The National Fallen Firefighters Foundation has been working with the family of Hal Bruno to coordinate funeral arrangements. The funeral will take place at 11:00 am on Friday, November 11 at Temple Shalom, 8401 Grubb Road, Chevy Chase, Maryland. The event will be open to anyone wishing to attend. For fire service coordination issues please contact Victor Stagnaro at 240-508-7731 or John Proels at 301-712-7201.
Family, friends and fire service members will be received between 1:00 and 5:00 pm in the Anastasi Room at the Bethesda-Chevy Chase Rescue Squad, 5020 Battery Lane, Bethesda, Maryland.
Flowers can be sent directly to Temple Shalom, and will be displayed in the front lobby of the synagogue. In lieu of flowers, donations may be sent to the National Fallen Firefighters Foundation, PO Drawer 498, Emmitsburg, Maryland 21727 and marked In Memory of Hal Bruno. A special fund has been established to memorialize his years of service and accomplishments within the American Fire Service Community.
A tribute page for Mr. Bruno has been established on the Foundation’s website, http://www.firehero.org/ which includes video clips from his years of service with the Foundation. Messages of condolence can be left in the guest book at http://firehero.org/brunotribute/.
On behalf of the Bruno Family the Foundation would like to express their sincere appreciation for all of the outpouring of love, concern and sympathy received. It truly is a fitting tribute for what Hal meant to all of us and a testament to the legacy he leaves.
To me, Hal Bruno is one of the most important figures in the history of this country's fire service. Hal died last night at age 83. I imagine that many of the younger firefighters and a few older ones who read this site aren't familiar with the name Hal Bruno. Hal wasn't a fire chief and his expertise wasn't in fireground tactics, hazardous materials, truck company or engine company operations. Hal's specialty was firefighters. He was the best friend a firefighter and the fire service could have.
But Hal Bruno wasn't the friend who just slapped you on the back and told you what you wanted to hear. Hal cared enough to tell us all what we needed to hear.
Whether it was through his "Fire Politics" column in Firehouse Magazine, or in countless talks and presentations at conventions and seminars, or privately with fire chiefs and union leaders, Hal Bruno provided invaluable guidance, counseling and advice on how the fire service could win the hearts and minds of the American public, elected officials and other government leaders. The effort behind the victory at the polls in Ohio for firefighters and other government workers at the same time Hal was leaving us is right out of the Hal Bruno playbook.
Hal knew that it took a lot more than just doing the job of fighting fires and saving lives to secure the resources needed to have an effective fire department that is properly supported by the people it serves. Hal Bruno's decades of work helped create the modern fire service leader who not only knows his or her way around the fireground but who can also navigate the corridors of City Hall or Congress and answer the tough questions from a reporter.
Hal shared with all those connected to the fire service what he learned from his long career as a political reporter. He was a distinguished observer of the political scene. After 18 years at Newsweek, Hal Bruno became the political director for ABC News. He had direct contact with those elected to lead this country. In 1992 Hal moderated the Vice Presidential debate between Dan Quayle, Al Gore and James Stockdale. It was one of the liveliest of these type of debates (click here and take a look for yourself) with the unflappable Hal Bruno in the middle of it trying to keep order. A style that served him well when he kept the politicians and the fire chiefs (and their egos) in check after assuming the role of MC at the annual National Fire and Emergency Services Dinner in Washington.
But Hal Bruno did show bias and exactly where he stood when it came to firefighters. As Hal related to many, he was practically raised in a Chicago firehouse and always felt indebted to firefighters. He later became a volunteer firefighter and was a member of many fire service organizations, including DC's Friendship Fire Association. It was not unusual to see Hal on a multi-alarm fire in the Nation's Capital handing out coffee on a cold winter's night.
Being there for firefighters took on a new meaning, well beyond providing refreshments and giving advice on politics, when Hal Bruno became a charter member of the National Fallen Firefighters Foundation's Board of Directors in 1993. In a big way, Hal Bruno was now able to practice what he had been preaching to firefighters for so many years. He used his political skill and insight to help guide the Foundation in its role of honoring the fallen and caring for their survivors. In 1999 he took over as Chairman of the Board.
