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UPDATED: Firefighter Stanley Wilson, Dallas Fire Rescue. 28-year veteran found in rubble of burned apartment building.

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Dallas Fire Rescue

IAFF Local 58

KXAS-TV:

The body of a Dallas firefighter who radioed for help after becoming trapped in a burning condominium has been recovered.

The firefighter, Stanley Wilson, was among the 100 Dallas firefighters who responded to a six-alarm fire at the Hearthwood Condominiums at 12363 Abrams Road Monday morning.

According to Dallas Fire-Rescue Chief Louie Bright III, Wilson was a 28-year-veteran of the fire department. Wilson was a native North Texan and a Lake Highlands graduate.

Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings said of Wilson, “he’s a hero. As I told his boys, they should be very proud.”

Wilson is survived by a wife and two sons.

Christina Rosales, DallasNews.com:

Dallas Fire-Rescue spokesman Jason Evans says the firefighter, who has been identified as 28-year department veteran Stanley Wilson, radioed in shortly before 5:30 a.m. that he was trapped and lost, at which point his radio went dead. It’s believed he became trapped when one of the floors collapsed. Almost three hours later his body was recovered from the wreckage.

The body was draped in an American flag as it was removed from the wreckage. Firefighters lined the path from the wreckage and saluted as Wilson was carried into an ambulance to be taken to the medical examiner’s office.

Wilson, 51, is survived by his wife and two sons. Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings said Wilson was a 1980 graduate from Lake Highlands High School, a few miles away from the condo complex where he died. 

WFAA-TV:

At 11 a.m. Monday, Dallas Fire-Rescue Chief Louie Bright, III confirmed that 28-year veteran Stanley Wilson was found dead inside the rubble of the fire hours after a radio message was heard from the firefighter saying, “I’m trapped.”

“A longtime member with the department,” Bright said. “A hard worker, certainly a hero with us for all of his efforts today.”

At about 8:30 a.m., a gurney set up for the missing firefighter was moved and firefighters formed a line around the burnt out building. The firefighters saluted as Wilson’s body, draped with a United States flag, was carried to an ambulance.

In addition to pulling the boy from the rubble, firefighters were able to rescue five other people during the blaze, Evans said.

Two Dallas firefighters, both with leg injuries, were taken to a hospital and a resident was treated for smoke inhalation at the scene.

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Firefighter Bradley Harper, Phoenix Fire Department dies from injuries after being pinned between fire truck & ambulance. Phoenix police officer died today at same hospital after hit & run.

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Phoenix Fire Department

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NOTE: The City of Phoenix also lost a police officer today. Officer Daryl Raetz was also pronounced dead at St. Joseph’s Hospital. He had been hit by a vehicle that fled the scene at an incident in West Phoenix (scene video here).

Jason Volentine, AZFamily.com:

A Phoenix firefighter has died after being pinned between two emergency vehicles while responding to a fire.

According to officials, Bradley Harper, 23, got caught between an ambulance and a fire truck as the two were trying to pass each other on a narrow road.

The crews were responding to a mulch fire at a business in southwest Phoenix at 39th Ave. and Lower Buckeye Rd. around 5:30 p.m. Saturday.

Emergency crews were able to rock the ambulance back and forth to free the firefighter, who was then rushed to St. Joseph’s Hospital.

KTAR-FM:

23-year-old Bradley Harper had just finished fighting a mulch fire in south Phoenix Saturday night, when a fire truck and ambulance tried to pass each other on a narrow road. Harper, who was taking off his gear at the time, found himself pinned between the two vehicles.

He would later be pronounced dead following his arrival at St. Joseph’s Hospital.

“When you’re one of us, you really love these people,” said Phoenix Fire chief Bob Khan. “It’s an uncommon bond.”


AZCentral.com:

Phoenix lost two first-responders Sunday as a firefighter who was wounded in a mulch fire died from his injuries and a police officer was killed in a hit-and-run incident in west Phoenix, authorities said.

The police officer, identified as Daryl Raetz, was killed early Sunday in an incident at 51st and Cambridge avenues, just south of Thomas Road. Authorities said the driver of the vehicle that struck the officer fled.

Raetz, 29, was a veteran of the Iraq War, officials said. He was pronounced dead at St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center. 

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UPDATED: Body of Wayne Westland (MI) firefighter Brian Woehlke recovered after mayday & search. Collapse during fire at a strip mall.

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Fox 2 News Headlines

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Wayne-Westland Fire Department

More coverage at FireCritic.com

Westland Mayor William Wild’s statement 

Ron Savage, WJBK-TV:

A Wayne-Westland firefighter’s life has been tragically cut short.   Wednesday, 29-year-old Brian Woehlke was killed on the job.

At 8:17 a.m.,  a 911 call from a cell phone reported a working fire at The Electric Stick on  Wayne Road in Westland, previously a pool hall converted into a charity poker  venue.  The 13,000 square foot structure includes Marvaso’s Italian  Grille.

While fighting the fire, it was discovered that Woehlke was  unaccounted for.

While checking an area of the building that had  collapsed, they discovered the missing firefighter.  He could not be  revived.  People watching the fire immediately began holding hands and  praying.

Jennifer Woehlke made the following statement: “Brian loved going to work every  day, and he worked his whole life to become a firefighter.  Brian was proud  a Wayne-Westland firefighter.”

Eric D. Lawrence, Freep.Com:

The body of a Wayne Westland firefighter has been recovered from a blaze at a pair of businesses in a Westland strip mall today.

Brian Woehlke, 29, was found today, said Deputy Fire Chief Rob Arbini. Woehlke had been a firefighter for 10 months, Arbini said.

Mayor William Wild said he received notification of the body’s recovery at about 12:40 p.m. No information is being released about the firefighter.

Firefighters responded to a blaze at the Electric Stick, a billiards hall, at about 9 a.m. They received a mayday call through the communications system at about 9:30 a.m., indicating a firefighter was in distress. The call was received after a roof collapsed. The strip mall is located at Hunter and Wayne roads.

LeAnne Rogers & Sue Mason, Observer & Eccentric:

Woehlke is the first firefighter to fall in the line of duty in the City of Westland Fire Department’s 47-year history.

A Dearborn resident, Woehlke was married and the father of one child.,

Woehlke was among firefighters who responded to the fire sometime after 8 a.m. Wednesday. A may day distress radio call from Woehlke was received about 9:30 a.m. His body was recovered from the collapsed building about 12:40 p.m.

Woehlke is believed to have been trapped in debris from the collapsed Electric Stick and adjoining Marvaso’s Italian Grille.

