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Elect Colorado’s Sheriff Justin Smith as the nation’s editor-in-chief. He’s the man who can protect us from all disturbing images.

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 Left to their own, the news media will continue to show images just like this one with no thought of the damage they are causing. Sheriff Justin Smith knows better. We need to take his plan to the nation.

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Read about new press controls in Colorado

STATter911.com previous column on Sheriff Smith

Larimer County Sheriff Justin Smith is my hero. He’s really showing those nasty news people who’s in charge. This is the guy we need on the national scene to finally get the out of control news media under the control of the government where it belongs.

After the arrogant TV news directors of Denver turned down Sheriff Smith’s request (see our earlier column) and kept showing burning and burned out homes, the man who was elected to be in charge got even (can you believe those insensitive, so called journalists actually showed things burning on the news?). According to an article by AP reporter Dan Elliott posted on Firefighter Nation, the sheriff has now issued brand new restrictions on the press covering wildfires in Northern Colorado. I know what you are saying and I’m with you. Can we even really trust a reporter to tell us what the sheriff is doing?

But if reporter Elliott is accurate (doubtful, considering how those people are), as part of Sheriff Smith’s continuing concern that a homeowner may have his or her privacy violated by seeing their destroyed home in the news before being officially notified, the sheriff is refusing to allow reporters and camera crews into areas they’ve typically had access to at previous wildfires in the region.

America needs Sheriff Smith. Here’s a guy who would make sure that all images of property destroyed by terrorist attack or other intentional act, accident or natural disaster have been properly cleared before being shown to the public. We’ve needed someone like Justin Smith for a long, long time.

With Justin Smith at the helm we would be spared live TV coverage of terrorist attacks or other unfolding disasters.

If he was in charge almost eleven years ago we wouldn’t have had to see any of the images from the attacks of 9-11 live on our TV screens. Sheriff Smith would have made sure access to the area by the reporters and photographers was restricted, and no images were seen until all property owners were officially notified by law enforcement.

When the next earthquake hits Southern California, Smith is the guy who can make certain no crumbling structures are viewed until after all home and building owners have been contacted.

When a jet goes off course and takes down an apartment complex, as it did in Virginia Beach, Virginia earlier this year, Sheriff Smith will see to it that every apartment dweller has heard the news from one of his deputies before even one image hits the airwaves.

The next time a single family home of lightweight construction catches fire and spreads to three or four neighboring homes and melts the siding off four or five others, Sheriff Smith will have the backs of the public. There will be no live TV chopper pictures of the destruction until each homeowner gets the word.

Everyone who lived in these apartments would have been notified first hand before the first image hit the screen if Justin Smith had his way. That’s why need him as our nation’s editor-in-chief.

This arrogance by the press, especially TV news, has gone on far too long. At the Museum of Radio and Television in New York, you can see for yourself, as I have, that as far back as a 1961 wildfire in Topanga Canyon in Los Angeles County, that KTLA-TV was showing live helicopter video from its chopper of homes burning. I can assure you no one notified those homeowners before the images were televised. And that’s probably because Justin Smith wasn’t born yet to protect us from this outrageous violation of our privacy and our freedoms.

I know if I were one of those resident in the path of a wildfire I wouldn’t want to know instantly my house burned down via some heartless TV news person doing a live report. No matter how many hours or days it took, it would be much better to be in the dark without such information, until, as the country’s Founding Fathers had intended, the home’s next of kin were properly notified by an elected official.

That’s all changed now. There’s a new sheriff in town. I urge both men who want to occupy The White House come January 21, 2013 to please consider naming Justin Smith as the nation’s first editor-in-chief. It’s time for the President to make sure the news people understand that a free press really means that the people who were elected by the citizens are free to make the rules. A man like Sheriff Smith, whose department also warned of unauthorized Facebook pages about the Colorado fires, could also be the guy to get this whole social media thing under control, with all of these citizens with cameras posting anything they want, whenever they want.

Better yet, this new national post should be a cabinet position with a name that everyone can clearly understand. How about Minister … I mean, Secretary of Information? It has a nice ring to it.

Those ghouls are at it again. TV stations turn down Colorado sheriff’s request not to show burned or burning homes.

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Warning: The video above is not authorized and some may find it offensive.

