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Video & fireground audio: Vacant rowhouse in Baltimore, Maryland.

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The Baltimore Firefighters Union, IAFF Local 734 posted the clip above that includes fireground audio and video from yesterdays dwelling fire in the 800 block of Druid Park Lake Drive. Here’s the description from the union’s website:

Just before 3:30 pm on April 6, 2012, Fire Communications alerted Box Alarm 52-2 for a reported dwelling on fire in the 800 block of Druid Park Lake Drive, West Baltimore. Some units had to take alternate routes due to a double shooting at W North Avenue and McCulloh Street. First arriving companies reported an end of group dwelling with heavy fire showing. Battalion Chief 3 arrived, reported fire on the 1st & second floors of a three story dwelling. A working fire was transmitted, bringing additional units to the scene. A few moments later, fire began to penetrate the roof and engulf the third floor. Battalion Chief 3 at that moment ordered a defensive attack due to the integrity of the building. Crews used monitor pipes, large hand lines and ladder pipes to pour water on the fire from a safe distance. The Fire Investigation Bureau has the fire under investigation and no injuries were reported.

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Photo from Baltimore Firefighters Union, IAFF Local 734.

Baltimore City announces closing of Trucks 10 & 15 & Squad 11. Other companies moving. End of rotating closures.

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PowerPoint: Baltimore City Fire Department Strategic Analysis, Presentation on ending rotating fire company closures, April 5, 2012

IAFF Local 734 says citizens lives placed in danger

Companies scheduled to close on July 1: Truck 10 at 1503 W. Lafayette Avenue; Truck 15 at 1223 N. Montford Avenue; Squad 11 at 5714 Eastern Avenue.

Companies scheduled to move on July 1: Engine 33 from 801 E. 25th Street to 1223 N. Montford Avenue; Truck 27 from 2700 Glenn Avenue to 5500 Reisterstown Road; Truck 6 from 1001 E. Fort Avenue to 15 S. Eutaw Street; Rescue 1 from 15 S. Eutaw Street to 1001 E. Fort Avenue.

WJZ-TV:

Three city fire companies will disband, four more must find new homes. It’s part of the fire department’s efforts to do away with rotating closures.

It’s important to note that no firefighters will lose their jobs and no fire stations will be closed. But this is a big shuffle of fire personnel and equipment and some worry it leaves city residents at risk.

“We are going to be there just as quick as we are today,” Jim Clack, chief of the Baltimore City Fire Department, said.

Baltimore Sun:

“We’re not laying off any firefighters,” Clack said. “We’re not closing any fire stations. We’re taking some firefighters from one area of the city and moving them to other stations.”

“Obviously, I don’t want to have anybody closed,” said Rick Hoffman, president of the firefighters union. “It makes our job a hell of a lot harder. We’re at bare bones right now. I don’t know how these people sleep at night. … They are gambling with the lives of the citizens of Baltimore and the lives of the firefighters serving Baltimore.”

Under the current plan, 72 firefighters would be transferred and 21 officers would be demoted, including six captains and nine lieutenants. The changes, Clack said, make the department more efficient and could improve response times.

WBAL-TV:

Clack said the move will put a ladder company amid all the downtown high rises. 

“We don’t want to have holes in our coverage in the city, especially for  EMS and fire. We want to be able to get there (to fire calls) within five  minutes,” Clack said. 

Baltimore Firefighters Union President Rick Hoffman said replacing Truck  6 with the city’s only specialized rescue unit will leave a peninsula in south  Baltimore unmanned and exposed. 

“Their response was, ‘It only takes an extra couple minutes to get down  there,’” Hoffman said. “Hold a match to your backside for two extra minutes and  let me know how that feels.”

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Chief Jim Clack, Baltimore City Fire Department photo.

Fireground audio & raw video: Baltimore battalion chief calls in dwelling fire with jumpers.