WJBK-TV:

FOX 2′s Alex Wiley says crews discovered the body among the wreckage at the  Electric Stick charity poker hall in the 6500 block of North Wayne Road.

“About 9:30 a.m. through the fire communication system was a report of  mayday call, which in the fire department, means there is a firefighter  down,”  said Westland Mayor William Wild.

The firefighter’s identity has not been released.

The cause of the fire, which also destroyed the neighboring Marvaso’s Italian  Grille, has not been released.

WXYZ-TV:

Five firefighters reportedly went in and only four came out after the Electric Stick pool hall went up in flames Wednesday morning. Electric Stick is located on Wayne Road just south of Warren.

A restaurant was also destroyed in the fire.

Black smoke could be seen pouring from the building for miles.

Business owner George Marvaso says, “we will rebuild.” Marvaso, a man of strong faith says it is his faith that he will rely on throughout this time.

Electric Stick opened in 1993 as a billiard hall and in recent years had become a charity poker hall.  Over the years Marvaso has been able to host tournaments that have raised more than $3-million dollars.

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Publishing of radio traffic from NY LODD creates controversy. Owego FD encourages boycott of local paper.

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Read controversial Press & Sun Bulletin article

In a post on its Facebook page today, New York’s Owego Fire Department is encouraging people to write the editor of the Press & Sun Bulletin to pull down an article by reporter David Robinson posted last night on the paper’s website yesterday that includes fire department radio traffic from a house fire that took the life of Capt. Matthew J. Porcari. It also encourages people to cancel their subscription to the local Gannett paper and to encourage advertisers to pull their ads from the publication. The message concludes with these words, “Please do what you can to help get this heartless and ‘shock value’ article off of the web forever!!!”.

 

As is made mention in the Facebook posting, the article comes two days before a delayed private burial for Capt. Porcari.

The paper reports it received the recording through “Freedom of Information Law”. Here’s an excerpt from the article:

From a struggle to supply enough water to aid firefighters to a harrowing rescue attempt that left multiple people injured, the recordings, obtained under Freedom of Information Law, detail the series of events that unfolded that frigid night.

Fire and law enforcement officials later determined a lighting apparatus in a small shed near the one-story home caused the fire, which they ruled accidental.

Here is an account of the emergency response based on dispatch records, along with a Tioga County Fire Investigation Team report and other details provided by county officials in news releases and during interviews.

As of this writing there are 45 comments with the article and 17 more on the paper’s Facebook page. That I can see, all of them are extremely negative about the decision to publish the article and the recording. Most of the comments are much more pointed than the original post from the Owego Fire Department. Most, like the Owego Fire Department’s Facebook message, express concern about the impact on Captain Porcari’s family and fellow firefighters. It should also be noted that at least 342 people recommended the article.

Before I go any further, let me state clearly a few things about STATter911.com. My goal with this site is to put in front of those who read STATter911.com information that is already in the public domain (almost always from the Internet and social media) about important issues, significant events and daily emergencies related to fire and EMS. Since leaving the television news business three-years-ago, I am no longer a reporter who originates the material, whether it be documents, information from anonymous sources, or audio recordings of radio traffic. But if it is on the web and I think there is something to learn from it, or could make for an interesting discussion, I often will post it. In fact, that is the main reason for providing the information about this controversy. I think there is a lot to learn from it and some important issues fire departments need to think about ahead of time.

As you know, this site and almost every other fire and EMS website you are familiar with has posted emergency radio traffic from significant fires, including ones where there have been line-of-duty-deaths. Many times these recordings are posted within a few hours of the event. While again, we aren’t the originators of the radio traffic recordings, the digital age has made it very easy for the recordings to be almost instantly published on the web, by virtually anyone. In addition, the radio traffic for thousands of fire departments can be heard live on the Internet thanks to sites like Broadcastify.com. Those recordings are then immediately available for members of the radio service to turn around and post on YouTube and elsewhere. I am not a member, but people who are, often communicate with me and other fire service site webmasters, notifying us that these recordings have been posted and are available.

My personal philosophy is that more information is generally better than less information. That said, on a number of occasions, I have delayed in posting radio traffic recordings that were available based on my own personal standard. Depending on the situation, the reasons have included the identity of an injured or deceased firefighter had not yet been made public, the recording included the final words of a firefighter, or the airing of the recording could have impacted an ongoing event. An example of the last case is, that while it had been made public, I held off on posting the initial radio traffic of Georgia firefighters making the notification they had been taken hostage until that situation was resolved.

In the New York fire there apparently was no such recording made available on the web. Instead, the newspaper went through long established channels on obtaining public records to get the recording.  That I can see, no one is claiming the paper did anything illegal or sneaky in getting the recordings. As a strong believer in the First Amendment, I fully support the paper’s right to do so and at the same time I fully support the community’s right to give them hell for doing it.

And “community” may be an important part of this controversy. Every community is different. I’ve been posting radio traffic from line-of-duty-deaths and incidents where firefighters have been injured on this site for almost six-years. Some of the radio transmissions were much more graphic than what is on the New York recording (think of Kyle Wilson’s last words from Prince William County, VA). Despite the scores, if not hundreds, of radio traffic recordings I’ve posted, I’ve never received anything near the outpouring of emotion and criticism that is directed toward the Press and Sun Bulletin. Yes, there are occasionally one or two people who think the recordings should be taken down immediately. But it’s a fact of life, that almost anything posted, offends someone. This includes routine house fire videos that offend homeowners. If I were to take down everything that someone finds offensive, I might as well shut down the whole site.

I can tell by the statistics from YouTube and my own site that these recordings of radio traffic are extremely popular among firefighters. But nothing comes without a cost. There is no doubt that, the instant release of the radio traffic puts increased pressure and possible scrutiny on the department involved. Even with a delay of many months, the recordings will have an impact that fire departments need to prepare for.

Here are some questions for you to consider, based on the controversy in New York:

  • Is it realistic for a fire department to think something that is considered a public record should not be released because of concerns about the personal feelings of the survivors of an incident?
  • Should a news organization only publish recordings and/or information after an official investigation is completed?
  • Should a news organization be allowed to conduct its own investigation of an incident?
  • Is a fire department line-of-duty-death fair game for a reporter to probe?
  • Do we really want the press to make decisions based on potential emotional impact or to just put on the record the facts they have discovered regardless of who might be hurt?
  • Whose standard of what’s offensive should rule the day, the newspaper’s, the fire department’s or the community’s?
  • Do you think any fire department radio traffic recordings should be allowed to be published on the Internet? If only certain ones, which ones? Who decides?
  • Should the fire department be the leader of a boycott of news organizations it finds offensive?
  • When you do publicly protest should you be worried you bring more attention to what you want everyone to ignore?