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Did you hear the latest from those damn unpatriotic, liberal, Commie sympathizer, whining news media types? You won’t believe this one. You better take a Valium because when you read the details you’re going to want to suspend the First Amendment immediately, if not sooner.

Can you believe while covering this tragic wildfire ravaging parts of Colorado, the TV stations in Denver and beyond dared to show video and pictures of burned out and burning homes?

Those heartless and uncaring ghouls. Actual burning homes where people once lived! I’m serious. They should take away the license of any TV station that does that.

The worst part is the TV stations continued transmitting these pictures after being warned by the Larimer County Sheriff’s Office.

 One of those shocking KDVR-TV images the sheriff doesn’t want you to see. Some folks think the TV station should be sued.

Joanne Ostrow, a reporter (yes. one of those) from the Denver Post, wrote this about those unsavory news people:

At times the journalistic imperative to deliver news clashed with authorities’ efforts to control the flow of information.

On Monday, the Larimer County Sherriff’s Office issued a request to the media not to show photos of destroyed homes out of respect to homeowners.

Station managers acknowledged the sensitivity of the issue, but turned aside the plea on journalistic grounds.

“While we have deep respect for what Larimer County is asking, at the same time we are hearing from the same community that they want to know,” said Jeff Harris, News Director at 7News. The outpouring of response regarding the station’s extended coverage has been rewarding, he said.

“We certainly understand the emotional nature of those images,” said CBS4 News Director Tim Wieland. “In fact, many news events in our community can be difficult to watch for those who are directly affected. However, while we take care not to show inappropriate images, our job at the end of the day is to cover the news.”

When did the people of Colorado elect Mr. Wieland or Mr. Harris so they could make these decisions about what we should see? Last I looked, Sheriff Justin Smith was chosen by the voters to be in charge.

Come on folks. Freedom of the press does not mean you can just go around shooting pictures and video of news worthy events and put them all over the television and the Internet for just anyone to view. That certainly isn’t what our founding fathers had in mind.

I’m sure what the guys who started this great country were thinking is more in line with what a man named Charlie Brown wrote on the Facebook page of KDVR-TV (FOX31):

The Larimer County Sheriff Dept needs to sue the hell out of EVERY News Media Station, especially FOX31, due to the fact they they announced they did NOT want any homes being shown (burning or not) on TV due to the fact it would cause emotional distress for the owners of the homes in the fire zone. Mitt Romney should sue FOX31 because the only commercials they’ll show on their station (containing his name) are anti-Romney commercials. I’m even gonna request to be one of Romney’s, and the homeowners Legal Advisory Board. You screwed up FOX31, accept the consequences for your actions. 

At least it’s hearteneing to see there are some other patriots who posted and let it be known they agree with Mr. Brown.

To make matter worse, I have also learned there are now Facebook and Twitter accounts about the fires that were not okayed by the Larimer County Sheriff’s Office. WTF!

I quote from a press release yesterday at 4:00 PM by John Shulz, the public information officer for the Larimer County Sheriff’s Office:

There are no official Facebook or Twitter accounts for the High Park Fire. Any sites that exist are not authorized.

Seriously folks, we can’t be having this. It’s bad enough that the news media think they have the right to provide information to the public that isn’t approved, but now the average citizen is doing this through social media.

If we begin letting just any Joe Schmoe on Facebook, or some schmuck with a blog have their say whenever they want, without authorization, won’t that be the end of our free society? (BTW, someschmuckwithablog.com is one of those sites not authorized by any sheriff and it should be shut down immediately.)

Doesn’t this idea of citizen journalists with their posts, Tweets and blogs go against everything this country has stood for? When will it end?

Man & wife who died in Lower North Fork fire near Denver told not worry. 911 calls released.

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Listen to 911 calls via KMGH-TV

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AP:

Emergency officials told confused residents not to worry after they reported a fire on the outskirts of Denver, including at least two residents who later were found dead in their burning home, 911 calls released by officials Tuesday showed.

Residents began calling to express concern about the fire and high winds around 2 p.m., and at first dispatchers assured them the heavy smoke and flames were part of a controlled burn that wasn’t a threat. Later they acknowledged that there was some trouble with a prescribed burn but told callers that firefighters were at the scene.

Jefferson County sheriff’s office spokeswoman Jacki Kelley said sheriff’s officials were aware the controlled burn had broken its perimeter that afternoon but she said the agency didn’t know the fire had gotten out of control until a local fire department sent a notification at 5 p.m. She said that’s when a firefighter first made a suggestion for evacuations.

