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Fireground audio: Explosion & fire in Indianapolis that killed two & destroyed homes.

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Previous coverage of this story

Teresa Mackin, WISH-TV:

Hundreds gathered Sunday evening in Greenwood to remember one of their own.

Second grade teacher Jennifer Longworth and her husband Dion were the two victims of Saturday night’s tragic explosion on the city’s south side.

Jennifer Longworth taught at Southwest Elementary for twelve years, said co-workers Sunday.

Co-workers, friends, family, students and parents all gathered outside for a candlelight vigil.

They laid flowers and candles near the flagpole outside, and wrote messages to Mrs. Longworth on a poster board.

Rick Callahan & Charles Wilson, Associated Press:

Splintered beams and boards on a piece of charred earth were all that remained Sunday where three Indianapolis homes were leveled in a blast that killed two people and rendered homes for blocks uninhabitable.

A backhoe raked through the rubble in the middle-class subdivision as clusters of firefighters and rescue workers weary from a long, chaotic day that began late the night before waited for their next assignment.

The two-story, brick-faced homes on either side of those demolished by the blast were in ruins. One home’s roof was gone, a blackened husk left behind. On the other side of the gap, the side of a home was sheared off. Across the street, garage doors had buckled from the heat.

It wasn’t yet clear what caused the blast that shook the neighborhood at 11 p.m. Saturday. Residents described hearing a loud boom that blew out windows and collapsed ceilings. Some thought a plane had crashed or that it was an earthquake.

Teacher, husband remembered at vigil

Alex Pflanzer, who was asleep when the nearby homes were leveled, said he heard his wife screaming and thought someone was breaking into his house. Grabbing his gun, he checked the house and saw the front door was standing open.

“I walked outside and all the houses were on fire,” he said.

Pflanzer, his wife and two dogs were staying in a hotel room Sunday night. They were, however, without their cat, who refused to budge from the crawl space.

Deputy Code Enforcement Director Adam Collins said as many as 31 homes were damaged so badly that they may have to be demolished. The explosion damaged a total of 80 homes, he said. He estimated the damage at $3.6 million.

Some residents were allowed to return to their homes to retrieve a few belongings Sunday under police escort, officials said. Others whose homes weren’t as badly damaged were allowed to go home, but officials said they would have to do without electricity overnight.

Deputy Fire Chief Kenny Bacon said investigators haven’t eliminated any possible causes for the blast. But U.S. Rep. Andre Carson, who represents the area, said he had been told a bomb or meth lab explosion had been ruled out.

Along with the two people killed, seven people were taken to a hospital with injuries, Bacon said.

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Two dead in Indianapolis explosion. 18 homes leveled or damaged.

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AP:

A roaring explosion that leveled two homes and set two others ablaze in a huge fire forced about 200 people from a devastated Indianapolis neighborhood where at least two people werr killed, authorities said Sunday. The powerful nighttime blast shattered windows, crumpled walls and inflicted other damage on at least 14 other homes. 

Two people were taken to a hospital with minor injuries after the explosion and fire, said Lieut. Bonnie Hensley, with the Indianapolis Fire Department. She said firefighters later put out the flames and searchers then went through the rubble and damaged homes one at a time in case others were left behind. At least one body has been recovered.

Some witnesses said in televised reports that they heard people screaming “help me! help me!” after the explosion and fire and that two parents and two children were safely pulled from one house that caught fire.

“This looks like a war zone; it really does,” Hensley told The Associated Press. “Police officers and fire department officials remain at the scene searching for other possible victims.” She said they used search lights until dawn as they peered into the damaged and ruined homes.

She declined to identify the only confirmed fatality, saying only that the body was found in one of the leveled homes after the fire was put out. Fire officials told AP after daybreak that they were not immediately releasing any further information until later Sunday morning. 

The explosion at 11 p.m. Saturday destroyed two houses that were side by side and spread fire to two other nearby homes in the neighborhood on the south side of Indianapolis, she said, adding at least 14 other homes were damaged in the area by the blast’s shock wave or flying debris it kicked up.

The blast was heard for miles all around, and authorities said they had no immediate information on the cause. An investigation by fire and other agencies was under way. Reports said the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives also was involved. 

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Pre-Arrival video: Citizen narration & a 360 of burning Indianapolis home.