I look forward to the discussion.

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Command & control: Retired Baltimore Co. division chief goes public over command staffing after last week’s critical injury.

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 Reisterstown VFC Firefighter Gene Kirchner (l) and Lutherville VFC Firefighter Mark Falkenhan.

Jonathan Hart is a retired division chief from the Baltimore County Fire Department in Maryland. The column below, reprinted with his permission, was published today by The Baltimore Sun. It addresses staffing issues for command officers in Baltimore County that Hart connects to the recent critical injury to Reisterstown VFC Firefighter Gene Kirchner and the January, 2011 death of Lutherville VFC Firefighter Mark Falkenhan (increasing command officer staffing was a NIOSH recommendation). Here’s the column:

Over two years have passed since firefighter Mark Falkenhan was killed at an apartment fire on Dowling Circle in Towson. His death resulted, in part, from a collapse of the Incident Command System (ICS), when first-arriving units were faced with heavy fire and multiple rescues. ICS is a procedural policy for ensuring that command and control mechanisms are continually utilized during mitigation efforts at every incident. “Command” is assumed by the officer of the first-arriving unit and passed to the responding chief officer upon his or her arrival.

The National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) conducts investigations of fires that result in firefighter deaths. Among the recommendations made by the NIOSH investigation of the Dowling Circle fire was the following: “Increase command officer staffing to ensure fire fighter safety during emergency operations.”

Despite the clear findings of the NIOSH, very few operational changes have been implemented by the Baltimore County Fire Department to prevent similar incidents from occurring in the future, and nothing has been done to improve command staffing.

In fact, Baltimore County has fewer on-duty command officers (per capita) than any other department in the metro area. Baltimore County has only three command officers on duty at any given time. Similar-sized jurisdictions (Montgomery County, Prince George’s County, Baltimore City) typically have six to 10 command officers on duty. These departments understand how essential it is to provide adequate command and control on the fireground by enabling command officers to reach the incident scene quickly.

By virtue of the limited number of command officers in Baltimore County, each officer is responsible for a very large geographic area (battalion). Therefore, response times for command officers are excessive. It is not unusual for battalion chiefs to take 20 or even 25 minutes to respond to an incident. These chiefs arrive too late to command incidents during the critical early stages of the fire attack, which is typically when things go wrong — sometimes very wrong.

On Jan. 11, 2011, it took approximately 20 minutes for the initial battalion chief to arrive at the fire that claimed Mark Falkenhan’s life. Upon arrival, that chief immediately made the determination that the building was not safe for interior firefighting operations; he ordered the evacuation of the building. Seconds later, Mark transmitted the “Mayday,” signaling that he was trapped in a third floor apartment. What would have happened if the battalion chief had arrived one minute (or even 30 seconds) earlier that day?

This past Wednesday, firefighter Gene Kirchner, 25, of the Reisterstown Volunteer Fire Company was critically injured during a house fire with people trapped. Although the facts surrounding his injuries are yet to be determined, it seems highly likely that in this case too, his injuries resulted in part from the delayed response of a command officer. The command officer was responding from the Woodlawn/Catonsville area, as would normally be the case. A response from that location to Reisterstown takes about 15 minutes.

Excessive response time; fire involving trapped civilians; critical firefighter injuries. Coincidence?

I joined the Baltimore County Fire Department in 1987, when the department had six battalion chiefs on duty on each shift. Today, there are just three battalion chiefs on duty on each shift. Each chief oversees 16-20 stations. Each chief covers more than 200 square miles. Unlike other departments in the region that assign multiple chief officers on structure fires, Baltimore County dispatches just one. Baltimore County’s fire and EMS personnel are at unacceptable risk of injury and death because there are too few command officers.

I retired as a division chief in February 2012. Throughout my tenure, I remained vehemently opposed to the reduction in command staff that occurred during the 1990s. There are a number of reasons I decided to retire, but my inability to convince the administration of the need to improve command staffing levels (especially in light of Mark’s death) was certainly a factor. I didn’t want to be the chief-in-charge of an incident at which we lost another firefighter whose death might have been prevented by enhancing command staffing.

Two months following my retirement, I met with County Executive Kevin Kamenetz. I wanted him to hear from me how dire this situation is. I told him I feared that if command staffing did not improve, another incident would claim the life of a firefighter in Baltimore County. To Gene, the Kirchner family, and to all my brothers and sisters in the Baltimore County Fire Service, I’m praying I was wrong.

Live coverage of funeral for Battalion Chief Michael Goodwin, Philadelphia Fire Department.

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Arrangements for Capt. Michael R. Goodwin Sr., Philadelphia Fire Department, Ladder 27.

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From IAFF Local 22:

Michael R. Goodwin, Sr.,Captain, Philadelphia Fire Department, Badge # 2773, passed away tragically serving the citizens of Philadelphia on April 6, 2013.Beloved husband of Kelly (nee McDonnell). Loving Dad of Dorothy Dunn (Timothy) and Michael R., Jr. Loving Pop of Timothy Jr. and Bailey Dunn. Dear son of Elizabeth and the late James Goodwin, brother of James (Kelly), Robert (Brenda) and Deborah Goodwin, brother in law of Thomas McDonnell (Joann). Also Surviving are many nieces and nephews. Mike was a member of the Philadelphia Fire Department for over 29 years. He became a firefighter on September 9, 1983, Class # 153. Mike proudly served in the U.S. Navy as an E-4 and was honorably discharged on August 27, 1983. Mike was awarded many commendations while serving the citizens of Philadelphia. He was a Philadelphia Sports fan but the most important aspect of Michael’s life was his family. Relatives, friends, members of Philadelphia Fire Department Local 22 and all first responders are invited to share in Mike’s Life Celebration Wednesday from 5:00- 9:00 PM and Thursday morning from 9:00 to 10:45 AM at John F. Givnish of Academy Rd. 10975 Academy Rd. Michael’s Life Celebration Service will be held at 12:00 Noon at St. Michael’s Lutheran Church, 2139 E. Cumberland St. Interment Hillside Cemetery, Roslyn, PA. In lieu of flowers memorial contributions in Mike’s memory to the Firefighters Widow Fund c/o Local 22, 415 N. 5th St. Phila, PA 19123 would be appreciated. To share your fondest memories of Mike visit www.lifecelebration.com

Raw video: Philadelphia fire that took the life of Capt. Michael Goodwin, Ladder 27.

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AP:

The mayor of Philadelphia on Sunday ordered flags flown at half-staff and called for prayers for the family and colleagues of a veteran fire captain killed when a roof collapsed beneath him as he battled a blaze, the third city firefighter killed in the line of duty in a year.