“We have to listen to what groups in the field are telling us,” Kelley said of why evacuations weren’t called earlier. “If they’re saying there’s a controlled burn and the state forest service is on the scene, we don’t just create evacuations for a fire that has gone outside the perimeter.”

Residents in the mountains are particularly sensitive to smoke in the air, and it wasn’t unusual for dispatchers to receive calls about seeing smoke from the controlled burn, Kelley said. The dispatchers’ messages to callers changed as the situation changed, she said.

The 911 calls raised further questions about emergency officials’ response to last week’s fast-growing fire, which authorities believe killed three people, damaged or destroyed more than two dozen homes and burned 6 square miles in the mountains southwest of Denver.

Resident Sam Lucas, who died along with his wife, was among the first to call around 2 p.m. on March 26 after returning home. The dispatcher, having already answered a handful of calls about the fire, cut Lucas off to tell him it was a controlled burn and that the forest service was on the scene.

“We got 79-mile-an-hour winds out there and they got a controlled burn?” Lucas said on the 911 call, one of 130 calls over a total of 10 hours released Tuesday.

When the dispatcher says yes, he replies “Oh wonder. Thank you.”

A neighbor has said Lucas, 77, and his wife, Linda, 76, were packed and ready to go if they got orders to evacuate. Authorities say they did eventually get one but it’s not clear when.

A friend concerned about the third person who apparently died in the fire also called to ask authorities to check on Ann Appel because she was getting chemotherapy and her husband was out of state. However, that call seems to have come after it was too late to help her.

“She’s a little sickly. We have no idea if anybody even knows she’s there,” the caller said. “We know the fire went through her property because we were able to get ahold of the neighbor.”

The caller said Appel — who didn’t get an evacuation notice — wasn’t answering her phone. Meanwhile, authorities say evacuation orders were sent in error to homes that weren’t in the fire’s path.

“She had her stuff to leave. The car had a flat tire,” the caller said.

The dispatcher took Appel’s number and address and said, “We’ll get someone out there to make sure she got out, OK?”

Searchers found human remains in Appel’s burned-out home on Saturday.

“The information at the time was we had a controlled burn, and fire agencies were on scene,” said Jefferson County sheriff’s spokesman Mark Techmeyer. “In law enforcement, you want to minimize radio traffic. There would be no reason to air out something that’s already common knowledge.”

He said the dispatchers weren’t giving interviews about what happened.

The fire appears to have been sparked by a controlled burn set four days earlier by the Colorado State Forest Service, which says embers escaped from the burn sometime on the afternoon of March 26. A review of what happened has been ordered by the governor.

The first wave of automated calls ordering residents to evacuate was sent at 5:05 p.m. but they went to the wrong list of phone numbers, Techmeyer said.

“It was way too large geographically,” he said, adding that he had no other details. “That was a user error on our end.”

That call was halted, and a new round of calls was started at 5:23 p.m., he said.

The 911 recordings show that that initial bad round of notifications caused even more confusion in the dispatch center.

Calls from people who wrongly got evacuation notices are mixed with more residents calling to report smoke and fire nearby. Dispatchers appear to become increasingly overwhelmed while fielding so many types of calls back-to-back.

Simultaneously, residents who were under mandatory evacuation called dispatchers to find out if they had to leave their homes. Some of those people do not indicate they received evacuation notices before calling 911 themselves.

A caller named Neal Biller on Sunburst Drive told a dispatcher he didn’t get an evacuation call but a neighbor did.

The dispatcher said he didn’t need to evacuate if he didn’t get a call, but Biller asked her to look up his address.

A few seconds later the dispatcher said, “OK, yeah, it looks like on Sunburst you are to evacuate, so yes, do evacuate.”

“Wow. Really?” Biller said.

“I wonder why you didn’t get the call?” the dispatcher asked.

“Well I’m glad I called,” Biller said.

Some dispatchers did urge people to err on the side of caution and evacuate if they felt they were in danger.

FirstCall Network Inc., which provides the county’s automated phone call system, said the first round of calls went to anyone who had signed up for the service on a county website, whether or not they lived in the evacuation area.