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This is from a house fire Sunday afternoon on Valley Creek Way Lane in Indianapolis, Indiana. Below is brief news coverage of the fire. One firefighter received burns to the back of the neck.

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Arrival video: Indianapolis apartment fire.

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This a fire yesterday in Indianapolis at the Creekwood Apartments. The fire was reported around 5:00 PM. The building was apparently struck by lightning that morning. Read more here.

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Report & audio tapes from deadly Indiana State Fair collapse. TV station looks at lack of MCI plan & coordination.

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Radio traffic & raw video from previous coverage on STATter911.com

WTHR-TV has been looking into the police, fire and EMS response to the August 13 stage collapse at the Indiana State Fair just before a planned perfomance by the group Sugarland that left seven people dead and scores injured. The story above focuses on the official release of audio tapes and a redacted Indianapolis Fire Department after action report the TV station obtained. WTHR looks at coordination between the fire department, Indiana State Police and Indiana Homeland Security and what, if any, mass casualty plan was in place at the Indiana State Fair.

According to reporter Sandra Chapman, the fire department was asked to provide EMS units for the fair for the first time in a decade and had been assisting in a support role, but after the collapse ended up "leading the command by default".

One of the most significant issues, according to WTHR-TV, was getting ambulances in and out of the fair grounds. Here are excerpts from the story:

"We need to rethink our strategy. It's not working. We need to get the trucks down here in order for us to start working the medical thing to get patients out of here. Do what we have to do. Have state police open up the line. But we need to get the trucks up here. We can't keep having the patients dragged across the pavement up to you," said the commander.

"What kind of plan do you have? What resources do you have down there? We're starting to go critical on a lot of our patients. They're starting to go from yellow to red on us, they're going into shock," warned another responder desperate to get patients help.

In the video above. another story focusing on more aspects of the response to the incoming weather and the MCI.

From the AP:

There's new information about the tragic Indiana state fair stage collapse in August. The chilling emergency radio calls for help and behind the scenes details were made public Thursday.

“State police 13-c looks like about 30 minutes or less before weather comes in,” was the first call for possible trouble.

For the first time, confirmation that state police were awaiting the storm's arrival moments before the stage collapsed at the Indiana State Fair. 

The warnings began at 8:38 p.m., five minutes before the collapse. 

“All units, all units, severe thunderstorm warnings at 9:45 for Marion County.  Use your best judgment, find shelter when needed," officials said on the tapes.

Two minutes later, a voice of concern, thousands of people were still awaiting the Sugarland concert, standing right in front of the stage. That's when we hear the call inquiring whether fans had been moved to safety.

“Have they released fans from the grandstands yet?" an official could be heard asking in the tapes.

“I have no information on that I will check and advise,“ another official responded.

Three minutes later, a lone radio call of sheer panic.

“The stage has collapsed. (inaudible) …I'm calling a mass casualty.“

That was at 8:40 p.m. Seconds later, reports of the human toll began trickling in. Some trapped, others going into shock. Those critically injured were code reds, the walking wounded were greens and yellows. The dead, tagged in black.

“Multiple reds.  Multiple reds.  Unknown blacks.  I need everything to the grandstand. I've got at least one with a head injury,“ one official said in the tapes.

At 8:48 p.m. with heavy rain and more wind expected, it was a scramble to evacuate.

“Unknown type of weather. We may need to expedite evacuating the rest of the major grandstands. “

“Copy that, working with state police on evacuations at this time. “

And then the first descriptions of the chaotic scene, the devastation and the need for help in a hurry.
Situation is this, the stage framework and the speakers have collapsed onto the rows of chairs just in front.

“Can you estimate total quantity of patients? “
“A lot. “
“Do you think we need to start more than five units? “
“Absolutely. “
“I've got one behind the stage, black tag done.”

The first reported fatality, just 11 minutes after the collapse.

The collapse took the lives of seven individuals including Tri-State resident, Megan Toothman .

Radio traffic & raw video: Stage collapse at Indiana State Fair just before Sugarland performance. At least five dead and 40 injured.

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(Thanks to Radioman911.com for assistance with this story.)

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) —

At least five people died when a stage collapsed during a storm at the Indiana State Fair, where country act Sugarland was set to perform.

Some 40 people were injured in the Saturday night incident at the fairgrounds in Indianapolis. Strong winds caused the stage rigging for the outdoor concert to collapse, trapping and injuring concert-goers.