His accomplishments in that role were many. They will long have impact on the safety and well-being of firefighters and the survivors of those who died in the line of duty. Current Chairman Dennis Compton and Executive Director Ron Siarnicki continue to build on that legacy.
In his final years as chairman, Hal Bruno worked tirelessly to make sure the families of fallen firefighters received federal benefits promised them. I listened to Hal, of course, explain the politics behind the issue as we stood watching the Georgetown Library burn in April, 2007.
At that time I had already been listening to Hal for almost 40 years. I first became aware of his as a young teenager reading my parents' Newsweek. But the name Hal Bruno became permanently etched in my mind in1974, the same year I became a volunteer firefighter. What caught my attention was an article he had written for Argosy Magazine about the 1958 Our Lady of the Angels fire in Chicago that killed 92 school children and three nuns. It was a tragedy that Hal Bruno witnessed. Hal's recounting of that event and his analysis of fire safety in the United States made such an impression on me, to this day, I have held onto that magazine.
Like many of you, I also became a big fan of Hal's columns on politics when Firehouse began publishing in 1976. In 1983 I finally got to meet Hal Bruno. That was when Rich Adams, the editorial director at Channel 9, who worked across the alley when I was a reporter at WTOP Radio, invited me to a cookout at the Bruno home in Chevy Chase, Maryland.
Hal and Rich were close friends who shared a bond of journalism, bluegrass music and the fire service. Rich wrote the EMS column for Firehouse and was a long time member of the Bethesda-Chevy Chase Rescue Squad.
While jazz is more my style, I was on board with the rest of what these two had to offer. In fact, both Hal and Rich were important influences on my career. They showed me how to combine a job in broadcast news with a passion for firefighting. In addition, when I went to work at Channel 9 in 1985, Hal and Rich each gave me a great deal of encouragement, and even some news tips.
In 1996 Hal asked me to fill in for an ill Rich Adams, who each year hosted the annual satellite telecast of the National Fallen Firefighters Foundation Memorial Service. When Hal called I really wasn't sure this was something I should be doing as a reporter who covered the fire service. Hal reassured me that it was fine and essentially held my hand through the first year's broadcast. Sadly, Rich passed away not long after Memorial Weekend. I kept coming back to Emmitsburg year after year because no one, including Hal, told me not to. I was learning that this connection to NFFF was something quite important to me and will always be grateful to Hal for making it a part of my life.
Despite all that I've written here, I am not the biggest Hal Bruno fan in my family. That honor goes to my wife Hillary Howard. In 2002 Hillary helped produce the Candlelight Service for Memorial Weekend when it was held in Washington, DC because of the large loss from September 11, 2001. She will tell you that the highlight of those couple of months was working with Hal.
Hillary often talks about Hal's warmth, charm, intelligence, smile and quiet strength. All of those attributes were still on display for us one last time, a month ago, as we stopped and chatted with Hal and his beautiful wife Meg in the dining hall at Emmitsburg at the end of Memorial Weekend. As we caught up, the conversation quickly turned to a mutual friend who had recently found himself forced out of a fire department job. Hal Bruno, of course, wanted to hear all about the politics behind this move.
It should be noted that Hal Bruno died on election day.
A D.C. firefighter who spent months in the hospital following an injury on the job is getting ready to head back to work.
Chuck Ryan was severely injured battling a house fire in April. Five other firefighters were also injured in the blaze, but none as severely as Ryan.
"My biggest thing about coming back is that I will get to the next chapter in my life,” Ryan told ABC7 News exclusively.
Ryan and Rescue Squad 3 were inside a burning house on 48th Place for only minutes on April 8 when the fire flashed over.
"It started getting hot and the smoke started changing, signs of a flashover,” Ryan said. The heat spiked to 2300 hundred degrees.
"My gear was on fire, everything, and my face piece started to melt,” Ryan said. "Just because you go inside of a burning structure doesn't always mean you are going to come out."