FirstCall logged slightly different times for the erroneous call — 4:50 p.m. — and for the start of the second round of calls, 5:16 p.m.

FirstCall’s president, Matthew Teague, said the corrected calls went to 1,089 phone numbers in six waves, the last one starting at 9:14 p.m.

Teague said 12 busy signals were detected and 32 calls weren’t answered. Another 90 calls went to numbers that had been disconnected or were not set up to receive voice calls. In each case, the system made three attempts to call those numbers, he said.

Intermountain Rural Electric Association, which provides power to the area, cut off the electricity at about 8 p.m., spokesman Mike Kopp said.

That could have rendered some phones inoperable, but residents with cell phones still could get the evacuation order, Techmeyer said.

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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.

When seconds count: TV station looks at mutual aid agreements after closest company didn’t respond for woman trapped in burning home. Chiefs defend system that keeps resources at home.

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In Colorado, a Denver TV station is looking closely at mutual aid agreements telling the public that the closest fire company may not respond in a life and death emergency when seconds count. KDVR-TV explains to the public the difference between automatic aid and mutual aid following an incident where a woman in the Golden Heights area of Golden called 911 saying she was trapped in the basement of her burning home.

West Metro Fire Station 6 is less than a mile away from the home. According to the TV station, firefighters from that station told West Metro not to respond to the emergency. The mutual aid agreement between the two departments requires a firefighter on the scene confirming there is a fire and the request has to be approved by a chief, a captain or lieutenant.

KDVR-TV reports Golden firefighters arrived in about eight minutes from stations 4.2 and 7.2 miles away. The woman’s husband apparently made the save before firefighters were on the scene.

Similar mutual aid agreements are in effect throughout the area. But the chief of the Cunningham Fire Department believes in automatic aid and has such agreements in place with Aurora Fire and South Metro. Here’s more from the station’s report

Response time is the most important thing for the citizen,” Cunningham Fire Chief Jerry Rhodes told FOX 31. “Citizens don’t care what the name is on the side when their house is on fire. They want firefighters there in a hurry.”

Chief Rhodes thinks the closest fire department should respond no matter which district it’s in. He believes the community would be better served if all the metro area fire stations with a mutual aid system switched to an “auto aid agreement,” which means the closest fire department is automatically called.

But Denver Fire, West Metro Fire, and many other large fire departments defend the mutual aid agreement saying auto aid would take resources away from their cities and from the taxpayers who pay for fire protection.

“We have to be available for our citizens, not that we would ever turn down a request for mutual aid, but we don’t want have it to where it’s just an automatic,” West Metro Chief Doug McBee explained.

Golden’s Fire Chief also stands by the mutual aid system. He would not agree to an on camera interview, but sent us a statement which states, in part:

After reviewing response times for the (Golden Heights) incident, Golden Fire Department has directed a dispatch/response change…to include West Metro in the initial call for personnel. It states, On any reported structure fire in the Golden Heights area…Golden Dispatch shall immediately notify West Metro Dispatch…and…Pleasant View (Fire) to respond immediately after toning Golden Fire.

Quick Takes

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 5th alarm in Orange, New Jersey: This is a fire from yesterday in an H-shaped building at 399 Lincoln Avenue. It was reported around 8:00 AM. See parts 2 through 7 of the video. Read more.

Videos of firefighter riding down a collapsing stairwell: We have two videos from Friday’s fire in Coatesville, Pennsylvania that show at least one firefighter in the stairwell of an apartment building as it collapses in a ball of flame. If you haven’t seen it you will want to. Click here.

Old story from PGFD: Not doing daily TV news anymore has me occasionally missing some local developments. One that I am sorry didn’t get on my radar screen earlier was the serious burns to Bowie VFD Firefighter Patrick Ivey. Firefighter Ivey’s facepiece became dislodged at a September 4 house fire. While fixing that problem he was then hit in the head with debris from the ceiling. PGFD PIO Mark Brady reported despite that, Ivey continued with the interior attack until all firefighters were pulled out of the building for defensive operations. It was only then that his burns were discovered. At last word on the Bowie VFD website Firefighter Ivey was expected to be in the burn unit for two weeks with multiple surgeries for third -degree burns to his head.

