire.

Tennis anyone?: On-duty tennis playing a little less than a mile outside the Village limits brought a TV camera and reporter to Key Biscayne, Florida to investigate. I think there's a lot about this one we don't know and a couple of things that, on the surface, don't make sense. Two things I do know about it are the TV station hyped it a bit by claiming a "massive" investigation is underway and that on-duty tennis and basketball as part of PT can be a hard sell to the public in today's environment. You need to set the ground work and provide the explanation ahead of time rather than be seen running from the TV cameras afterwards. Here's the story.

Take me home tonight … think again: WPLG-TV, the same station that uncovered the "massive" investigation above, has also been all over Miami-Dade Fire Rescue about the need for so many take home cars. In the latest report, the TV station says it has discovered more take home vehicles than the department had reported. WPLG is also reporting that the chief has now sent out a memo saying: "Being assigned a 24-hour vehicle does not give the assignee the authority to take the vehicle home at night." Here's the latestEarly coverage from Mike Ward at Firegeezer.

Special note to fire chiefs: TV stations and newspapers investigating fire department take home cars, like the excess overtime stories, is a trend developing across the country. Now might be a good time to evaluate your policy and make sure you can justify the need for each department vehicle you allow to sit in someone's driveway.

Popular Baltimore bar destroyed in two-alarm fire: Fire broke out at the Mount Washington Tavern in the 5700 block of Newberry Street around 4:30 this morning. The picture at right is courtesy of IAFF Local 734. Another picture and details can be found here.

Fires 'R' Us: House fire in Reddick, Illinois (with audio); House fire in Rochester, New York (with audio); Garage fire in North Attleborough, Massachusetts; House and garage fire in Gary, Indiana.

Detroit Devils' night details: From The Detroit News -  "Although the official tally of fires Sunday will not be released until this afternoon, Fire Department officials have said the number of blazes in the city remained low Sunday. Eighteen fires were reported Saturday night, below the average of 26 for Saturday fires. Fire Chief Steven Flanagan said the number of fires 'has been real low today.'

House fire in Michigan: Not much in the way of details on this one other than it was handled by the Iron Mountain Fire Department.

UPDATE – Must see video plus fireground audio: Wall collapses on firefighters at Momper Insulation Company in Fort Wayne, Indiana.

11 comments

More videos from Firefighter Nation

(Special thanks to reader Aaron Krontz for alerting us to this incident.)

INCnow.com reports this is video shot by videographer Aaron Dohring of a wall collapse during a fire at the Momper Insulation Company at 2431 W. Main Street. The fire was reported around 11:30 this morning. Two firefighters caught in the collapse were quickly pulled free and are reported in good condition. One refused treatment and the other was taken to a local hospital.

Above is a frame just as the first debris falls. Three firefighters are seen here with the fourth in front of them operating a line into the bay door. The stream is visible above and to the left side of the head of the firefighter on the left. The firefighter on the right (the officer?) points and moves forward as the wall collapses. That firefighter and the one on the line are in the middle of it as the wall comes completely down, less than two seconds after this frame.

From The Journal Gazette:

The fire escalated and firefighters were pulled out, Willis said. After firefighters were out of the building a side wall of the building collapsed and a firefighter who was on the perimeter of the building was injured, Willis said.

It is unknown how serious the firefighter's injuries are.

In the fireground audio below from firefighterdispatch on YouTube the evacuation occurs around 9:30. The collapse is reported at 23:15.

Besides multiple collapses, another issue has been the concern about hazardous materials and toxic runoff. Below is video from a press briefing about the fire.

FireTruckBlog.com: Georgia on my mind.

No comments

Glenn Usdin's FireTruckBlog.com with a Minnesota fire engine spending its retirement years in Georgia. As in the Republic of Georgia. Click here for the story.

Raw video & fireground audio: Rochester, New York house fire.