Ryan held his face mask in place – that saved his life.
"They didn't think we were going to make it through the night,” he said of doctors at the hospital.
Forty percent of Ryan’s body was covered in 2nd and 3rd degree burns. But even while recovering, Ryan longed to return to his job.
"From the moment I woke up in intensive care, all I was looking forward to was going back to work,” he said.
He was able to leave the hospital 49 days later and continue the even tougher days at home.
With the help of his 15-year-old daughter Shelby and 21-year-old son TJ, Ryan's wife Kathy took 80 days off from work. She had to change her husband’s bandages twice a day, painful three to four-hour sessions.
"I have a wonderful wife and best friend that is just amazing. I don't know how many people would have to be able to do what she did,” Ryan said.
He almost lost four fingers, but has healed now with his grip back to 100 percent. So is his spirit.
"Every day before you go to work it is like getting ready to go to Walt Disney World," Ryan said.
The arsonist who caused the house fire that injured Ryan and his colleagues was sentenced to 25 years in prison.
Ohio’s new law limiting the collective bargaining abilities of 350,000 unionized public workers has been defeated after an expensive union-backed campaign that pitted firefighters, police officers and teachers against the state’s Republican establishment.
The law hadn’t taken effect yet. It was thrown out today amid high turnout in a year without a presidential election. Current union rules will stand until the GOP-controlled Legislature plots its next move.
Republican Gov. John Kasich traveled the state to promote retaining the law, which set new minimum contributions for public employee health care and retirement and banned strikes, among other provisions.
Supporters promoted the law as a means for local governments to save money and keep workers. Opponents said the union limits threatened public safety with little proof of cost savings.
After two recent posts of fire videos, additional video has arrived via YouTube. Above is another helmet-cam view (with other video edited into it) from the house fire Sunday at 133 Laurel Street in Minersville, Pennsylvania. The video is from Yorkville Hose Company, Station 60. Here is our previous coverage.
Below are two more videos from a structure fire in Willow Springs, Missouri. The video is from the West Plains FD which ran mutual aid from about a half hour away. Here is the earlier coverage of that fire.
This is truly a fascinating and different story out of Berea, Ohio. It is a bit complicated and required two readings of James McCarty's article for The Plain Dealer before I understood it. Let me try to explain it chronologically.
In 2010, Williams Phelps, a 17-year veteran of the Berea Fire Department who is black, was offered and turned down a promotion to lieutenant. The reason Phelps gave in a lawsuit recently filed in federal court, is that the promotion, at the time, was based on race and not merit. In that suit, William Phelps refers to the interview for the job he had with Safety Director Kenneth Adams, who is also black. From The Plain Dealer:
"If I promote you first, you need to be able to deal with the situation of being promoted ahead of two candidates who scored higher than you," Phelps quoted Adams as saying. He went on to quote Adams as saying that if he didn't promote Phelps, "people in the community" would ask why he didn't give the job to the black candidate.
Adams rejected Phelps' version of the process, and denied making the statements quoted in Phelps' lawsuit.
This year there have been two more firefighters promoted to lieutenant. Though Phelps says his exam scores placed him in one of the top two in line for those jobs, he was not offered a promotion. Phelps contends now that the promotion is based solely on merit and not the color of his skin, he wasn't offered the job. He believes he was passed over as retaliation for what happened last year.
In addition, Firefighter/Paramedic Phelps, has been one of the faces of the Vote No on Issue 2 campaign in Ohio. Issue 2, which will be decided on Tuesday, is a referendum on Senate Bill 5, backed by Gov. John Kasich, limiting collective bargaining rights for public employees. Phelps lent his face to the ad below that has been seen on billboards around the state.
Rescues at high-rise fire in London: This is a fire over the weekend at Mermaid Towers in Abinger Grove, Deptford. Reports indicate three adults and two children were rescued after a seventh floor flat caught fire. According to the BBC, "Emergency crews had to wear breathing equipment to lead them to safety."
Seven hurt in fire engine – car crash: Glenn Usdin's FireTruckBlog.com has the details on Friday night's collision in Virginia Beach, Virginia that left three firefighters and four civilians injured. Click here.