New story from PGFD: PGFD Captain James Jiron was coming out of a church on Saturday in Woodstock, Virginia after attending a family function. It was then that he saw smoke coming for the rear of a two-story duplex. Mark Brady’s PIO blog has the story of Captain Jiron rescuing two from the home

Baltimore City firefighters battled a three-alarm fire in the 3400 block of Auchentrolly Terrace around 4:15 Sunday morning. The fire was in a vacant apartment building. This image is from IAFF Local 734.

New York volunteer blows whistle leading to department safety violations: Adam Crown needed information about his own department for a fire officer course he was taking. When he couldn’t get that information from Danby VFC  he filed a Freedom of Information Act request. What he learned in his course soon brought Crown to file an 11-page complaint with New York’s Department of Labor about safety issues at his fire company. The department was then cited for a number of those issues including eight violations deemed serious. As you might imagine Crown soon became an ex-member. Danby officials say they’ve now dealt with the violations. Here’s the story. Here’s more

Update on burned Flint firefighter: You may recall the August 16 story of Flint, Michigan firefighter Jeremy Turner. Turner was brought back to the department thanks to a SAFER grant that Flint used to rehire firefighters who were part of layoffs. Firefighter Turner fell through the floor of a vacant home that had been set on fire and was critically burned. Flint Journal’s Laura Misjak looks at Turner’s recovery and how bringing back 39 firefighters has made the department safer. At the same time the arson problem is out of control-

The suspicious fire that injured Turner was one of 48 abandoned structure fires in August — more than double the average of 23 for August in the previous four years.

In fact, in every month since March, the number of vacant house fires this year has outpaced the average number for the month in the previous four years.

Click here for the article.  One of the more recent suspected Flint arsons was in a vacant elementary school. Watch the story.

Double-decker bus crash: Firegeezer has the amazing pictures from a double-decker bus that was too high for a railroad bridge in New York state. Four people were killed.

9-11 stair climbs: Firefighters in the United States and New Zealand spent Saturday climbing and climbing. They were climbing in honor of the FDNY firefighters who climbed the Twin Towers and were killed nine-years-ago. Check out the coverage – Denver and Red Rocks; Nashville; Seattle; Sacramento; Redwood City; Aukland.   

Mt. Carmel, Pennsylvania 2nd-alarm: Fire from yesterday at 301 East Avenue.

Quick Takes

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25 firefighters treated at White Plains, NY commercial fire: A half block of downtown White Plains burned yesterday and during the fire a nearby manhole exploded. The firefighters suffered from smoke inhalation, heat exhaustion and heart palpitations. Click here for details and pictures of the fire.

Looks like they are going to have lots to talk about on C Shift at Station 1: Some baseball fans expecting to see a foul ball drop down from the sky instead saw a firefighter do just that. FF/PM Tyler Morris of the Lake Cities Fire Department in Corinth, Texas fell 30-feet while trying to grab a ball during Tuesday night’s game. Co-workers with Morris at the game say he is going to be okay. Nolan Ryan was among the visitors at the hospital. Check it out

No life safety problem, no fire protection: Many property owners on Bradford Island in California were under the impression they had fire protection when a fire took hold of multiple homes. They were wrong. The East Contra Fire Protection District responded a number of times but is not authorized to spring into action unless there are people in immediate danger. There’s a lot more to the story. Click here.

Must read stories about a Montana firefighter who faced two emergencies on vacation, saved a brother firefighter and now may lose his job: Whitefish, Montana FF/PM Ben Parsons was in Oregon for the Father’s Day Test of Endurance race. After a strong finish in the race he spotted a grill on a wooden porch that was about to catch a home on fire. Parsons did what he could and asked a friend to go to the fire truck parked around the corner and alert the firefighter to the problem. The friend then told Parsons to respond to the rig because the firefighter who was with it was in cardiac arrest. Thanks to Parsons and others, the firefighter is alive. That’s part one of the story that you can find here. Returning home Parsons now has to face reality about his career choice. Ben Parsons may lose his job by the end of the month due to budget cuts. Read that story.  Thank you Butch Weedon for alerting us to this story.

More big cuts in Lawrence, Massachusetts: Twenty-three firefighters were laid-off  and another fire station closed (the third during the current financial crisis). Read the latest from a place that has seen more than its share of fire.

Man arrested for getting physical over his complaint about fire tactics: In Greeley, Colorado earlier this week a man began shoving one firefighter and knocking the facepiece off another because he didn’t like the way they were fighting the fire. The chief says they were concentrating the limited water supply from a dead end hydrant on protecting what wasn’t burning. Read more.