No comments

Fireground audio & pictures from Monroe County Fire Wire

Guy Zampatori video of a fire at 47 Sullivan Street last night. The Democrat and Chronicle's Chad Roberts was also on the scene and says the fire in the two-family home was reported at 10:30 PM and declared under control at 11:37 PM. Chad's video is below. More details here.

UPDATE – Fireground audio & raw video: House fire in Reddick, Illinois.

23 comments

NEW – Radioman911 has posted fireground audio from this fire

This is from a fire on Thursday in the Reddick, Illinois area. According to the Daily Journal, a truck that hit an electrical distribution pole caused a power surge that started this fire and some other smaller fires. Click here to read more.

Raw video: Garage fire in North Attleborough, Massachusetts.

13 comments

Thanks to Michael Brogan for sending us the video he shot yesterday in North Attleborough, MA.

Here's the description with the clip:

Numerous calls were received reporting a building fire at the corner of Old Post Rd and Mt. Hope St in North Attleborough MA on the afternoon of 10/28/11. Companies reported heavy smoke showing from a distance and found this 20×20 garage fully involved exposing the structure a few feet away

Good PT or bad PR? Key Biscayne, Florida firefighters make quick exit after TV crew finds out of town tennis match.

28 comments

Tennis anyone? Click the image to see the WPLG-TV report.

WPLG-TV reported yesterday "The Village of Key Biscayne has launched a massive investigation after Local 10 cameras spotted on-duty firefighters playing tennis outside the village limits."

First of all, what in the world is the fascination by TV reporters and anchors these days with the word "massive"? Something tells me this is not going to be a "massive" investigation. Yes, it will be looked at and dealt with. But come on, massive? They cheapen the story with hype that is completely out of perspective with reality. Some consultant must be telling news operations to use that word because I hear the phrase "massive fire" an awful lot in stories around the country (and 90 percent of the time it ain't massive).

But I digress. The point of the story is that the entire shift of Key Biscayne Fire Rescue was found by the reporter and videographer playing tennis a little less than a mile outside the Village limits on October 20 at the Crandon Park Tennis Center. The officer in charge has now been asked to write a report to interim Village manager John Gilbert. Gilbert is still listed on the Village of Key Biscayne website as the fire chief.

If the firefighters were doing what they were supposed to as part of PT, they probably shouldn't have run from the cameras the way they did. The reporter says they gave the indication they were responding to a call on the radio, but Village officials say that was not the case.

Gilbert confirms there was no specific policy the crew violated, except possibly using common sense. It looks like there soon will be policy. The report indicates the firehouse has a gym and basketball court.

This is another good reminder that cameras are everywhere. Make sure you can justify your actions and don't have to run from them. Whether you like it or not, little things that everyone used to get away with will likely come back to bite you on the local newscast or YouTube.

Here's an excerpt from WLPG's article:

"I think there was an extreme error in judgment. I was not aware this was taking place," said interim Village manager John Gilbert, who started the fire department 18 years ago.

"There will be an investigation. We will get their side in what they did and why they did it, and I will make some decisions on what happens next," Gilbert said.

Key Biscayne Mayor Frank Caplan expressed concern that firefighters on duty were playing tennis outside their jurisdiction, which might have had life-or-death consequences in a true emergency.

"There would be a delay in response time, which there surely would be if a call came in," said Caplan. "Absent other coverage on the island, there would be a delay."

 Point A is the Village of Key Biscayne Fire Rescue station. Point B is the Crandon Park Tennis Center. Google Maps indicates they are 1.5 miles apart on the same road. It appears the firefighters were playing tennis about .8 miles north of the village limits.

Must see video: Mom lowers toddler by harness from Stone Mountain, Georgia apartment fire after dropping infant into arms of neighbors.

4 comments

A mother drops one child into the arms of strangers and lowers the second by harness before escaping from the same third floor window with her mother-in-law. It happened on Wednesday evening when fire broke out around 6:45 PM in a ground floor apartment on Three Oaks Bend in Stone Mountain, Georgia. Some of it was caught on video. Watch the story above from WSB-TV.