Capt. Michael Goodwin, 53, plunged onto the second-floor roof of the three-story building in the Fabric Row section during Saturday night’s blaze. He was pronounced dead at the scene. Fellow firefighter Andrew Godlewski, 28, burned on his hands while trying to rescue Goodwin, was discharged Sunday from a hospital, officials said.

From IAFF Local 22 website.

“We must never forget the grave risks that these heroic public servants take every day at a moment’s notice on behalf of us all,” Mayor Michael Nutter said in a statement Sunday.

At an emotional news conference late Saturday, Fire Commissioner Lloyd Ayers called Goodwin, a 29-year veteran, “a really good person.”

“He was the kind of guy who looked out for his folks,” he said. “A ladder man. A firefighter’s firefighter.”

Goodwin is survived by a wife, two grown children and three siblings, one of whom is a police officer, he said.

Police officers and fellow firefighters saluted Goodwin’s body, draped in an American flag, as it was carried to a hospital and, later, to a funeral home.

The loss came as the fire department prepared to mark a year since an April 9 blaze at a warehouse that killed Capt. Robert Neary, 59, and Daniel Sweeney, 25. They also died in a collapse, which came as they inspected an adjacent building.

“We have a department that is wounded,” Ayers said. “We have scars that are fresh, and indeed they have now been reopened.”

Nutter ordered flags flown at half-staff at all city buildings for the next 30 days in Goodwin’s honor, officials said.

At Goodwin’s fire station deep in south Philadelphia, bouquets were clustered on and around a wooden bench along with a large toy fire truck and ladder.

The American Red Cross of southeastern Pennsylvania said 17 residents were displaced by the blaze, and three of them needed financial help with hotels, food and clothing.

At the scene Sunday afternoon, a fire hose planted in the middle of the street sprayed a jet of water onto the remains of the building, which had collapsed into a pile that stretched over the sidewalk in between two other three-story row homes. Meals and counseling were being provided for grieving firefighters, the Red Cross said.

The blaze appeared to have started in a fabric store downstairs before spreading to upstairs apartments and a neighboring boutique, the store’s owner said. The proprietors of both stores told The Philadelphia Inquirer that everyone in both buildings at the time of the fire managed to escape.

The fire’s cause wasn’t immediately known, but Bruce Blumenthal, the owner of Jack B. Fabrics, said he believes it started in a wall and may have been electrical in nature. Blumenthal said he smelled smoke coming from the basement at around 5 p.m. and found a box of collars and cuffs on fire. He tried to put the flames out with an extinguisher to no avail, he said.

UPDATED: Philadephia Fire Department Capt. Michael Goodwin, Ladder 27, killed in collapse at fabric shop. Firefighter Andrew Godlewski burned trying to save captain. Watch press conference.

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Philadelphia News, Weather and Sports from WTXF FOX 29

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Watch live report from scene

Philadelphia Fire Department

IAFF Local 22 (Facebook page)

WCAU-TV:

A fire burned a fabric shop, upstairs apartments and a neighboring boutique Saturday evening, causing a partial roof collapse that killed a firefighter and injured a colleague who was trying to rescue him, officials said.

Captain Michael Goodwin, 53, was killed in the line of duty, Amy Daly, a nursing supervisor at Jefferson University Hospitals, told The Associated Press. Goodwin was a 29-year veteran of the fire department. Fire Commissioner Lloyd Ayers says he was killed in a fall from the third floor roof to the second.

The second firefighter, Andrew Godlinski, 28, of Ladder 2, was hospitalized with burns. Officials say he was injured while trying to rescue Captain Goodwin. He is expected to survive.

Officials say Captain Goodwin belonged to Ladder 27. His comrades saluted as his body was carried out and taken to the hospital.

WPVI-TV:

Firefighters stood side by side and saluted 53-year-old Captain Michael Goodwin from Ladder 27b. He was killed in a fall from the third floor roof to the second.

The fire roared out of control for hours from the three story building on the stretch known as “Fabric Row.”

Neighbors say the fire started in the basement of a business called Jack B Fabrics and spread to other parts of the business and apartments upstairs.

Another firefighter 28-year-old Andrew Godlinski, suffered burns while trying to save his fallen captain. He was treated at a local hospital and is expected to survive.

View more videos at: http://nbcphiladelphia.com.

PhillyFireNews.com:

Engine-11 arrived on scene with smoke showing from the first floor of three story store front with apartments above. B/C-4 reported companies had trouble located the seat of the fire in the basement of fabric store. Placed all hands in service Deputy-1 requested the second alarm. Command ordered all companies out of the building and went in service with an exterior operations. Command requested the third alarm struck for heavy fire through out. Command requested a the collapse unit for a firefighter trapped after a collapse of the building.

The firefighter was recovered from the building and transported to the hospital with serious injuries. Another firefighter was burned in an attempt to rescue the trapped firefighter.

The firefighter was pronounced at the hospital. He had been the Captain of Ladder-27.

Mike Newall, Philly.com:

The collapse left the firefighter trapped inside the building on the street known as Fabric Row, officials said. Other firefighters saluted as his body was carried out on a stretcher and taken to Thomas Jefferson University Hospital.

The fatality came just short of a year since the last time Philadelphia firefighters died in the line of duty. A warehouse blaze in the Kensington section last April 11 killed Capt. Robert Neary, 59, and Daniel Sweeney, 25, both from Ladder 10, and injured two other firefighters.

“We have a department that is wounded,” Ayers said. “We have scars that are fresh, and indeed they have now been reopened.”

WTXF-TV:

The first engine arrived four minutes after the fire call came in, Ayers said. One person inside the building at the time was taken out by firefighters, as they stretched hoses into the building and went to work.

It was 31 minutes after the initial call when the second alarm was struck. Ayers said the crews faced “faced heavy smoke, heavy fire,” adding that from the exterior you could see fabric throughout the store.

It was 6:21 p.m. when officials were informed that a member of the department was “down.” The report changed to one member “missing,” and a third alarm was struck by 6:30 p.m.

Ayers said they found out subsequently that the firefighter “had fallen from the third-floor roof to the second-floor roof.”

“Firefighters were trying to rescue him from the second-floor roof when that roof collapsed,” the fire commissioner went on to say.

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KYW-TV image, Marshall Fleming.

Firefighter killed after truck plows through IL highway crash scene. Five other Hudson firefighters hurt & three emergency vehicles wrecked on I-39.

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AP:

Authorities say a central Illinois firefighter was killed and 5 of his colleagues injured when a tractor-trailer hit three emergency vehicles.

The emergency responders were working at the scene of a previous freeway accident at the time. The name of the dead firefighter from the village of Hudson hasn’t been released.