More assault charges at an emergency scene: Read what a woman in Shermans Dale, Pennsylvania did with a bucket containing the contents of her stomach.

And even more assaults on first responders: In a late July 4th entry, Firegeezer reports on how firefighters and police were assaulted by fireworks in Alton, Illinois Sunday night.

Audio from deadly fire in Schenectady, New York: FireSceneAudio.com has the fireground audio here from the fire yesterday morning that killed a two-year-old girl and injured her sister and grandmother. Read more.

On the mend: One of four Sacramento firefighters injured in a house explosion has been released from the hospital. Read details. Also home from the hospital, a North Charleston, SC firefighter injured when the roof collapsed at a house fire. Here’s more.

Sprinklers in Baltimore County: Now that I am no longer a reporter, I can come out of the closet on one bias of mine. STATter911.com is very much pro-residential sprinklers and will work on behalf of that goal where I can. That’s why we are happy to report Baltimore County is the latest Maryland jurisdiction to require sprinklers during a vote of the County Council yesterday. Great work by the Baltimore County Fire Department, the Maryland State Fire Marshal’s Office and others. Read the unbiased version of the story here.

FDNY gets a perfect score in annual double dipping probe (and that’s a good thing):  In New York you can’t get a government pension and a government salary at the same time. The latest review found no firefighters in violation. Click here for the story.

Ft. Lauderdale museum: Martin Grube’s FireRescueTV takes a trip south to visit The Fort Lauderdale Fire & Safety Museum inside Station 3. Here’s the video.

Stair climbs growing in numbers: In my work with the National Fallen Firefighters Foundation I have been aware of the increasing numbers of stair climbs to honor the firefighters lost in New York on September 11. The annual 9/11 Memorial Stair Climb, first held in Denver, Colorado in 2005, is the model for these events.  I am happy to say that Jason Thomas at Firefighter Spot is doing his part to spread the word (scooping STATter911.com on the story). We will have more for you in the coming weeks. You can read lots more about the 9/11 Memorial Stair Climb programs and how become involved at Firehero.org.

Chicken joint burns in North Bergen, NJ: A two-alarm fire yesterday at Pollo Loco. Click here for all eight parts of the video.

Must see old video: Firefighter Nation member posts roof collapse video taken from the inside seven-years-ago.

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Find more videos like this on Firefighter Nation

Today is the seventh anniversary of a day when Andy Lyon clearly had a horse shoe embedded somewhere on his body. In celebration of his survival, Lyon posted this video to Firefighter Nation (thanks Bill Carey). Here’s the description that Lyon wrote:

Seven years ago (March 19, 2003) the Denver area was hit with a massive spring blizzard. Three feet of wet snow collapsed and damaged many roofs. I had the good fortune (since I survived) to be filming inside a store called US Toy & Constructive Playthings when a partial collapse turned into a complete collapse. The resulting rush of air blew me out the open door like a champagne cork (yes, I was actually airborne). Mind you, I knew the rest of the roof might come down and stupidly went inside (again) anyway. A mistake I won’t make again. The video is more of an audio experience since I was shooting a closeup at the time of collapse, but you’ll get the idea.

Quick Takes

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House fire in Spring, Texas: The Bravest Online posted this fire from Saturday. You will hear the air horns around 2:15 in the video. Here’s more from the description posted with the clip  - “Forced defensive when the living room flashed. Regained control of the fire and put a hole in the roof. Spring, Ponderosa, and Klein fire departments on scene. No injuries and no cause known.”

Firehouse burns: This photo by John C. Miller of The Daily Mail shows one of the four fire trucks damaged in Sunday's fire at Greene County, New York's Ashland Fire Department. The town hall was also damaged. Click the image for more pictures, video and details.

Firehouse burns: This photo by John C. Miller of The Daily Mail shows one of the four fire trucks damaged in Sunday's fire at Greene County, New York's Ashland Fire Department. The town hall was also damaged. Click the image for more pictures, video and details.

Voting ends tomorrow. Firegeezer is catching up, but this lame blog is in the middle of the pack: Clearly that picture of me on the masthead doesn’t help in this beauty contest. Not that this is anything real important, but just a fun exercise by Rhett Fleitz at FireCritic.com (notice how Dave downplays this now that he is getting his clock cleaned … what a jerk!).