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From the website of Baltimore Firefighters IAFF Local 734:

Around 6:00 am on January 23, 2012, while returning from a dwelling fire, Battalion Chief 3 (F. Ruff) came upon a two-story, middle of the group dwelling, with heavy fire showing from the first floor. The box alarm and working fire were requested. While requesting the assignment, Chief Ruff sees a civilian jump from the second floor, front window. He immediately requests an additional medic unit. The civilian tells him that there are two other occupants in the second floor, rear room. That information is immediately relayed to responding units. Engine 14 arrives and begins an aggressive interior attack with a preconnected hoseline. Trucks 10 & 23 arrive, deploying ground ladders and initiating a primary search. Command orders the RIT engine to assist in search and rescue due to the known life hazard. Engine 8 arrives in the rear and reports that there is an adult civilian who jumped from the second floor rear as well as an infant who may have been thrown from the second floor. Additional medic units were requested,a total of five, as well as the EMS Battalion Chief. Engine crews worked quickly to extinguish all of the fire while Truck crews performed search and rescue while ventilating and checking for any hidden fire. Paramedics worked quickly to provide advanced life support to two adults and one pediatric patient. The Fire Investigation Bureau, as well as Police Arson Investigators, were on scene to determine the cause and origin of the fire. The victim that jumped from the front of the dwelling was a 45 year old female who was transported to Shock Trauma, in serious condition, with injuries sustained from her fall. The adult victim that jumped from the rear was a 21 year old female who was transported to Johns Hopkins Bayview Burn Center with 2nd and 3rd degree burns, as well as injuries she sustained in her fall. The pediatric victim in the rear was transported to Johns Hopkins Pediatric Trauma Center for possible smoke inhalataion. There were no apparent injuries to the victim and it is not clear whether she was thrown to another person or landed on the ground.

This incident was a perfect example of how all aspects of the Fire Service work together, from the suppresion units to the emergency medical units to the exceptional job by the Fire Communications Bureau in relaying all pertinent information to responding units.

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Dave’s list for Firehouse Expo: Better Angels; Stair Climb; Uno’s Meetup; Local 734 events; Social media panel; Come to Booth #743 to meet the inventor of the fire service blog.

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They meet again: Fire Critic Rhett Fleitz, sitting under the banner for his favorite blog of all time, hoping that when he grows up he can be just like the editor of STATter911.com. A scene from Booth #743 last year, courtesy of Mike Legeros of Raleigh/Wake Firefighting Blog. This year the booth will have a child security gate added (read below). And feel free to write your own caption for this picture in the comments section. Just keep it relatively clean and make me laugh.

From Wednesday through Saturday I will be in Baltimore for Firehouse Expo. My time will be split, as usual, between work for the National Fallen Firefighters Foundation and the insanity of Booth #743 (plus being part of a social media panel discussion on Saturday morning). Click here and use promo code EX79 to get a free pass for the convention floor.

Booth #743 is probably one of the few places you will visit that has both adult and child day care under one roof. It should make for an interesting mix. Our host is Firegeezer Bill Schumm. Bill will be joined by FossilMedic Mike Ward and I am guessing some other members of the cast at Firegeezer.com.

At one end of the double-wide (booth, that is) will be the crew from Firefighter Nutcast. (Did I spell that right? I sometimes have trouble spelling the word "firefighter".)

John Mitchell (FireDaily.com) and Rhett Fleitz (AKA THE Fire Critic) will be doing live and taped webcasts from the booth. IronFireman.com's Willie Wines (Rhett's legal guardian) will be on hand for diaper changes and feedings (for young and old alike).

You will probably recall that Rhett, the guy who invented the fire service blog, played the lead role last year in that critically acclaimed series of short films titled the Adventures of Fireboy from Roanoke.

I expect to be stationed at the other end of the booth from the webcasters. Schumm tells me there will be a child safety gate in the middle of the booth to keep the toddler from wandering into the adult areas.

That's a good thing, because Will Wyatt from Texas, author of And a Paycheck, Too! (right now Rhett's saying to Willie, "and I didn't even buy And a Paycheck, One") will be signing and selling books on Friday and Saturday. I'm a little worried the book's content might be a little too adult oriented for Fireboy. But make sure you buy and read Will's hilarious book. Also, check out Will's take on the singing battalion chief from Philly.

And rumor has it FireTruckBlog.com's Glenn Usdin may make a guest appearance on Saturday.