McLean County Coroner Beth Kimmerling says that at about 9:45 p.m. Tuesday, emergency responders were dispatched to a multiple-vehicle wreck on southbound Interstate 39 near Hudson.

An hour later, a southbound tractor-trailer hauling a load of automobiles lost control and hit 3 of the emergency vehicles belonging to the Hudson Community Fire Protection District and the Illinois State Police.

All of the injured were taken to a hospital in Normal.

From Hudson Community Fire Protection District website:

McLean County Coroner Beth Kimmerling releases the following information concerning a motor vehicle fatality that occurred on the evening of Tuesday, March 5th 2013 in Hudson, IL. At approximately 2145 hours, MetCom received a 911 call in reference to a multiple vehicle incident on southbound I-39 near mile marker 6 in Hudson. Fire and police units were dispatched. Then at approximately 2245 hours, a southbound semi-tractor trailer carrying a load of automobiles lost control and struck three official first responder vehicles belonging to Hudson Community Fire Protection District (HCFPD) and the Illinois State Police (ISP). Six members of HCFPD were injured and transported to Advocate BroMenn Regional Medical Center in Normal. At 2238 hours on March 5th, a member of the Hudson Fire Department succumbed to his injuries and was pronounced deceased by Emergency Department Staff. 

“Today we lost a member of our Hudson family. We share in the sorrow felt by his loved ones, and we must not forget the valuable contributions be made to this community and the impact he has left on the Hudson Fire Department,” said Chief Dan Hite, Hudson Community Fire Protection District. “The Hudson Fire Department is a close-knit family, and the loss of one of our own affects us all. A tragedy of this type is felt by each and every member, but together we can make it through. Our thoughts and prayers are with his family.” 

We ask that at this time that all media please allow our Department and families time to grieve. Any questions specific to the Hudson Fire Department can be directed to Chief Dan Hite at 309-824-2226 or Capt. Shane Hill, HFD Public Affairs Officer at 309-310-3788. 

An autopsy will be scheduled for Wednesday, March 6th. The identity of this firefighter will be released along with preliminary autopsy results later in the business day. Any questions regarding the death investigation may be directed to Coroner Beth Kimmerling. 

An Accident Reconstructionist from the Illinois State Police has been assigned to the incident and is working with the Coroner’s Office and Hudson Fire Department on the circumstances surrounding this crash.

Hudson Fire Department Facebook page post this morning:

It is with a heavy heart and great sadness I have to report the passing of one of our members. He was struck by a semi last night while at a accident scene. We also had 5 others firefighter’s treated and released from a local hospital. Our thoughts and prayers are with the family, those injured and the rest of the department members as we move through this difficult time.  Thank all of you for your kind words and keep all of us especially the family in your prayers. Respectfully, Dan Hite, Fire Chief 

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Fight at Oklahoma firehouse leaves one firefighter dead. Strother FD’s chaplain, Capt. Dale Patterson being mourned.

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Strother FD Facebook page

UPDATED

Bill Finch,  The Seminole Producer:

The altercation occurred in the early morning hours on Thursday after the firefighters had returned from a run. It was during the course of the altercation that Patterson allegedly hit his head on a hard surface at the station.

Communication records showed that an ambulance from the Seminole Fire Rescue responded to the Strother Fire Department at approximately 1:45 a.m.

 

EARLIER

AP:

Authorities say a volunteer firefighter in Oklahoma has died after a fight with another firefighter at the Strother Fire Department.

Seminole County Sheriff Shannon Smith says 56-year-old Dale Patterson died at OU Medical Center after the fight early Thursday.

Strother Fire Chief Nicholas Nadeau tells Oklahoma City television station KOCO  that Patterson joined the department as a volunteer firefighter six years ago. He says Patterson had risen to the rank of captain and also served as the department’s chaplain.

He says Patterson previously worked as a drug enforcement officer in New Mexico before moving to Oklahoma to retire.

Few details were released about the altercation, but authorities say no arrests have been made. The name of the other firefighter involved in the fight has not been released.

KOCO-TV:

Smith said Dale Patterson, 56, was transported to Seminole Hospital. He was then flown by medical helicopter to OU Medical Center where he was pronounced dead.

“Dale had come to me six years ago to become a firefighter,” said Nadeau. “Throughout the six years, he’s made rank of a captain. He showed great leadership, great personality.”

Patterson served as a chaplain for the department and often offered to pray with those who firefighters were helping.

Nadeau said the department is mourning his death while also trying to support the other firefighter involved in the fight. 

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PM UPDATE with new details: Owego (NY) FD reports Capt. Matthew Porcari killed & Lt. Daniel Gavin injured after floor collapse at house fire.

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Owego Fire Department website

UPDATE 5:33 PM EST:

On it’s Facebook page the Owego Fire Department reports that Lt. Daniel Gavin has been released from the hospital. There was an afternoon briefing with more details about what occurred at the house fire in Chamberlain Road. Here is an excerpt from the latest article by Debbie Swartz at PressConnects.com:

Several teams had entered the burning home on Chamberlain Road late Monday before Capt. Matthew J. Porcari and Lt. Daniel G. Gavin took their turn.

But it was when they were in there that the home’s floor gave way — causing Porcari to fall several feet into the basement where he suffered fatal injuries. Gavin, who suffered from burns, fell partially through the floor but was able to pull himself free before going back in to save his partner, fire officials said today during a news conference.

 

Porcari, a captain with Owego Fire Co. 3, is survived by his wife, Christina, an 11-year-old daughter and a 9-year-old son, Owego Deputy Chief Bob Williams said.

From Owego FD Facebook page: Captain Matthew Porcari, center, and Firefighter Daniel Gavin, far right, while in Long Island in November assisting with the Hurricane Sandy relief effort.

From Owego Fire Department Facebook page at 9:27 AM:

It is with great sadness and heavy hearts that the Owego Fire Department announces the Line of Duty Death of Captain Matthew Porcari while battling a house fire last night. Injured in the blaze was Firefighter Daniel Gavin, who was transported to a local hospital and then transferred to the burn unit at Upstate Medical in Syracuse NY. All of our thoughts and prayers are with the Porcari and Gavin families in this tragic time.

 

 

Picture of Captain Matthew Porcari’s gear from Owego FD Facebook page.

YNN:

Owego Deputy Fire Chief Bob Williams said Owego firefighters Matthew Porcari and Daniel Gavin were in the building when the floor collapsed. Porcari died in the fire. Gavin was taken to Wilson Hospital with burns before being transferred to Upstate University Hospital in Syracuse.  

Video from 2011 that includes Capt. Porcari and Lt. Gavin.