News report says hydrant check results in firefighter being robbed & shot at: That's the story from Miami's Liberty City where on Sunday afternoon a firefighter reports he was checking a plug a half bock from the firehouse when a man pulled a gun demanding the firefighter's gold necklace. The firefighter says he threw the necklace at the man and ran away as the gunman fired. Here are the details.
Saving money by reducing firefighter sick days: That's the proposal to the City Council by the city manager of Charleston, West Virginia. Read the story.
Retirements at the top in Topeka, Kansas: Firegeezer looks at the careers of Chief Allen Bradshaw and Deputy Chief Edward DeWitt who rose through the ranks together at the Topeka Fire Department. They are both retiring in December. Click here.
Also, pay close attention to Firegeezer this week for a special five part series that will wrap up on Veterans Day that I think you will not want to miss.
According to the description this is a mutual aid call for the West Plains Fire Department to assist Willow Springs about 30 minutes away. The fire portion of this video begins around 3:30.
Fire destroyed a home on Monday at 2128 Trego Creek Road in the Chllicothe, Ohio area. According to the Chillicothe Gazette, "Franklin and Scioto township fire departments responded". The description say this video was shot by Stephen Zupi, EMT-I/ FF.
And this is apparently another fire department that hires a band to play at all their fires.
Glenn Usdin's FireTruckBlog.com has the story of a very selfish South Carolina man who just couldn't get from point a to point b on his own personal timetable. Blocking his way was a fire engine. However late he was by the initial delay was nothing compared to the set back to his schedule that the handcuffs caused. Click here.
These are two video clips from a fire on Tuesday at the Windsail Apartments in South Tulsa. One firefighter was hurt when part of a ceiling fell on him. In the video above the firefighters are preparing for master streams. In the one below air horns are sounded and the last firefighters leave the building before the streams are opened up. Read more about the fire.
This video, from a fire around 9:00 PM on October 16 in the Mystic Harbor section of Little Egg Harbor Township, was uploaded to YouTube today. According to the description with the clip, it came in as a shed fire, but with sustained winds of 30 MPH and gusts to 50 MPH the homes on either side were also burning when the fire department arrived.
Here's more:
Engine 72 arrived and crews pulled (2) 1.75" Lines to attack the fire from the outside. Our other Engine that was right behind us That crew also pulled (2) 1.75" Lines to fight the fire from the inside as the fire made its way to the 2nd and 3rd floors and the attic of the "C" & "D" side of the house. Using Class "A" foam the Fire was k/d in about 18 min.
Our friend Steve Redick (click here for Steve's books & photographs) took one his trips out of Chicago to Detroit to be there for Devil's Night. Steve shot a bunch of fires. These were all day time fires and give you a good view of Detroit firefighters in action.
Bill Carey of Backstep Firefighter posted this one and has a couple of comments about stretching lines. It's from a house fire yesterday in the 3200 block of Pope Street, SE near Fort Dupont Park. Two civilians were injured due to the fire.
Firefighter Spot found this video from a house fire on Penns Street in Penns Grove, New Jersey last Thursday afternoon. No one was injured but a dog died. Read more. The short video above shows the people living in the home escaping. The clip below has the arrival of the fire department.
On Monday, while engine 1 was away from the fire station on Calhoun Street, someone broke in through a bathroom window, ransacked the firefighters lockers and stole several items.
Yesterday’s burglary closes a month that has seen several criminal acts against firefighters. As firefighters battled a major blaze on Genesee Street that injured four of their own Oct. 15, members of a large crowd that had gathered tried to steal a power cutting device from the back of an engine. They were foiled by firefighters and police.
On Oct. 21, a city teen hurled a large concrete block at firefighters pumping water out of a basement on Kirkbride Avenue. No injuries were reported.
The video above is a compilation of clips from dashcams released by the Bastrop County, Texas sheriff showing deputies and firefighters reacting to the first reports of fire just before 2:30 PM on Sunday afternoon, September 4.