That's booth #743. Now for some more serious adventures in Baltimore:

Thursday:

Firehouse Expo/NFFF 9-11 Memorial Stair Climb – Make sure you are one of the 343 people to sign up for this great way to honor the firefighters who were lost 10-years-ago on 9-11. It will be at the Hilton Baltimore adjacent to the Convention Center. Click here to sign up. In addition, I will be hosting a webcast from the opening ceremony for the climb. You can hear it live by clicking here on Thursday at 1:45 PM. While I don't think I will have time to name all of the individuals climbing, if you are part of a group participating in the event, make sure you let me know so I can mention the group or department during the webcast. You can send me an email at dave@statter911.com or tell me on Thursday.

Uno Chicago Grill Firefighter Nation, FireEMSBlogs.com and FireRescue Magazine Meetup - 8:00 to 11:30 PM at 201 East Pratt Street – Harborplace. Lots of fun and it's a benefit for NFFF. Be among the first 50 at Booth #743 and get a free drink ticket for the event.

IAFF Local 734 Union Hall event - Opens at 3:00 for light snacks and drinks. Click here for details.

Friday:

IAFF Local 734 Union Hall event & Orioles tailgate party – $20.00 donation at the door benefiting Baltimore Widows & Orphans Fund. Click here for details.

Saturday:

Social Media: An Opportunity, a Curse, or Both? – 8:30 AM in Room 339. Bill Delaney moderates a panel that includes Curt Varone, Pete Piringer and me. Come join us.

Leave yourself time at the Baltimore Convention Center to spend with Better Angels: The Firefighters of 9/11. Dawn Siebel's work sponsored by the Department of Justice Public Safety Officers' Benefits Programs and NFFF will be in the lobby and is a place you will likely want to linger for a bit.

Baltimore City Firefighter/Paramedic Jeffrey Novack back to work. Cleared for duty nine-months after injuries during rescues at an apartment fire.

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May story with Firefighter/Paramedic Jeffrey Novack and Lucille Ziglier.

You can find our coverage of the fire that injured Jeffrey Novack here, here and here

IAFF Local 734 website

After almost nine months Firefighter/Paramedic Jeffrey Novack has been cleared for full duty by the Baltimore City Fire Department. Novack, from Truck 12, was critically injured, with burns and broken bones, during an April fire at an apartment building next to the firehouse on Liberty Heights Avenue. The good news came today from Baltimore Firefighters, IAFF Local 734. Here’s the message:

IAFF Local 734 photo of Jeffrey Novack's Christmas visit with Lucille Ziglier.

Novack was seriously injured battling a northwest Baltimore apartment fire on April 7, 2010. He pulled one victim, Ms Lucille Ziglier, from the third floor of the building, through the fire, and onto safety. Knowing there were still more people inside, he immediately turned her care over to Paramedics and returned to continue searching. There he located another victim on the third floor. While assisting the victim, Novack became trapped by fire and was forced to jump out of a third story window. He spent many weeks in Shock Trauma undergoing several surgeries. He was then transferred to the Bayview burn center for burn care.

After some fire and medical refresher training, and upon receipt of his new fire gear, FFPM Novack will return to the front lines, protecting the Citizens of Baltimore from his station, Truck Company No. 12 at 3906 Liberty Heights Avenue.

 Welcome back Jeffrey!

Picture of the day: A grim scene in Baltimore.

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Click here for our early morning coverage of this fire along with the fireground audio

It has been a long while since we’ve run a picture of the day. This one comes to us courtesy of Baltimore Firefighters Union Local 734. It’s the only image we’ve seen of the fire conditions and frustration presented to Baltimore’s firefighters early this morning in the 2300 block of Homewood Avenue. Inside one of  two homes burning were the bodies of three adults and three children. According to The Baltimore Sun, “Elnor and Richard Satterfield died in the blaze, along with their granddaughter Tiara Gholston, 26, and her three children, Amari, 9, Darryon, 3, and Daelyn, 1.”

The winter fire season appears to have come early in our region. It has been an extremely busy eight days for Baltimore firefighters, with numerous multiple alarm fires. But this, of course, is the most tragic of those fires.

Baltimore’s Jeff Novack meets accused arsonist & woman he rescued. Watch the story.

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Previous coverage of this story here, here and here

WJZ-TV article by Andrea Fujii:

It was an emotional reunion Thursday between an injured firefighter and a woman whose life he saved.

Andrea Fujii explains they met in a courtroom as they both faced the person accused of setting the fire that nearly killed them both.