Raw video: House & garage fire in Gary, Indiana.

2 comments

Ed Malik video from a fire in the 2800 block of Black Oak Road in Gary, Indiana on Wednesday.

Western Maryland Firefighters refuse to help Habitat for Humanity build home to honor heroes. But they did it for a good cause

19 comments

Habitat for Humanity International opposes residential sprinklers in 2008

Tennessee Habitat homes burn not long after sprinkler opposition

You may recall the story we ran in 2008 about Habitat for Humanity International supporting the National Association of Home Builders in opposing residential sprinklers. At the time Elizabeth Blake, senior vice president of advocacy, government affairs and legal with Habitat for Humanity said, "Our affiliates build all across the country and around the world. Mandating fire sprinklers fails to recognize their varying needs, and runs the risk of requiring something that may be impractical for some of our partner families. Habitat's mission is to provide simple, decent and affordable shelter for families. Each home we don't build due to an added and unjustified regulatory requirement such as this can leave yet another family in substandard housing."

Some state affiliates of Habitat have not followed the International's lead and have embraced sprinklers have had them installed in Habitat homes. Apparently that's not the case in Maryland and firefighters are taking a stand. Here's the story from the AP (with special thanks to my former colleague Jessica Glasser for sending us the story):

Some western Maryland firefighters are refusing to help Habitat for Humanity build a house meant to honor them unless a sprinkler system is added to the plans.
           
The Herald-Mail newspaper of Hagerstown reports that the Washington County Volunteer Fire and Rescue Association is standing firm to make a point.
           
Volunteer firefighter Blaine Snyder said Wednesday that sprinklers save lives. The fire and rescue association wants local governmental bodies to require them in new homes.
           
Washington County and the city of Hagerstown require sprinklers for some new construction but not for single-family detached homes like the "Heroes House" that Habitat is planning.
           
Local Habitat official Sherry Brown Cooper says the "Heroes House" project will proceed, with or without the fire and rescue association's help
.

FireTruckBlog.com: Latest on bicycle – fire engine fatal in Winter Park, Florida.

No comments

Glenn Usdin's FireTruckBlog.com has details and video from this week's tragic collision in Winter Park, Florida between a teenager on a bicycle and a fire engine. Click here.

Parking ticket battles police vs. fire. Real one in Pittsburgh. Fake one in Montreal.

6 comments

KDKA-TV describes it as a legal battle pitting the City of Pittsburgh versus the City of Pittsburgh. In the story above you will learn that some city fire trucks were ticketed for parking at spaces reserved for the mayor and City Council members on Tuesday. The firefighters had stopped by for their flu shots. A police officer, aware of regular complaints by the city officials about people who park in their spaces, slapped tickets on the rigs.

Here's more from KDKA TV:

The trucks came from the Homewood station with full crews, and according to their union attorney with the best intentions.

“They had parked outside the City County Building, they were supposed to get a flu shot to avoid sick days,” said Josh Bloom, the firefighters’ attorney. “As they went in… the fire trucks and fire engines were given parking tickets.”

“I suppose the city will have to go to court against itself,” said Bloom. “The firefighters do not own the fire trucks, so the city was written a ticket today.”

A possible solution to this problem emerges in the video below that shows a Montreal police officer ticketing a fire engine parked in front of a hydrant (police NEVER do that). But I am not sure I would recommend that firefighters respond this way to a parking ticket (but if you are planning to do so, please alert me so I can bring my video camera). The clip is one of a series of videos involving "firefighters" and a Candid Camera type of approach.

In Hermitage, PA one firefighter clobbers another with a pipe & attached drain. Fight occurs as they were heading out on a run.

4 comments

Image from Hermitage FD website.