No one was performing at the time, witnesses said. The opening act had finished, and the crowd was waiting for Sugarland to take the stage.

Indiana State Police spokesman David Bursten told The Associated Press that a "strong gust of wind upset the rigging above the stage at the Indiana State Fairgrounds and caused a collapse of the structure over the stage."

Bursten said the injuries ranged from "very serious to cuts and scrapes."

Emergency crews were called to the scene, and workers were setting up a command center to tend to those who were injured.

The collapse came as thousands of concert-goers were being evacuated from the fairground grandstand to a nearby coliseum.

The stage rigging fell onto an area where some fans were seated.

"It was like it was in slow motion," concert-goer Amy Weathers told the Star. "You couldn't believe it was actually happening."

Associated Press photographer Darron Cummings was in the audience attending the concert as a fan shortly before the collapse. He said an announcer gave the crowd instructions on how to evacuate if the weather worsened, but said they hoped to get Sugarland on stage soon.

Cummings said he and his friends went ahead and sought shelter in a nearby barn after seeing the weather radar.

"Then we heard screams. We heard people just come running," Cummings told the AP.

Another person at the concert, Emily Davis, told WTHR that there was lightning and the sky had gotten dark but it wasn't raining when the wind suddenly toppled the rigging.

"It was horrible, people were running and going crazy," she said.

A representative for Sugarland could not immediately be reached, but the top-selling, Grammy-winning country duo tweeted about the incident on its Twitter page and released a statement on its website.

"We are all right after our stage collapse at the Indiana State Fair tonight," the website statement said. "Many of our fans and friends in Indianapolis may not be. Please keep them in your thoughts, prayers, or whatever form of strength you are able to send. They need you. Thank you."

Copyright © 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Video: Friday’s NFFF/FDIC 9-11 Memorial Stair Climb at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis.

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Click here to learn how to host a 9-11 Memorial Stair Climb in your community

Sign up for the April 6 climb at CFSI in Washington, DC

I offer this as an antidote to that sleazy 9-11 ad story I sent your way this morning. Above is a look at Friday's 9-11 Memorial Stair Climb inside Lucas Oil Stadium.

As part of my work with the National Fallen Firefighters Foundation, I have been pushing the climbs as a way to honor the firefighters we lost 10-years-ago. To be honest, while I had heard a lot from firefighters who have hosted and organized climbs, I had never seen one until Friday at FDIC. The video doesn't quite do justice to this wonderful way to join together to remember the fallen and raise money to help their survivors and others. There is another climb next week (April 6) at CFSI in Washington, DC.

Rather than me trying to explain what a great experience and event a 9-11 Memorial Stair Climb is, read what was posted yesterday on the Average Jake Firefighter Blog run by Robert and Daniel Owens:

Of all of the times I have been to FDIC and all of the classes, and events I have been to I rarely have any regrets when I leave. This year I left with a HUGE regret. The 9/11 Memorial Stair Climb, was probably one of the best displays of brotherhood, I have ever witnessed. I regret not participating, I watched and was moved by the imagery of the brothers and sisters with pictures of the 343 making the long walk up the Lucas Oil Stadium steps, and I immediately regretted not doing it. I kind of felt like a scum bag. I use FDIC for a lot of things, learning, teaching, and relaxing. I felt selfish for not giving up one night of drinking, or a day of taking it easy to memorialize our fallen brothers. I hear there is one coming to DC, and I hear they may be one coming to other locations close to me. I will definitely be participating in one of them, and I hope FDIC does one again next year so that I can participate.

FDIC roundup: Bagpipes at 25,000 feet; Buy a Nano & help the NFFF; Dave gets frisked by a VA deputy sheriff; A well deserved award & more.

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I guess if you were complaining about that crying baby in seat 15A this isn't going to put you in a better mood. But if, instead, you want to bask in the afterglow of a successful and enjoyable stay in Indy the video above will fit right in. The firefighters and others aboard this Southwest Airlines flight received a special treat. That's John Flynn, a member of the Palm Beach County Firefighter Pipes & Drums Corps. The video is from the FirefighterNation.com and Go Forward Media team.

My flight back on Saturday was a bit quieter, but carried quite a few returning from FDIC. I am just catching up and checking the web for some things at FDIC that I missed while shooting and editing videos for the National Fallen Firefighters Foundation.