Lucille Ziglier, 85, finally got to say “thank you” to the firefighter who saved her life.

“If it wasn’t for him, I would not be here today,” said Ziglier.

On April 7, police say Brittany Garcia, 19, started the fire at a Northwest Baltimore apartment building.

According to charging documents, she was upset after seeing the father of her child with another woman.

In court she pleaded not guilty to first-degree arson charges.

Firefighter Jeffrey Novack suffered a fractured hip and burns in the fire. He was in court Thursday to see Garcia for the first time.

“I wouldn’t say I’m mad. I’d just like to see that justice is served,” said Novack.

He ran back into the burning building twice to save two unconscious residents, including Ziglier.

“I don’t think you can match the feeling of what it’s like to save someone’s life,” said Novack.

The union claims rotating fire station closures forced backup to take longer to respond that night.

Within the next couple of weeks the city must find a way to raise tens of millions of dollars to prevent any cuts to public safety. If they don’t, firefighters say it will put their lives and the public’s lives at risk.

Novack says neither injuries nor budget concerns could have interrupted this reunion.

“Just being here and meeting this young lady puts all that out the window and I don’t think about that now. I’m just happy I have her standing next to me,” said Novack.

“And I’m happy to be standing next to him,” said Ziglier.

Novak is expected to make a full recovery.

Garcia’s defense attorney declined to comment on the case. The trial will start in September.

Update on Baltimore’s Jeff Novack. Fundraiser scheduled for Thursday.

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MD Balitmore Novack 2

Click here to learn more about Thursday’s fundraiser

Previous coverage here and here

We have been corresponding with Al Novack, who is president of the Montgomery County 5th Fire District in Pennsylvania. Al has two sons who are Baltimore City firefighters, Scott and Jeff. As many of you know, FF/PM Jeff Novack was seriously injured after making rescues at an apartment fire at 3910 Liberty Heights Avenue on April 7. He suffered serious burns and many broken bones when fire conditions forced him to bail out of a third floor window.

Al Novack, who is also a veteran radio reporter in Philadelphia, sent this message early this morning-

I’m very thankful for the outpouring of support and prayers from both the brotherhood, the union, the Baltimore City Fire Department, the people of Baltimore, his friends, and his hometown communities for all their concern, their texts, their emails, cards, letters, and Facebook messages.

Please express my sincere thanks  on behalf of myself , my son Scott, daughter Melissa, and most of all my son Jeff.

Jeff  has really appreciated hearing from all of the brotherhood in addition to the community

MD Baltimore NovacksJeff Novack was transferred from the R. Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center this past Thursday to the Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center Burn & Rehab Unit. Visiting hours are from 10:00 AM to 10:00 PM daily.  According to his dad, Jeff is allowed mail, and “anything else that people generally send”. Here is the address:

Firefighter Jeff Novack -Patient
c/o Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center
5505  Bayview Circle
John Arbor Burton Rehab Center -Room #31
Baltimore, Maryland 21224

IAFF Local 734 has alerted us to a  fundraiser planned for Thursday from 3:00 PM to 10:00 PM at Mothers Federal Hill Grille, 1113 South Charles Street.

UPDATED: Baltimore union says ‘firehouse roulette’ was behind injuries to Firefighter Jeffrey Novack & civilians. PIO questions union’s claims. Second press release blasts PIO.

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MD Balitmore NovackWBFF TV coverage

WBAL TV coverage

IAFF Local 734

Baltimore City Fire Department

Previous coverage of this fire from STATter911.com

Read entire statement from Local 734

NEW Read second statement from Local 734 on PIO’s comments

(NOTE: Following the posting of this story Friday night, IAFF Local 734 released a response to the comments by Baltimore City Fire Department PIO Kevin Cartwright. There is a link above to read that statement.)

As STATter911.com reported early this morning, not only was Squad 40, the engine company from the fire station next door, on another run at the time of the fire at 3910 Liberty Heights Avenue that seriously injured Firefighter/Paramedic Jeff Novack (seen in picture to the left from the North Penn Fire Company website), so was Engine 46, the second due engine. Third due Engine 20, from Walbrook, also wasn’t available because of the city’s policy to close fire companies each shift due to serious budget problems.