Click here to watch video report

WPXI-TV reports they heard the Hermitage Fire Department dispatched on a call for a kitchen fire Tuesday night and that was quickly followed by a call at the same firehouse for a firefighter who had been assaulted. Hermitage Police say a 26-year-old firefighter suffered a serious head wound. The cops didn't have to go far to make an arrest. Charged is 54-year-old Dale McCloskey, a veteran Hermitage volunteer firefighter.

Here's more from WPXI-TV:

"One of them assaulted the other with a plastic pipe and at the end of the pipe was a drain. I'm not sure what they used it for," said Hermitage Deputy Police Chief Brian Blair.

"He hit him in the back of the head three times. There was an open wound and there was some blood," said Blair.

"Our fire department is incredible. They are all volunteers, except two paid, and in my book they're No. 1," Blair said.

McCloskey has now been banned from all town fire stations. news reports indicate he was released on a $5000 unsecured bond. No one is saying what sparked the attack.

 

Someone should call 911 for Atlanta 911. Audit says it can take more than five minutes to transfer calls to dispatcher.

8 comments

When you look at the 911 stats reported by an auditor hired by the City of Atlanta you have to wonder if the Atlanta Journal Constitution got this one wrong. There is no indication at this point that's the case. But to take as long as five minutes and thirty seconds for a call taker to send the call to a dispatcher 95 percent of the time is somewhat chilling.

Then again, I am not exactly sure what the "as long as" part means in this case. The article doesn't use the word "average". Are these the unusual ones that take that long? I get the impression that's not the case from reading the article, but I would love to see the actual auditor's report and the language used.

From the AP:

Atlanta's auditor says the time between an Atlanta 911 operator taking an emergency call and relaying that information to dispatchers is more than 10 times the recommended national average.

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution says the report by auditor Leslie Ward says the damage done by the delay is compounded by delays in dispatching fire fighters or paramedics.

Ward said Tuesday that quicker responses reduce property damage and the chance of injury or loss of life.

The national standard is that information should be transferred from a 911 operator to a dispatcher within 30 seconds at least 95 percent of the time. The report says in Atlanta, that first transfer of information takes as long as 337 seconds in 95 percent of cases.

Here's an excerpt from the AJC.com article by Rhonda Cook:

The national standard is also that it should take less than a minute to dispatch emergency medical responders but in Atlanta, that took more than three minutes in 90 percent of the calls last year.

"It could cost both lives and property," Atlanta Fire Rescue Chief Kelvin Cochran said of the delays.

The audit was begun to review Atlanta Fire Rescue staffing, but Ward said the focus shifted to the handling of calls.

She noted that her office was unable to do a complete audit of response time because 90 percent of the calls for a medical emergency are routed through Grady Hospital first before the more serious ones are returned to a fire department dispatcher. That means once the call leaves the city's E911 system, there is no "time recorded," Ward said. "There's a gap."

Must see video (sort of): Fire reports from a citizen journalist. At least he’s not afraid to use the word firefighter.

17 comments

I found this video of a fire on Monday at a restaurant in Ludlow, Massachusetts to be quite interesting. The man in the yellow hard hat anchoring the newscast is Kenny Rogers. I don't know if Lucille picked a fine time to leave this guy, but he is reporting from the man cave with Man Cave Headline News.

He doesn't just stay in the cave, we get to see Mr. Rogers' neighborhood in his video reports. A number of the reports are about fires. Below is one from a few weeks ago from a house fire in Granby.

Take the time to watch both videos. Rogers has quite a unique reporting style. A bit unpolished, but the good news is he calls the people who show up on the fire trucks, firefighters and not "safety personnel" or "first responders". So, he already has me in his corner.

I particularly like the personal information Rogers adds that give context to the reports like, "I was home, downstairs in my studio, playing X-Box Call of Duty Black Ops when a call came over my scanner … ". Sort of Dragnet-esque ("We were working the day watch out of auto-theft division"). And the lack of audio-video synch for the on-camera portion of the Granby fire reminds me of a Japanese horror film.