In the video you will see efforts to notify residents and try and put out the rapidly moving fire. Roads the deputies used to get into the area were suddenly cut off by the fast moving fire. This is the initial stage of a wildfire that killed two people, destroyed more than 1500 homes and spread over 34,000 acres.
The headline reads "City of Miami Fire Department having fun with Hooter girls". And here's the description with it:
"Our city of miami fire department wasting their time with Hooter girls while the buildings fire alarm was going Off!".
Is that really what is going on here? I am far from convinced that's exactly the case, based on what I saw in the clip. Watch it and tell me what you think?
Whatever the facts are of this situation, the bigger lesson for everyone is in this person's perception of the event. It is a concept to think about as you go about your everyday business on the job and on your rigs. With cameras popping up everywhere, even innocent actions where you are actually doing some good, can be misunderstood or distorted and used for someone else's agenda.
What I see in this video (and this is just MY perception) is the pump operator using some moments while the rest of the crew is handling a building's fire alarm is some positive public relations for the fire department. I am not being sarcastic. I mean this sincerely. Like the woman taking the video, I have no knowledge of the facts and I'm making a few assumptions to reach my conclusions (just like a reporter, huh?).
Fire chiefs, other officers and union officials are often reminding firefighters to present a good image to the citizens and teach them about the fire service. They want the troops to be good ambassadors.
So, when there is down time at an incident scene, if it doesn't interfere with operations and it is safe to do so, is there something bad about letting the people you serve get a quick tour of the fire trucks their tax dollars pay for? Few of us would say that's a terrible idea.
But if the citizens happen to be three young women who work for the restaurant chain Hooters, are the firefighters obligated to tell the women that because of where they work it's not allowed?
From what we can see, this isn't like the Los Angeles incident where there is video of a naked porn star climbing onto a rig. These are just three young women who got to sit in a fire engine, take pictures and then pose with someone's helmet. They probably left with a good impression of firefighters and the fire department.
Still, some in the public will only see that three Hooters girls came pouring out of a fire engine laughing and having a good time while the firefighters were supposed to be working. That's how the woman taking this video views it.
This may be one of those damned if you do and damned if you don't moments. From what I can see, the only thing that might have been a bit smarter to do in this situation was keep the door open so people could see clearly what was going on inside. A little transparency, if you will. Other than that minor point, it appears to me something that a chief can justify and defend, especially if firefighters are extending that same courtesy to other citizens.
Even having the door open probably wouldn't have changed this woman's view of it all from a few stories up. If she had bothered to heed the warning of the fire alarm and left the building (like the Hooters staff apparently did) she might have learned that the other firefighters were doing their job and the one left behind was also serving the citizenry, just in a different way. She too might have then been able to climb up into the fire engine and then use that camera for something a little more productive and positive.
My friend Luis Santano, an Alexandria, Virginia fire captain, was off-duty yesterday on Maryland's Eastern Shore and pulled up to a convenience store burning on Route 50 in Easton. Luis used his cell phone to capture the video above of the fire at the Fast Stop, which carries an address of 4543 Ocean Gateway.
According to WBOC-TV, the fire was reported just before 10:00 AM. No one was injured.
A Berwyn Heights resident is hospitalized after sustaining burn injuries during a fire inside of her house. At about 4:45 pm, Sunday, October 30, Fire/EMS units from the Berwyn Heights and the College Park area were alerted to a house fire in the 8500 hundred block of 58th Avenue. Berwyn Heights firefighters arrived to find fire coming from the 1-story single family home and an adult female just exiting her home. Paramedics tended to the injured adult female as firefighters worked to extinguish the fire. The adult female resident was transported by paramedics to a Burn Unit in fair condition. It appears that she was the only person at home when the fire started.
There were about 35 firefighters and medics that required about 10 minutes to extinguish the fire. Fire Investigators believe the fire started in the master bedroom located in the rear of the house. The cause of the fire remains under investigation until Investigators have an opportunity to interview the resident, however, they believe the fire to be accidental. Fire loss is estimated at $80,000 for the structure and contents.
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