This afternoon, IAFF Local 734 issued a press release indicating the injuries to its member and three civilians were impacted by the rotating closures:

We should all be thankful that this event was not as bad as it could have been, despite the Firehouse Roulette that the Blake Administration carried over from the Dixon Administration.  Hopefully this shines a light to the Mayor and City Council. 

Contacted shortly after the union’s statement was released, Chief Jim Clack told STATter911.com he was aware of its contents. Chief Clack added in an email, “Right now I am focused on helping our severely injured firefighter recover from his injuries. There will be a full investigation into all the factors that resulted in life threatening  injuries to one of our bravest and we will learn from it.”

President Bob Sledgeski made statements similar to those in the news release in interviews with at least two Baltimore TV reporters. Baltimore City Fire Department PIO Kevin Cartwright went beyond Chief Clack’s remarks and responded to the union’s allegations in at least one TV interview. Here is more  from WBAL-TV’s website:

“The claim that this firefighter suffered injuries because we were not appropriate or adequate or had insufficient units on the scene — I question that,” said Fire Department spokesman Kevin Cartwright.

Cartwright said the city is staring down a $121 million budget deficit and that every department is affected, but he said the Fire Department still has the tools and manpower to do its job effectively.

The fire union disagreed.

“Our Fire Department isn’t getting less busy and they’re also using the fire apparatus and our members to help support the EMS system, which is fine. The problem is, we don’t have the resources to do everything for everybody all the time,” Sledgeski said.

Cartwright said there’s no data to support the union’s theory that the rotating closures of four fire stations per day have negatively affected public safety.

“We have very dedicated and committed members. Every time we get a call, we’re going to respond and we’re going to be there as fast as we can,” he said. 

The Novacks from the North Penn Fire Company website.
The Novacks from the North Penn Fire Company website.

FF/PM Novack is reported to be in serious but stable condition at the R. Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center.  He has multiple broken bones along with 2nd and 3rd degree burns to his arms.

The press release from Local 734 is providing more details into the firefighter’s actions on Tuesday night as the crew from Truck 12 arrived from the firehouse next door and went to work well before an engine crew arrived. The press release is also critical of statements made by the PIO at the scene of the fire:

Upon their arrival, they encountered a three story apartment building, with fire in a 2nd floor apartment and people trapped on the 3rd Floor. FFPM Novack, and the other men from Truck 12, without hesitation or thoughts of their own safety, entered the burning building to do their job, save people’s lives. FFPM Novack located and removed one victim from the third floor. Outside, he turned the victim over to awaiting BCFD Paramedics. He then returned to the building to search for more victims. At this time, about 9:14pm, the first arriving Engine, Engine 52 from Mondawmin, arrived on the scene and began to extinguish the fire. While searching the 3rd floor again, FFPM Novack became trapped by the fast moving fire. He used his portable radio and transmitted a MAYDAY distress call. Unfortunately, before he could be assisted by the Rapid Intervention Team (a Team of Firefighters on scene dedicated to rescue any Firefighter in distress) he was forced to hang out of a 3rd floor window. There he transmitted another MAYDAY, but the fire was growing too fast. FFPM Novack was forced to jump from that 3rd floor window, or he would have died. Despite other information released by Fire Department officials, he was on the 3rd floor not the 2nd, and he did not fall, he jumped, after saving lives! If more time was spent on the facts then there would be fewer discrepancies.

As we mentioned this morning, there is a really nice article about Jeff Novack and his firefighting family written by Tony Di Domizio in The Reporter newspaper. Jeff, his brother Scott (also a Baltimore City firefighter – Engine 8, D Shift) and their dad Al are members of the North Penn Fire Company in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania. As a number of our readers pointed out, Al Novack is also a long time radio reporter in Philadelphia.

Quick Takes

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Baltimore 2nd alarm (and rally info): This fire on Ostend Street Friday morning left one firefighter with minor burns. Firefighters point out the closest engine company, Engine 55 in Pigtown, was closed for the day. The rotating closures and the budget cuts are behind today’s rally as firefighters march from the Baltimore City Fire Museum (old Engine 6 on Gay Street) to City Hall at 5:00 PM. IAFF General President Harold Schaitberger is scheduled to join IAFF locals 734 and 964 (officers) WJZ-TV has the story.