While I find the clips quite entertaining, I want you to level with me STATter911.com readers. Is this what you see me doing in a few years? Or is it possible I am there already? Give it to me straight. I can take it.

Raw video: Two large buildings gutted in Fort Collins, Colorado three-alarm fire.

1 comment

The video above helps show what happened in Fort Collins, Colorado early Monday morning. Around 3:30 AM, the Poudre Fire Authority responded to a fire at Mason Flats, a four story condo complex under construction. Before long the roof of a separate large building housing residences and commercial space, known as Penny Flats, began burning. 

Below is a short video taken by a person living at Penny Flats before that building was evacuated.

Below is nice quality video shot later in the operation, around dawn, by Aaron Cathcart of Cathcart Photography.

Here's an excerpt from a story today at coloradoan.com:

Firefighters continue to monitor the Penny Flats and Mason Street Flats buildings following the massive fire in Fort Collins that destroyed one and seriously damaged the other.

Investigators are set to begin their work in earnest today, scouring both buildings for clues about how the fire started in the under-construction Mason Street Flats before spreading onto the side and roof of the occupied Penny Flats.

UPDATE: When did ‘firefighter’ become such a bad word? ‘Safety personnel’ now fight fires in Virginia. Really?

47 comments

UPDATE: We've had an impact with this post. Leah M. Kosin changed the subhead. It no longer reads "Safety personnel". But despite our less than subtle editing suggestion, Ms. Kosin didn't bite. It now reads "Emergency personnel" and there still is never a mention anywhere in the article that firefighters put out the fire. Oh well

A month ago I found myself in the middle of a discussion on Ray McCormack's Facebook page after Ray wrote the line "Only you can prevent first responder". I was and am in total agreement (but there were a few non-believers also commenting). I also felt more than just a little guilty for having occasionally given in to this form of government speak. A term the news media picked up on and ran with over the last decade.

I used to quietly fight against it and for a long time avoided using the term on TV and in the blog. Being the weak willed person I am, I eventually just gave up and gave in. But Ray's six words were like General George S. Patton slapping that soldier and they sent me back to the front lines on this issue.

Which brings me to the article above from the Leesburg Patch. Reading this story about a house fire on Ferriers Court in Loudoun County, Virginia last night resulted in screams of "No way!" and "Un#&^$%#?#believable" and "WTF" emanating from the World Headquarters of STATter911.com. The neighbors weren't shocked. They are used to hearing such exclamations. But usually it's from Mrs. STATter911.com. This time it was from me.

The outrage started when I read the subhead of the article, "Safety personnel continue to fight fire … ". So, now it is "safety personnel" who fight fires. Not even "first responders". When was someone out there going to tell me it has been changed again? I guess once I retired from the news business they stopped sending me the memos from Liberal News Media Central (as we all know, the place where every reporter, except those working for Fox News, gets their marching orders). 

But wait, there was more to feed my growing disgust. In the entire11 paragraphs it never mentioned that firefighters were the ones extinguishing this house fire. Somehow in an article about a fire, the reporter avoided the word "firefighter". The writer used the word "personnel" and  the term "fire teams" (more memos I failed to see), but not one mention of a firefighter being on the scene last night. How does this happen?

Does the word "firefighter" now carry such a negative connotation reporters try to avoid it (maybe that's what happens when idiotic political leaders claim prisoners can do your job)? Is "firefighter" somehow politically incorrect? Do young people not know this word or can't relate to it? Please someone, explain it all to me.

My outrage is not directed at the young reporter who wrote this and yours shouldn't be either (but Leah Kosin, if you happen to see this, please get something out of it other than I am an old, washed-up reporter with a bad attitude). This is just a symptom of the problem Ray McCormack so simply highlighted (and in a hell of a lot fewer words than I am doing). It's an epidemic.  

To me, this is an issue about firefighters losing their identity and becoming generic. More important, it's allowing others to take the lead in defining who you are.