While I knew about it, I didn't get to see my friend Brian Kazmierzak receive the Fire Engineering/ISFSI George D. Post Instructor of the Year Award (above). Brian is the division chief for training and safety with Indiana's Clay Fire Territory. I have come to know Brian quite well in his role as director of operations at The Secret List and Firefighter Close calls. Taking a cue from Bobby Halton, I would describe him as the brains behind the moustache (sorry Billy, but it was too good to pass up). Congratulations Brian!

Speaking of Goldfeder, after Billy's run-in at NFFF's Stop, Drop, Rock 'n' Roll with Roanoke's Captain Willie Wines Jr., a walrus at the Indianapolis Zoo committed suicide because he didn't think he could compete with these two. We should have some video up of Stop, Drop, Rock 'n' Roll in the next couple of days. Auctioneer and NFFF board member Goldfeder brought in more than $30,000 with the live auction.

NFFF also walked away from FDIC with a $10,000 check from Streamlight. In the video above you can see how to support NFFF by buying Streamlight's special little Red Nano Light with the NFFF logo. It's on sale at The Fire Store from the Witmer Public Safety Group.

One of the highlights of FDIC for me was watching the 9-11 Memorial Stair Climb on Friday (video to follow, soon). I had been involved in a very small way with my work for NFFF in helping with the publicity for this event. So, I was very aware of what this was all about and how it would work. But being there and watching it up close is a very different thing. You should think about sponsoring one in your community to honor the upcoming tenth anniversary of the loss of 343 firefighters. Click here for details. Also, there is another 9-11 Memorial Stair Climb on April 6 at CFSI in Washington. Sign up here.

I needed an assistant in shooting the stair climb event. The picture above is by THE Fire Critic, Rhett Fleitz.

Lt. Fleitz was detailed to my command by his supervisor and father, Captain Wines. As you can imagine neither of us was very happy with this arrangement. We somehow got through it. The picture above, taken by Bill Carey, was shot during the event. There is something very odd about the photo, considering we were both standing. Can't put my finger on it. Is it possible Rhett has been heightening?

And then there is this picture (above). Somehow I was seated at a table with this guy for dinner Friday night. I was just there to have a meal with my friends Billy Hayes, Mike Brooks and some folks from Columbia Southern University. Erik says he's a deputy sheriff in Bedford County, Virginia. I am assuming he wanted the photo because he's a big STATter911.com fan (who isn't? …I mean, besides Fleitz). It was strange, after dinner people from other tables kept coming up wanting their pictures taken with Erik. Must be a very popular sheriff's department. 

FDIC Day 2: Sign up for the NFFF 9-11 Memorial Stair Climb. Stop, Drop, Rock ‘n’ Roll. Stop by and see Dave on Thursday.

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Read more about 9-11 Memorial Stair Climbs

Sign up for the 9-11 Memorial Stair Climb at FDIC

If you are not sure what the 9-11 Memorial Stair Climb at FDIC is all about, I shot a video for the National Fallen Firefighters Foundation today with a couple of experts on the subject. I will also be shooting video of some of you climbing on Friday. I will be the guy with the camera and the AED already attached. It's a great cause and you will be climbing with some great people. Click the links to read more and sign up. You can also sign up at the NFFF booths at FDIC tomorrow. But do so early, only 343 slots available.

Below, another video with details about Thursday night's Stop, Drop, Rock 'N' Roll. You can buy the tickets at the NFFF Booths or at the door of the Indiana Roof Ballroom.

Get Tickets at Booth# 342, Booth #9900 in Lucas Oil Stadium,
  and at the door on the night of the event

Featuring: Singer-Songwriter Candy Coburn

While hanging out editing this video at one of the NFFF booths today, I saw those stalkers again. The same ones that were in my hotel lobby last night. Creepy. But it was good to see a lot of friendly faces too.

I hope you will join me in room 125-126 on Thursday at 1:30 PM for The PIO Reporter: Telling Your Story in a World Where “Spin” Doesn’t Work. Rhett Fleitz, who looks very much like one of the guys in the hotel lobby, is in room 134-135 at the same time. There's no class going on. He's just in the room (more of that stalking). Actually his class is Social Media: The Fire Service’s Next Big Innovation.