VIDEO ADDED – DC & Sarasota officials signed ageement to allow new Florida chief to remain District employee: STATter911.com now knows what happened to allow Sarasota County Chief Kenneth Ellerbe to stay on the rolls of the DC Fire & EMS Department in able to enhance his retirement pay. We even know a DC assistant fire chief and the city’s head of human resources approved Kenneth Ellerbe’s leave without pay status. What we don’t know is why this was allowed to happen, especially since Chief Dennis Rubin originally declined to sign the deal. We are also trying to determine the benefit for the city to engage in a formal personnel exchange arrangement to fill a fire chief’s slot in Florida. The DC Fire & EMS Department and the DC Department of Human Resources aren’t exactly filling in the blanks on a lot of unanswered questions. One question from a STATter911.com reader is one we hadn’t thought of: Will the DC Fire & EMS Department now offer this arrangement to every firefighter who may be almost a year short in reaching retirement age? Click here for the latest, including Wednesday’s 6:00 PM report for TV.

Also in Sarasota County, Florida, a 911 problem causing a 20 hour delay: Listen to the audio and read the details on why help wasn’t sent to a man later found dead in North Port, Florida. Click here.

Construction workers make rescue at Beltway vehicle fire: Raw video from the air, pictures from the ground and the story from Scott Broom on yesterday’s save after an SUV crashed and burned on the Capital Beltway near College Park, Maryland. Construction workers pulled a woman from the burning vehicle.

Rape charges dropped against Bourne, Massachusetts deputy chief: Paul Weeks is eager to go back to work and his bosses want him on the job as soon as possible. The rape charge against the deputy chief has been one of many dramas involving Bourne’s fire department in recent months. While the papers say they don’t identify rape victims, the victim in this case declined to prosecute citing “marital privilege”.  Read more.

NEW – Developer on home confinement after off-duty firefighter shot: We were a little late in telling you about the arrest in the off-duty shooting of a Milton, Massachusetts firefighter in an apparent road rage incident. Read about the charges against a well known developer.

Anthropometry, a word Dave has never heard before: Ann who? Dave showing his ignorance on reading an interesting press release from the Montgomery County Fire & Rescue Service. MCFRS will be working with NIOSH in using anthropometry to to “improve the fit and performance of equipment that interfaces with the body”. Anthropometry “is the science of measuring the human body”.  Read the release.

Fire chief and city sued by landlord: Readers in Utica, New York alerted us to this story about a fire in September that killed four people, but Firegeezer already had this interesting case  well covered. Click here.

Firefighters replace money stolen in Salvation Army robberies: IAFF Local 660 in Charlotte, North Carolina has donated $6000 to make up for some men going around to Salvation Army kettles trying to steal Christmas. Read the story.

Quick Takes

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A ferry tale ending: Stranded on the Potomac River. Sixteen cars, drivers and passengers, aboard the General Jubal A. Early. A tree caused White’s Ferry to come to a halt for about four hours on Thursday evening. Montgomery County Fire & Rescue Service crews were about to begin a rescue operation to bring the people to shore when the vessel suddenly came free of the tree. All are well.

NEW – “I had the ambulance and I had a pretty good time driving it”: The words of Mindy Jones from a must see interview. Jones was in handcuffs when she told a reporter about her joy ride in a stolen ambulance. It was taken from Oklahoma’s Shawnee Regional Medical Center. Click here to watch the story. Trust me you don’t want to miss this one.

I never liked being an “I told you so” and certainly not in this case: Not that anyone else didn’t predict this, but our column from one-year-ago saw the future for the Baltimore City Fire Department’s rotating closures. Read the impact of Wednesday’s fatal fire that occurred near a closed truck company.

Former Maryland volunteer is charged with setting a man on fire: You may have seen the story of Joshua Mashburn. He was arrested in Little Rock, Arkansas after being accused of using gasoline and a candle to set a man on fire in Frederick, Maryland. It turns out Mashburn, until August of this year, was a member of the Burtonsville VFD in Montgomery County. Read more.

Fireground audio and raw video from Chicago: Click here to watch and hear the 5-11 in a high-rise that killed one person and injured others (including 5 firefighters). More fireground audio can be found here.

Local 2 points to fire in debate over staffing levels: Yesterday’s fire in Chicago is already making its way to the negotiating table. Read the details.