Even though Rhett’s contest has ruffled a few feathers in the blogging community (this isn’t t-ball, everyone can’t be picked or win) there are some good fire and EMS blogs out there like FireDaily.com and a new one by Doug Walton covering Howard County, Maryland (don’t let this junk I write sour you on the rest of them).  If nothing else the voting process will familiarize you with some other voices in cyberspace. So, click here and let them know your favorite blog from the ten finalists. You can vote as many as four times a day. 

EMT ordered rehired takes on The Washington Post: An interesting statement released by the attorney for Selena Walker, the DC Fire & EMS Department EMT who was fired over the David Rosenbaum incident. We told you Friday the DC Court of Appeals affirmed previous rulings that Walker should get back pay and be returned to her job. The statement lashes out not only at the DC government, but makes a case against the editorial board of The Washington Post. Read the statement. Read the court ruling.

It is possible this is the last time we will be posting this image of Lt. Kelli Weeks of the Bourne Fire Department in Massachusetts. After a months long drama and lots of controversy Lt. Weeks has resigned from the department. Click the image for more.

It is possible this is the last time we will be posting this image of Lt. Kelli Weeks of the Bourne Fire Department in Massachusetts. After a months long drama and lots of controversy Lt. Weeks has resigned from the department. Click the image for more.

Staying on course: We have run a number of stories about first responders who become last responders due to the inability to find an address. Fire service veteran and STATter911.com reader Alan Studt says it doesn’t have to be that way. Read his article on the U.S. National Grid

He’s a fake: There is very clear surveillance video of an impostor fire inspector who has been hitting businesses in Maryland, DC and Virginia. Click here to view the video and watch the story.

Cop PIO goes out of his way to praise firefighters: It isn’t often I get an email from a police PIO telling me what great work firefighters have done. In fact, this may be a first for me. That’s exactly what United State Park Police Sgt. David Schlosser did last week. We took his hint about a recent ice operation in the District of Columbia and went even further, taking a look at how the DC Fire & EMS Department is handling the deep freeze.  Click here for our coverage.

Must see video – is it a cop or a firefighter?: Just like David Schlosser I am trying to give credit where credit is due. The video caption says it is a firefighter in Brazil who rappels down the side of a building catching a jumper in his arms and bringing him to safety.  A STATter911.com reader had some doubt. We have added another video that seems to answer the question.  Check it out.

HD helmet-cam shows more than good fire video – it illustrates staffing problems: The video of a December fire in an East St. Louis, Illinois night spot is pretty awesome. But if you look around you will see lots of fire and few firefighters. Check it out.

Fireground audio from Fairfax County second-alarm and other multiple alarms: Our friends at FireSceneAudio.com are at it again.  They have already posted audio from last night’s house fire on Cherry Drive in Fairfax County. Click here to listen.

They also have fires from Saturday in Chicago, Boston and Jersey City. Click here.

The aftermath of a train - car collision in Beltsville, Maryland. This car actually fell onto the tracks early Sunday morning. PGFD's PIO Blog has details and some more images from Beltsville VFD. Click above.
The aftermath of a train – car collision in Beltsville, Maryland. This car actually fell onto the tracks early Sunday morning. PGFD’s PIO Blog has details and some more images from Beltsville VFD. Click above.

Update on Modesto, CA firefighters: Jason Clevenger is back in the hospital scheduled for skin grafts after is was determined his burns are a little worse than originally thought. Jim Adams remains sedated with burns over half his body. Both fell through the roof of a burning home New Year’s Night. The Modesto Bee has the latest.

Save in Quebec City: Read the story from Canada on the rescue of a 3-year-old boy from a fire on Friday night.

Lots of  video of commercial fire in Millburn, NJ: Click here to watch Sunday’s multi-alarm fire in a row of stores.

This is exhibit number 1 on why you shouldn’t read this blog: In case you missed it, Dave had just a little too much fun on Friday with the story of a pipe dream  that turned into a pipe nightmare for a man from the UK. Firefighters went beyond the call of duty to solve the problem and not turn the man into John Bobbitt. Click here, if you must.

Bullet hits firefighter: Exploding ammunition at a house fire hit a target but did not hurt a Denver firefighter. Read more from Firefighter Close Calls.