So, after all of the junk I fill your mind with on Thursday, clear it all out with music Thursday night and a nice, healthy climb on Friday.

I hope to see you.

FDIC bound? Come see me at 1:30 next Thursday in Room 125-126.

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Like many of you I am heading to Indianapolis for FDIC next week. This is just a reminder to come see me in room 125-126 next Thursday at 1:30 PM for The PIO Reporter: Telling Your Story in a World Where “Spin” Doesn’t Work.

I have lots of interesting videos to show and will be talking about a few controversial stories that you’ve seen here on STATter911.com. We will also focus on using social media to tell your story, whether the news is good or bad, and in a time of a major emergency in your community.

Below is one of the stories we will be discussing. No, it won’t be another debate like I had with THE Fire Critic over whether firefighters in Tennessee were right or wrong in their actions when they had a fire at a home that wasn’t on the department’s subscription list. Instead, we will look at how this story might have played out if the firefighters had immediately told their story to the TV news crew on the scene. 

Look forward to seeing you.

 

Quick Takes

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Fuel tanker in deadly California crash: This is video from yesterday morning on Highway 99 in Chico. The driver of the rig was briefly trapped but got out on his own. Officials say a woman was killed when she tried to pass traffic and ran straight into the truck. According to ChicoER.com, “Cal Fire-Butte County officials said the tanker was allowed to burn itself out, partly over concerns that putting water on it would spread the fuel.”  Read more here. Check out this photo gallery (really good pictures).

Thanks so much for helping my friend: A man in Seminole, Florida showed his gratitude to firefighters who responded to his friend’s medical problem by sneaking into their rig and stealing a lieutenant’s helmet. Here are the details.

Fire truck turned prom limo crashes, but no pictures allowed: Taking two of its members and their dates to the Shippensberg (PA) Area High School senior prom, two rigs from the Pleasant Hall VFD pulled up to the event Saturday night. The Sentinel Online reports one of the fire trucks hit a light pole. When two photographers tried to shoot the damaged pole and truck they say they were surrounded by firefighters. Here’s what one of the photographers wrote to the paper-

“When the firemen saw we had cameras, they acted as if it was a crime or homicide scene and insisted that we were not permitted to take photographs. The driver was a bit too aggressively assertive.”

The chief of the department admits some of his people, including the embarrassed opererator of the fire truck overreacted. Here is the story.

Did chief violate privacy by telling reporters the reason a firefighter was fired?: A former firefighter has filed suit in Pasco County, Florida claiming the City of Zephyrhills fire chief did just that. Shawn Baptist, a 16-year-veteran, says the chief shouldn’t have gone beyond acknowledging the firefighter was no longer employed by the fire department. City Manager Steve Spina defended Chief Kevin Williams telling TBO.com-

“When you are a public safety officer and you get fired for a certain reason, that’s the public’s business. You know that going into it.”

Here’s the story.

Council members want to know if a new chief is really necessary: In Flint, Michigan the question is whether the expense of the new fire chief is needed considering they have had an acting chief for more than a year. There are also questions about two lawsuits the nominee, John Linker, had filed against the city that gave him more that $200 thousand. Linker, who retired in 2002 as an assistant chief, now says he actually regrets filing the suits claiming discrimination. Watch the story. Read  the story.

Newborn rescued from pit toilet: Firefighters and paramedics in Durban, South Africa responded after someone heard the cries of a newborn child from amid the waste in a pit toilet. Here are the details.

Big bust in topless arson case: The headline, no surprise, is from Firegeezer (who consistently breaks new ground on ways to sneak sex into these boring fire/EMS sites). This is a follow-up to the story we both ran last June of the fire at a topless coffee shop in Maine called Grand View. Here’s the update.

Indy apartment burns again: You may recall there was an apartment fire in Indianapolis on April 23 during FDIC. The vacant building at Nottingham Village burned again this morning. A firefighter was slightly injured when a stairwell fell on him. Click here to read and watch the story.

Baltimore County two-alarm apartment fire: Michael “FirePix1075” Schwartzberg says this started out as a smoke investigation for Engine 1 (Towson) at Rodgers Forge Road and Blenheim Road around 11:40 PM last night. Soon it was a second-alarm with fire in the basement of the apartment building. One firefighter suffered a knee injury.