WBNG-TV:

The fire was reported just before 11 p.m. at 871 Chamberlain Rd. in Newark Valley, according to Tioga County emergency communications.

At 12:10 a.m., Newark Valley called for all available crews from Campville. Newark Valley, Berkshire, Maine and Owego fire departments were also on the scene. Union Center was called later in the morning.

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Commentary: Chicago TV anchor says honor Capt. Herbie Johnson by giving CFD firefighters a contract.

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On the day they buried Capt. Herbie Johnson, a veteran TV anchor used his commentary section to urge city leaders to work out a new contract with Chicago firefighters. Here’s an excerpt:

We owe his memory, and his fellows, some payback – and the respect of a new contract. They’ve been saving lives without a contract for four and a half months.

City Hall, skimping on a contract, aiming to take away the firefighter clothing allowance and holiday pay and physical fitness incentive. Don’t do that, don’t insult Capt. Johnson’s memory. Think about him, feel for him.

Raw video: Chicago house fire where Capt. Herbie Johnson died.

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This is video just uploaded yesterday that a neighbor shot of Friday’s house fire that took the life of Chicago Fire Department Capt. Herbie Johnson. The fire occurred at 2315 W. 50th Place and also injured Firefighter Ryan Woods. Click here for our previous coverage of the fire

 Image above from IAFF Local 2.

Here is a reminder on information on arrangements for Capt. Johnson from IAFF Local 2:

Visitation: Wednesday, November 7th, 2012

Saint Rita of Cascia Shrine Chapel

7740 South Western Avenue, Chicago, IL

1500 – 2100 hours — CFD Assembly at 1745 hours — Walk thru at 1800 hours

Funeral Mass: Thursday, November 8th, 2012

Saint Rita of Cascia Shrine Chapel

7740 South Western Avenue, Chicago, IL

1100 hours Mass

Procession and Interment: Mt. Olivet Cemetery, 2755 West 111th Street, Chicago, IL

Immediately following the funeral. 

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UPDATE – Radio Traffic: Captain Herbie Johnson, Chicago Fire Department killed in South Side house fire. CFD spokesman says flashover in attic.

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FireCritic.com coverage 

The Secret List 

 

Chicago Area Fire Blog

CFD 

IAFF Local 2 

Chicago Tribune’s detailed coverage 

suntimes.com:

A Chicago fire captain has died from injuries suffered while battling a South Side house fire, the first firefighter to die in the line of duty in nearly two years.

Capt. Herbie Johnson (l) with Commissioner Jose Santiago in CFD picture. 

Captain Herbie Johnson, 54, was a 33-year veteran of the department. He had just been promoted from lieutenant this summer during a ceremony at Navy Pier. 

More audio from RadioMan911TV

WLS-TV:

Fifty-four-year-old Captain Herbert Johnson died while being treated at the ER of University of Chicago Hospitals. 

Johnson celebrated his 33rd year on the job in February and had been recently promoted to captain.
Chicago News and Weather | FOX Chicago News

Fire department spokesman Larry Langford said Friday’s fire was in the attic of the two-story frame house. He said the firefighters were injured during a possible “flashover” of flames.

Image from suntimes.com of Capt. Herbie Johnson from 2006 fire. Click here for the paper’s coverage.

WGN-TV:

“He was the best, he was the best guy,’’ said Chicago Fire Dept. Lt. Steve O’Malley who was relieved by the 54-year-old Johnson this morning about 6 a.m. from Engine 123, Tower Ladder 39, on 51st Street after O’Malley had worked the 48 hour shift.

“He was his usual crazy self, laughing,’’ said O’Malley of the Johnson. “He always had a smile on his face,’’ said O’Malley, whose voice was quaking with emotion during a telephone interview after hearing the news from another firefighter that he passed.

WFLD-TV:

The 2-11-alarm fire was in the attic of the two-story frame house.

A “mayday” call went out during the fire, which began in the attic and spread, a fire spokesman said.

Fire Dept. spokesman Larry Langford said the firefighters were injured during a possible “flashover” of flames.

Chicago Tribune:

Johnson died at the U. of C. emergency room. Paramedics had to perform CPR on him at the scene, said Fire Department spokesman Larry Langford.

Johnson was assigned to Engine Co. 123 in Back of the Yards for the night, but normally worked from firehouses all around the city.

As Ahlheim spoke near the hospital tonight, Chicago Fire Department Truck No. 16 sat at the corner of 58th Street and Drexel Avenue with its ladder extended to mid-air and the roar of its engine sounding, a ritual saluting fallen brethren. A firefighter hoisted the American flag atop the ladder.

Below are tweets about the fire from CFD spokesman Larry Langford (@CFDMedia)

NIOSH report: Zachary Whitacre, Virginia firefighter who fell off rear step of tanker headed to fill site at West Virginia fire. Father was driving rig.

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Previous STATter911.com coverage of this story

Read entire NIOSH report

On February 13, 2011, 21-year-old Firefighter Zachary Whitacre fell off the tail board of Gore Volunteer Fire & Rescue Department Tanker 14 when the rig spun out of control on ice and crashed while heading to refill during a house fire in Capon Bridge, West Virginia. Whitacre’s father Donald was driving Tanker 14 when the accident occurred. NIOSH released it’s report today. Below are a summary of the findings:

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

On February 13, 2012, a 21-year-old male volunteer fire fighter (victim) died after falling from the tailboard of a fire department tanker (Tanker 14). The victim, acting as a spotter and using the driver’s side mirror, had successfully guided the driver in backing the tanker to position its tailboard near the dump tank. The driver of Tanker 14 stayed in the driver’s seat and watched the water gauge indicator lights on the pump panel through his side mirror.

The victim, located on the tailboard, operated the dump valve to fill the folding tank. When the driver saw the tank-empty light flash, he left the fire scene to go to the water source to refill the tanker.

Unknown to the Tanker 14 driver, another tanker (Tanker 9) had inadvertently dropped approximately 1,500 gallons of water on the roadway while also responding to the incident. Tanker 9 had reported the inadvertent drop to their dispatcher, but Tanker 14 had not heard this communication. As Tanker 14 traveled this same roadway en route to the water source, it hit a patch of black ice that had resulted from the inadvertent water drop. The Tanker 14 driver lost control and the tanker spun around a number of times before impacting a berm on the shoulder of the roadway (see Photo 1 and Photo 2). The Tanker 14 driver was injured but was able to radio for help and crawl out of the passenger side door. The driver then saw the victim lying unresponsive in the roadway. A rescue unit from the fire scene responded to the crash along with other units and emergency medical aid was performed. The victim was taken to a local hospital where he died from his injuries.