Yes, I am very aware firefighters now do so much more now than just fight fires. They respond to "all hazards". I get it.

But they always did things other than just spray water at flames. Even back in the day when they were called firemen.

Do you really think anyone has ever uttered these words: "Oh my dear, the cat is stuck up in the tree. Shall we ring up the first responders to get it down"? I didn't think so. But you may hear that someday soon, if you allow the word "firefighter" to die from disuse.

Firefighters are the can-do people the public relies on when it hits the fan. While it may not describe everything you do, and has certainly taken a beating in recent years (some of it self-inflicted), it's a word the public generally thinks of in a positive way. If you treat this word with respect by not doing the stupid things that will further tarnish its image and stand up and say something when reporters or politicians call you something else, I believe the word will continue to serve you well.

Arrangements for Fairfax County Firefighter Horace C. Pendergrass

1 comment

Previous coverage

Fairfax County Firefighter Horace Christopher "Chris" "Teddy" Pendergrass, passed away suddenly on October 22, 2011. Beloved son of James H. Pendergrass and the late Jestine Adams Pendergrass. Loving father of Christian Aniece Adams, Tierra Janiece Pendergrass and Horace Christopher Pendergrass, Jr. Cherished grandfather of Ahmare Antwan Adams.. Dear brother of Natalie Gravette, Robin Gail Pendergrass, Jessica Lynn Jones and Donnell Adams (Eve). The family will receive friends at the EVERLY FUNERAL HOME, 10565 Main Street, Fairfax, VA 22030 on Wednesday, October 26, 2011 from 6 until 8 PM. Funeral services with honors will be held on Thursday, October 27 at 10 AM at Greater Little Zion Baptist Church, 10185 Zion Drive, Fairfax, VA. Interment will follow at Quantico National Cemetery, Triangle, VA. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests memorial contributions to the Firefighters Fund of Fairfax County, PO Box 401, Fairfax, VA 22038-0401 or Prince of Peace Church, 1543 Summit Avenue, Portsmouth, VA 23704

SERVICES

Visitation

Wednesday October 26, 2011
6:00 PM to 8:00 PM
*Everly Funeral Home
10565 Main Street
Fairfax, VA 22030
(703) 385-1110

Funeral Service

Thursday October 27, 2011
10:00 AM
*Greater Little Zion Baptist Church
10185 Zion Drive
Fairfax, VA 22032
(703) 764-9111

*Parking details will be provided at a later time. 

Video: Fire buff flash mob gets corralled by Detroit cops.

17 comments

David Psenechnuk at DMP Productions/FireBuffVideo.com made me laugh with this undated video from Detroit he titled "How many fire buffs can you fit on a fire scene?".

Could this fire buff convergence also be referred to as a flash mob? And were fire buffs well ahead of their time and are actually some of the original flash mobsters?

Wikipedia describes a flash mob as "a group of people who assemble suddenly in a public place, perform an unusual and sometimes seemingly pointless act for a brief time, then disperse". 

Of course "pointless" is in the eye of the beholder. We don't see the videos fire buffs provide STATter911.com and other fire service media as pointless, but clearly some in the Detroit Police Department do. 

Quick Takes: October 24, 2011.

4 comments

In case you missed this must see video: We posted this video late Friday showing a woman plowing her car through a crash scene on a highway  in Goose Creek, South Carolina hitting two firefighters. They have broken bones and were treated and released. She has been accused of driving while intoxicated. Click here for the details.

FF Horace C. (Chris) Pendergrass: Firefighter Pendergrass was found dead in the bunkroom of Fairfax County (VA) Fire & Rescue Department Station 41 after shift change on Saturday. He is being fondly remembered in our comments section (here), on the guestbook of IAFF Local 2068 (here) and at VAFireNews.com (here). We will provide memorial details when they are available.