Quick Takes

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Gas main fire: In Somerset County, New Jersey firefighters spent a good portion of yesterday dealing with a burning gas line in Franklin Township. The fire started after a crew working on a drainage project struck the 6-inch plastic line around 10:40 AM. The fire destroyed two trucks and a backhoe belonging to the contractor. It also scorched power lines with about 115 customers losing power. The gas burned until about 2:00 PM. Read more about the fire. Pictures from the fire. Watch a video from one of the responding fire companies.

Videos ‘R Us (How do you make that backwards “R”?): We haven’t done a video roundup in months, but Emily Cyr loaded so many in the player to the right yesterday they just spilled over into the main blog. The best video shows drivers apparently doing self colonoscopies instead of realizing that towering geyser coming from the sheared off hydrant in Carson, California could have very well undermined the roadway as they drive through the flooded street. We also have fires from Michigan, Massachusetts, Illinois and California. And we added the awful looking aftermath video of Houston’s Engine 13 after it struck a bridge support injuring three firefighters yesterday. Click here to see all of the clips.

OH Columbus mayday fatal fire

Mayday in Columbus, Ohio around 4:30 this morning after a firefighter fell though the floor of a home on Medina Avenue. We are told the firefighter was quickly removed. Another firefighter suffered smoke inhalation. The injuries to the firefighters aren't considered life-threatening. An elderly woman who was missing has been found dead inside the home. Click the image for more from WBNS-TV.

Whine by winemaker uncorks firefighter anger: Do you recall the letter to the editor we linked to last week from a Napa Valley winemaker? We ran the letter because our gut told us that this was not the last we would hear of Dario Sattui and his complaint that American Canyon, California firefighters are overpaid, underworked and have a great pension. We were right. A Santa Rosa firefighter called for a boycott of Sattui’s wines and the Internet is helping to fuel the backlash. Here’s the story. You can also read a couple of letters to the editor with a different view than Mr. Sattui’s.

More complaints and some regeneration work-arounds: Looking at our stats yesterday there seemed to be quite an interest in Boca Raton Chief Tom Wood’s guest column about DPF regeneration on newer rigs. Some writing in shared similar time-out problems and others had ideas on at least partial solutions. Click here and scroll down for the comments.

Arbitration panel orders drug testing and a big pay raise in Boston: Four years of a bitter standoff between firefighters and Mayor Thomas Menino apparently have come to an end. An arbitration panel gives the firefighters a 19-percent pay raise over four-years (retroactive to July 1, 2006). At the same time there will now be random drug and alcohol testing. The raise is significantly more than other city workers, including police, have received. Here’s the story.

Chief loses buggy after stopping to help at crash scene: A Cal Fire battalion chief stopped to help at the scene of a traffic collision near El Cajon yesterday. One of the people involved in the crash jumped in and took off with the pickup truck. It was soon recovered undamaged. Here’s some more info.

Flint firefighters are at their breaking point: That’s the contention in the headline and story from WJRT-TV after two firefighters were hurt in weekend fires. There have been more than 100 fires so far this month in Flint. The city has been operating with 23 fewer firefighters after last month’s layoffs. That could soon change. Read and watch the story.

Geezer on fire: While many of his fellow bloggers are hard at work in Indianapolis (see below) Bill was posting like crazy yesterday. Just click and scroll.

How the local media views FDIC: Check out the story from WISH-TV. Or you can go right to the source at FireEngineering. com. And don’t forget the bloggers gathering Friday night. You will find details and various reports from Indianapolis from many of the other folks who cohabitate with us at FireEMSblogs.com.

Network looks at shrinking volunteer force: ABC News is the latest with a story about the nation’s dwindling resource of volunteer firefighters. Click here.

Two Texas firefighters return to the job after lengthy battles. One is sent home: We told you yesterday about the return of Houston’s Jane Draycott nine-months after the graffiti incident at Station 54. Her return was apparently uneventful. You can read more here.

Things weren’t as easy in Beaumont where James Mathews has been fighting to get his job back since an arrest in 2008. He won an arbitration, but was sent home hours after his return to the department yesterday. Here is the latest.

 Market fire in the Philippines: This is from Cabadbaran City, a city in the province of Agusan del Norte, where faulty wiring is blamed for starting the fire that destroyed the Cabadbaran City Public Market early yesterday morning. Read more about the fire.