CONTRIBUTING FACTORS

  • Failure to check the apparatus before leaving the scene (driver walk-around)
  • Inadequate communications between the driver and victim
  • Unintentional discharge of water onto roadway in freezing conditions
  • Ice on roadway
  • Fire department communication interoperability.

KEY RECCOMENDATIONS

  • Fire departments should ensure that fire fighters are properly trained to ensure that the apparatus is ready for the road before leaving the fire scene (including a driver walk-around)
  • Fire departments should ensure that fire fighters are properly trained and equipped to communicate task-level functions
  • Fire departments should ensure that fire department driver/operators are trained in techniques for maintaining control of their vehicle at all times
  • Fire departments should ensure that fire fighters from different departments can communicate with each other via radio
  • Fire departments should consider installing rear view camera(s) with monitor(s) inside the cab
  • Fire apparatus manufacturers should use engineering controls (such as electronic lockouts and engineering guards) to ensure that water dump valves cannot activate unintentionally.

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Final report: Ashevlle FD investigation into the death of Captain Jeff Bowen.

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Click here to download entire report

Our friends at FireNews.net have alerted us to the release of the City of Asheville (NC) Fire Department’s line of duty death report looking at the July 28, 2011 fire at 445 Biltmore Avenue that took the life of Captain Jeffrey Scott Bowen.

Chief Scott Burnette talked about some of the changes for the department outlined in the report.

Julie Ball, Citizens-Times.com:

Chief Scott Burnette reviewed some of the changes the department has planned during a presentation for City Council’s Public Safety Committee on Monday.

The chief also released the department’s 522-page internal report on the Biltmore Avenue fire that killed Capt. Jeff Bowen in July of last year.

“It is our hope that the lessons learned from the fire at 445 Biltmore Ave. will create positive improvements in the fire service as a whole,” Burnette said in a letter included with the report.

Emily Pace, WSPA-TV:

“We have sent every one of our firefighters through a rapid intervention team certification course,” said Burnette.

The new course is required by the state of North Carolina and teaches crews how to rescue a firefighter in trouble.

Burnette hopes it will help prevent another tragic loss.  

“We have also added an extra fire engine to structure fire responses, so that way we can make sure we have enough personnel to serve as a rescue team,” adds Burnette. 

Other links:

Read NIOSH report

The loss of Captain Jeff Bowen, the inside story from Firefighter Jay Bettencourt Part 1

The loss of Captain Jeff Bowen, the inside story from Firefighter Jay Bettencourt Part 2

Earlier coverage of this fire here, here & here

Firefighter Jay Bettencourt receives firefighter of the year

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NIOSH reports: LODDs of Asheville, NC’s Capt. Jeff Bowen & Baltimore Co., MD’s FF Mark Falkenhan.

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NIOSH released reports into the line of duty deaths of two firefighters whose deaths we  covered. Below are the reports and some related links. Both men’s names will be added to the National Fallen Firefighters Memorial during Memorial Weekend, October 6 & 7.

January 19, 2011, Baltimore County, MD, Firefighter Mark Falkenhan:

Read NIOSH report

ATF modeling of fire

ATF report

Baltimore County report

Radio traffic

 July 28, 2011, Asheville, NC, Captain Jeff Bowen:

Read NIOSH report

The loss of Captain Jeff Bowen, the inside story from Firefighter Jay Bettencourt Part 1

The loss of Captain Jeff Bowen, the inside story from Firefighter Jay Bettencourt Part 2

Earlier coverage of this fire here, here & here

Firefighter Jay Bettencourt receives firefighter of the year 

Funeral details: Firefighter Thierry Godfrind, Montreal Fire Department.

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News coverage above of Friday’s accident.

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From Montreal, word from our friend Chief Gordon Routley on the funeral for Firefighter Thierry Godfrind, who was struck and killed by a fire truck on Friday:

The civic funeral for Montreal Firefighter Thierry Godfrind will be held at Notre Dame Basilica in Old Montreal Friday, July 20 at 11am. There will be a reception following the service. 

Any out of town delegations, please contact me at 514 872-7498 or by e-mail at gordon.routley@ville.montreal.qc.ca 

We have provisions for rooms at nearby hotels.

Montreal Gazette:

Godfrind was part of a team responding to a call at  2102 Dutrisac St., near Henri Bourassa Blvd. in the St. Laurent borough last Friday afternoon.

While the operation was taking place, the firefighter was struck by a fire truck, the same one he had arrived on the scene in.

Godfrind had been a member of the Montreal fire department for a little over two years, since March 2010.

Fire truck crash in Accomack County, VA. Bloxom VFC Firefighter David Chew Jr. killed.

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FireTruckBlog.com has more on Firefighter David R. Chew Jr.

UPDATE:

The firefighter killed in Accomack County has been identified as David R. Chew Jr. by delmarvanow.com. Read more on the incident at FireTruckBlog.com.

WVEC-TV:

A volunteer firefighter with the Bloxom Volunteer Fire and Rescue Company was killed in a crash Monday morning.

Va. State Police say it happened around 11:30 a.m. in the 27000 block of Nelsonia Road, between Route 13 and the Town of Bloxom.

Bloxom VFC Facebook page.

delmarvanow.com:

The deceased is a member of the Bloxom Volunteer Fire Co. and was one of two people riding in a fire engine on Nelsonia Road.

State Police Spokeswoman Michelle Anaya confirmed the fatality. At 12:45 p.m. Monday, investigators and crews remain at the scene.

 WBOC-TV:

Emergency officials in Accomack County say a volunteer firefighter for the Bloxom Volunter Fire Company died Monday during a single-vehicle crash involving a fire engine.

The identity of the firefighter has not yet been released.

Video: ATF modeling with radio traffic from MD apartment fire that killed Firefighter Mark Falkenhan.

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Previous STATter911.com coverage

Read Baltimore County Fire Department report on Firefighter Falkenhan’s death

Read ATF report

This is the video (in three parts) the ATF produced to accompany its engineering analysis utilizing Fire Dynamics Simulator (FDS) of the fire that killed Lutherville VFC Firefighter Mark Falkenhan last year. There are links above to the ATF report by Adam St. John P.E., Fire Protection Engineer ATF Fire Research Laboratory and the internal report the Baltimore County Fire Department released in March. The modeling is matched with the fireground and dispatch radio traffic.

Description with video:

This video summarizes the ATF Fire Research Laboratory’s Engineering Analysis of the fire that occurred at 30 Dowling Circle on January 19th, 2011.  ATF Fire Protection Engineers were asked to utilize engineering analysis methods, including computer fire modeling, to assist with determining the route of fire spread and the events that led to the firefighter MAYDAY and subsequent Line of Duty Death of Firefighter Mark Falkenhan. 