A picture worth seeing: Check out this from Firegeezer

Firefighter shuts valves to propane tank as fire burned: Pictures and the story from Norfolk, Nebraska after fire shot from a 30,000 gallon propane tank following a ruptured pipe. Click here.

Commercial fire in South St. Louis: This fire was yesterday at 3100 South Jefferson Avenue. The building had both a business and apartments.

Is anyone surprised? Baltimore City’s rotating closures fits the pattern and becomes critical only after someone dies.

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Even STATter911.com saw this coming. Click the image for a column from a year ago.
Even STATter911.com saw this coming. Click the image for a column from a year ago.

Today’s Baltimore Sun story on the search for money to halt rotating closures

WJZ-TV story on 911 calls for Presstman Street fire

Press release from IAFF Local 734

“No, this was not the result of budget cuts. Based on the distance of the current stations we are still within a great safe zone as far as responsiveness. It’s not because of the rotation.”

Those are the words of Baltimore Mayor Sheila Dixon from her response to WJZ-TV following the death of a man inside a burning rowhouse on Presstman Street early Wednesday morning. The closest truck company to that home was shut due to the city’s rotating closure policies.

We are not sure what investigation into the response to the fire, if any, Mayor Dixon is using to come to her conclusion. Clearly there were a number of factors involved in this response, including crews being sent to the wrong location based on a call taker not hearing the correct address from a woman trapped in the home.

MD Baltimore Presstman StreetBaltimore City Fire Chief Jim Clack has pretty consistently told the news media in Baltimore and in previous emails to STATter911.com that rotating closures do have an impact on response times.  He has also indicated response times have gone up some since the closures started.

On Wednesday, Chief Clack told the Baltimore Sun the department is  still reviewing the response to the fire, but indicated the first truck company’s arrival on the scene likely would have taken longer than the closed Truck 18:

The search-and-rescue company nearest the Davis’ home, Truck 18, was closed overnight. Had it been in the station when the call came, the truck could have arrived in about half the time the first unit took to arrive, said Fire Chief James S. Clack.

On Thursday Chief Clack modified that statement a bit. Also from The Baltimore Sun:

Also yesterday, Clack said that if the truck had been in operation, it might not have arrived at the fatal fire earlier than other units because it would have been sent to the incorrect address after a garbled initial call. That was a change from his initial assessment of the fire response.

If units had gone to the right address initially, the closure of the truck “would have affected our response time,” he said.

Right now, City Council members and the mayor are trying to now come up with money to end these closures for the rest of the fiscal year.

Isn’t this usually how it goes with rotating closures? Of course it is.

There is plenty of case history in Baltimore, in Washington and around the country where a fatality near a closed company allows those who hold the purse strings to suddenly see the light. In this case, to be fair, just hours prior to the deadly fire, city leaders were finally starting to address the idea of finding overtime money for the department to stop the rotating closure policy. But now, all indications are it is THE priority.

IAFF Local 734, in a press release yesterday afternoon, called the closures “firehouse roulette” and is telling citizens the mayor and the fire chief  “have placed a price tag on yours and your neighbor’s lives”.

You don’t have to be a genius or the Amazing Kreskin to have predicted a while ago that this was exactly how the story of rotating closures in Baltimore would play out. Even a lowly blogger living 40-miles-away saw this coming. Here’s what we wrote one year and two-days before the fire on Presstman Street occurred after learning that rotating closures were in store for Baltimore:

Having covered three rounds, in three different decades, of what union officials called “firehouse roulette” in Washington, DC, there is a lot of precedent you can point to indicating how this policy is likely to play out. In fact the City Paper article talks about a previous Baltimore City rotating closure policy:

In 1995 and ‘96, BCFD tried to keep overtime costs down by closing some firehouses during certain shifts. Such “rotation closures” became controversial when fires broke out near firehouses that were temporarily shut down.

That’s exactly what happened each time in Washington. It is also what happened earlier this year when medic units were shut down because of Prince George’s County, Maryland furloughs.

True, these are fiscally much more difficult times than any but the eldest among us have seen. But it all comes down to how much heat the political leaders can take when the inevitable headlines appear.

That 1998 Baltimore City Paper article I was referring to is from 1998 and gives the details of the cuts the Baltimore City Fire Department endured in the 1990s. It is well worth reading.