Quick Takes

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Early this morning in Rochester: Lots of fire on Wadsworth Street in this Guy Zampatori video. Pictures and fireground audio can be found at Monroe County Fire Wire.

The regeneration blues coming to a firehouse near you: Read how one fire chief finds the time-outs for regeneration on his department’s newer diesel engines quite maddening and potentially dangerous. A guest column from Boca Raton Fire Rescue’s Tom Wood. Click here.

UPDATED Houston’s Draycott scheduled to return to is back at work today: “I want to be treated like everybody else. I want to be able to go to work and not be harassed, not be retaliated against.” That’s what Firefighter Jane Draycott told the Houston Chronicle’s Terri Langford yesterday, a day before her scheduled return to HFD’s Station 54 at Bush Intercontinental Airport. Draycott attempted a return in January and found herself in the middle of a “team building” exercise with her fellow firefighters. That four-hour session resulted in a lot of transfers and the resignation of the fire chief. It has been nine-months since Draycott made the news after racist and sexual graffiti were found on Draycott’s belongings in the women’s bunk room at the firehouse. Watch as Firefighter Draycott arrives at Station 54 this morning.

Car smashes into ladder truck … inside the firehouse: Click here to read how police say the driver of a car that crashed through the bay door of a firehouse in Wisconsin may not be at fault.

Driver jailed after crashing into fire truck: Police say two motorcyclists racing near Missoula, Montana led one of them into the back of a fire truck injuring a firefighter.  Here’s the story.

A busy weekend in Flint: A dozen fires, including one in a vacant warehouse Saturday that spread to another building. Officials believe 10 of them were intentionally set. So far in April there have been 107 fires compared to 37 last year. This latest arson spree began the day before layoffs were initiated at the end of March. Read and watch the story.

Erosion of political influence: That’s the title of FossilMedic Mike Ward’s latest entry on Firegeezer. Mike is wondering if these budget battles, where firefighter overtime and pensions are targeted, are taking a toll on firefighters who might otherwise enjoy the backing of the public and the politicians. Check it out.

If you would like to tell Mike Ward you agree with him or that he is full of it: You can do so in person this week at FDIC during the big Meetup at Indy on Friday at the Rock Bottom Brewery. Lots of bloggers from FireEMSBlogs.com and elsewhere will be on hand, along with their many groupies. You can even get a free drink ticket for the event by stopping by these booths-

  • FireRescue Magazine, FirefighterNation.com and FireEMSBlogs.com: Booth #3755
  • Black Diamond: Booth # 410
  • Black Helmet Apparel: Booth # 138
  • I had hoped to be there, but recent knee surgery is keeping me very close to home. My doctor didn’t think I could handle the trauma of the procedure and at the same time deal with the sharp barbs from Rhett Fleitz, The Fire Critic. But you can listen to the latest Indy news from Rhett and his partner John Mitchell (Fire Daily) on their live Firefighter Netcast (or is it Nutcast with that crew?) out of Booth 3755 on Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Read more.

    Rescuer needs rescuing: A Phoenix firefighter helping to rescue a hiker who fell off a mountain trail fell victim to the heat. Click here to read and watch the story.

    Weekend video roundup: A house fire from Gary, Indiana discovered by a battalion chief; a three-alarm apartment fire in New Haven, Connecticut; A Jacksonville, Florida house fire with fireground radio traffic.

    4-alarms in AnnapolisFireSceneAudio.com has the radio traffic from Saturday’s fire on Maryland Avenue in the Annapolis historic district. Click here for Part 2. A quick video clip is here and you can read more about the fire.

    Hydrants frozen delaying attack on restaurant fire. Video report from Indianapolis.

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    Short raw video clips here, here and here.

    From the AP:

    Firefighters had to struggle with frozen hydrants as they faced a blaze that destroyed a restaurant on the east side of Indianapolis.

    Fire crews arrived at the Texas Roadhouse restaurant near Shadeland Avenue and Interstate 70 early Monday, finding heavy fire and smoke coming from the rear of the building.

    Fire Capt. Rita Reith says crews soon ran out of water as they needed more than 15 minutes to find a working hydrant. The temperature was in the low teens when the fire was reported.

    The restaurant had been closed for more than two hours when the fire was reported and its cause wasn’t immediately known. One firefighter was taken to a hospital after suffering chest pain.

    Damage is estimated at $4 million. The restaurant employed 135 people