Lt. Richard Nappi, FDNY Engine 237, dies at three-alarm Brooklyn warehouse fire. Mayor says ‘Lt. Nappi overheated, suffered exhaustion and collapsed.’

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Read statement by Mayor Michael Bloomberg

Forty-seven-year-old Lieutenant Richard Nappi of Engine 237, a 17-year veteran of the FDNY, died during a fire reported around 1:00 this afternoon at a warehouse on Flushing Avenue in the Bushwick section of Brooklyn. Lt. Nappi was a Bronx native who lived in Suffolk County. He has a wife Mary Anne, a 12-year-old daughter and an 11-year-old son. According to a statement from Mayor Michael Bloomberg, Lt. Nappi overheated, suffered exhaustion and collapsed.

Joeseph Goldstein & Andy Newman, The New York Times:

A veteran city fire lieutenant died of an apparent heart attack on Monday afternoon while battling a three-alarm warehouse blaze in Brooklyn, the authorities said.

Fire Lt. Richard Nappi, 47, was commanding a hose line at the fire, at 930 Flushing Avenue in Bushwick, when he began feeling dizzy, Fire Commissioner Salvatore Cassano said. He soon went into cardiac arrest and was pronounced dead at Woodhull Medical center at 3:32 p.m., the authorities said.

“This is a very tragic day for New York City,” Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg said at a news conference at Woodhull.  “Someone who devoted his life to keeping us safe is no longer with us.”

Kerry Burke & Barry Paddock, New York Daily News:

After becoming overheated, Lt.  Richard Nappi, 47, of Farmingville, L.I., was taken in cardiac arrest to  Woodhull Medical Center, where he died, officials said.

“Outside of his family, his life’s work was keeping New Yorker safe from fires, and by any measure he succeeded magnificently,” said Mayor Bloomberg, speaking at a press conference at the hospital.

They mayor comforted Nappi’s wife, Mary Anne, at the hospital. Nappi, a 9/11 first-responder, also leaves behind a 12-year-old daughter and 11-year-old son.

Chief Kenny Fox killed in Parsons, Tennessee restaurant fire. Reports he pushed others out of the way as roof collapsed.

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UPDATED: In the initial news reports about this incident it was not noted that Kenny Fox was the fire chief in Decaturville, Tennessee.

The Secret List:

Reports are now that it was Firefighter Kenny Fox, a volunteer Firefighter and Sheriff’s Deputy, who became trapped – and killed in the Line of Duty when the roof collapsed during this mornings restaurant fire in Decatur County, TN.

2 other Firefighters were badly burned and are at Vanderbilt Hospital. Firefighters Jeremy Inman and his brother Randy are being treated for third degree burns on their face and hands. Firefighter Fox’s eldest son was also on the fire scene assisting at the fire and stayed until crews could recover his father’s body. FF Fox leaves behind a wife and three sons.

 

Reports are that FF Fox heroically pushed his fellow firefighters out of the way as the roof collapsed, trapping Fox inside the Oak Hill Cafe-leading to his death.

FF Fox was also a Sergeant with the Decatur County Sheriff’s Office. His oldest son was also fighting the fire just before 0430 today. The younger Fox ran inside the burning building to try to save his father, but it was too late.   

WSMV-TV:

Channel 4 News is being told Fox pushed his fellow firefighters out of the way as the roof collapsed, trapping Fox inside the Oak Hill Cafe.

Fox was also a sergeant with the Decatur County Sheriff’s Office. His oldest son was also fighting the blaze just before 4:30 a.m. on Saturday. The younger Fox ran inside the burning building to try to save his father, but it was too late.

Investigators are still trying to figure out what caused the fire. A memorial fund has been set up to help Fox’s family. You can donate to the Kenny Fox Memorial Fund at Decatur County Bank, P.O. Box 429, Decaturville, Tennessee, 38329.

North Carolina Board of Transportation reverses itself. Asheville bridge now expected to be named for Capt. Jeff Bowen.

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The Loss of Captain Bowen by Firefighter Jay Bettencourt, Part 1 & Part 2

Previous coverage of this story herehere, here & here

Congratulations to the Asheville Firefighters Association, the North Carolina State Firemen’s Association and the 7700 people who supported the petition drive to change the minds of the North Carolina Board of Transportation about renaming the Smoky Park Bridge after Captain Jeff Bowen who died during a medical office building fire last July. A committee voted unanimously yesterday to move forward with the new name and the full board is expected to vote this morning.

The same group is also going to reconsider the long-standing practice that generally excluded firefighters, but allowed state bridges to be named after fallen law officers. The committees chairman says they are supporting the will of the people.

Here’s an excerpt from an article by Mark Barrett in the Asheville Citizen-Times:

The Naming Committee turned the idea down March 7, citing a practice by which DOT typically does not name roads or bridges for firefighters or other emergency workers who die in the line of duty, asking instead that local governments rename one of their structures.

DOT does regularly name bridges after state troopers killed on the job and other law enforcement officers have been so honored.

A Citizen-Times review of state records found that the names of two firefighters who did not die on the job adorn bridges in Western North Carolina and that elected officials make up the largest single category of honorees.

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LODD report: Read Baltimore County investigation into death of Lutherville VFC Firefighter Mark Falkenhan.

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Previous STATter911.com coverage

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Excerpt from the Executive Summary:

In fairness to those units involved in this incident, the investigating team had the advantage of examining this incident over the period of several months. Furthermore, given the size and nature of the event, and the fact that arriving crews were met with serious fire conditions and several residents trapped and in immediate danger, all personnel should be commended for their efforts for performing several rescues which prevented an even greater tragedy. The team did not identify a particular primary reason for FF Falkenhan’s death. What were identified were many secondary issues involving but not limited to crew integrity, incident command, strategy and tactics, and communications. These issues are identified and discussed, and recommendations are made in appropriate sections of the report, as well as in a consolidated format in the Appendix.

Some of the issues identified in this report may require some type of change to current practices, policies, procedures or equipment. Most, however, do not. Specifically, the analysis and recommendations regarding Incident Command and Strategy and Tactics show that if current policies and procedures are adhered to, the opportunity for catastrophic problems may be reduced.

Mark Falkenhan was a well-respected and experienced firefighter. He died performing his duties during a very complex incident with severe fire conditions and unique fire behavior coupled with the immediate need to perform multiple rescues of victims in imminent danger. It would be easy if one particular failure of the system could be identified as the cause of this tragedy. We could fix it and move on. Unfortunately it is not that simple. No incident is “routine”. Mark’s death and this report reinforce that fact.

Image from report showing conditions on arrival.