Collision between fire truck, ambulance, taxi and a car injures 10: Glenn Usdin's FireTruckBlog.com has that story from Jackson, Mississippi. Click here.

Comments hit 30K: Over the weekend the number of approved comments since the start of STATter911.com passed 30,000. Even though Fire Critic Rhett Fleitz calls those who write in "trolls" (you don't think he is jealous, do you?), I greatly appreciate it when you take the time to write.

Cop accused of setting police station on fire is shot: Firegeezer has this unusual story from Forest City, Iowa. And BTW, I realize I never congratulated Firegeezer Bill Schumm and Raleigh/Wake Firefighting Blog's Mike Legeros (now Legeros Fire Blog) on their honorable mentions in the IAFF's Media Awards in the Best Blog category. Well deserved gentlemen. Most likely I would receive a dishonorable mention.

Fire videos: Three-alarm restaurant fire in South Whitehall Township, PA; House fire St. Paul, MN.

What a mess in Portland, Maine: The fire chief admits the policies weren't in place to prevent the friends and family plan that apparently was the de facto SOP for the Portland Fire Department's boat. This somewhat lax float-along policy was discovered by the media and the public when one of those trips ended with $38,000 damage to the boat. Here are the details behind the suspension of a captain and a lieutenant. And here's a columnists view of the whole thing after talking to the chief.

I called one wrong: I figured the bare butt firehouse video from Canada wouldn't last very long on YouTube before someone had a change of heart. That's how much I know. They apparently stand on their principles and don't back off from their prank videos so quickly north of the border. It's still there

Senate Minority Leader says keeping firefighters & cops employed isn't his job: Sen. Mitch McConnell, talking about the defeat in the Senate of President Obama's jobs bill, makes the case that preventing firefighters and police layoffs shouldn't be the role of the federal government. Click here.

South Jersey volunteer woes: Read an article looking at some firehouses that are closing due to a shortage of volunteers.

Women aren't finding their way to San Jose: Thirty years after the first one joined the ranks of the San Jose Fire Department (around the same time the Harris Poll began using the term "firefighter") there is concern that only 35 of the 631 members are women. Read more.

Off-duty mud rescue: Three firefighters from Manatee, Florida were on vacation Friday along the Withlacoochee River in Marion County when they heard the call for help from a man stuck in the mud for quite a while. Here's the story.

Torah! Torah! Torah!: FDNY firefighters knew what the rescue priorities were during a two-alarm synagogue fire in Brooklyn early Sunday morning.

Raw video: Three-alarm vacant restaurant fire South Whitehall Township, Pennsylvania.

11 comments

Above is Bill Rohrer's video from a fire at Charlie Brown's Steakhouse, a vacant restaurant at 108 Walbert Avenue in South Whitehall Township, Pennsylvania around 1:00 this morning. Bill has details of fire company assignments on his site NewsWorking. At 6:22 on his video you will hear the order to evacuate the structure due to a ceiling collapse.

Below is more video from firtog on YouTube.

Raw video: Two views from a Saint Paul, Minnesota house fire.

14 comments

Pre-arrival video from Brandon Scheunemann

Video above of a house fire on Saturday in St. Paul, Minnesota. Helmet-cam of the same fire below. No further information.

Fairfax County, Virginia Firefighter Chris Pendergrass found dead at Station 41. 22 year veteran apparently died in his sleep.

15 comments

More from The Secret List:

From WUSA9.com:

A Virginia firefighter was found dead at a firehouse in Fairfax County Saturday morning.

Horace C. (Chris) Pendergrass, a 49-year-old from Chesapeake Virginia, was found at Station 41 off Hampton Road around 8:30 a.m.

Fairfax County Fire and Rescue Spokesperson Captain Will Bailey says Pendergrass has been a firefighter for 22 years.

Investigation is ongoing at this time.

Chris Pendergass was also a U.S. Army veteran and is survived by his father and three adult children. He was found dead in bed this morning after shift change.