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Printing company fire in Chatsworth, California: Fire consumed a printing company yesterday evening. The fire was reported at 5:59 PM in the 100 X 80 building. Los Angeles Fire Department spokesman Brian Humphrey has a very detailed account, pictures & more video at the LAFD blog. Here’s an excerpt- “Forcing their way through rolling steel and entry doors, firefighters discovered extreme fire conditions throughout a graphics design and direct mail marketing firm heavily loaded with combustible printing and printed materials. The offensive interior attack on the fire proved short lived as flames roared through the roof, compromising the structure within ten minutes of the 9-1-1 call that brought scores of Los Angeles Firefighters to the scene.” Click here for more video

Election woes: In Stockton, California firefighters are quite worried over the passage of Measure H which gives the city new ways to control staffing and cut costs. Read and watch the story.  

Crane rescue: Continuing with our California theme, click here for pictures and details of the rescue of two people injured on top of a 200-foot tall construction crane in Long Beach. 

Neil Sedaka was wrong! Not everyone loves the calendar girl. Controversy has stalled the release of a calendar in Australia that features pictures of female firefighters from ACT Rural Fire Service. If it is delayed too long the calendar's only use may be those pictures. Click the image for more.

Virginia department adds positions because of volunteer shortage: Four part time firefighters will be hired in Warren County due to concerns over the dwindling number of volunteers. Here’s the story

One dead in overnight two-alarm fire in Baltimore: Early details from a 2:30 AM fire that damaged three townhomes in the 7000 block of McClean Boulevard in Northeast Baltimore. One man was found dead inside. Click here for more

Union head fights suspension over talking to the press: In Ottawa a disciplinary hearing is underway as Stéphane Noël, president of the union in Gatineau tries to overturn a six-month suspension for telling reporters about water pressure issues following a church fire. Here’s more

6:30 AM “home inspection” leads to arrest of man claiming to be firefighter: In Adams County, Pennsylvania a strange story of a man claiming to be a firefighter walking into the bedroom of a man’s home. Read more.  

911 not that important: The mayor of Alsip, Illinois, a former firefighter, is stunned voters failed to approve a fifty-cent per month surcharge on their phone bills to help fund 911. The mayor points out you can’t buy a Coke for that price. Check it out

Strike update from the Firegeezer crew: Mike Ward and Bill Schumm continue to keep us up to date on the labor dispute involving the London Fire Brigade. Click here and scroll down for multiple stories.

Woman says she wasn’t about to jump but was sure was glad to see firefighters: In the video above, WUSA9.com talked to a young woman who was on the phone with here sister doubtful that DC firefighters would be able to get to her as smoke filled her 10th floor apartment on Tuesday. Along with the previous raw video and fireground audio, we have added interviews with some of the firefighters who helped in the rescues during Tuesday’s fire at 1444 Rhode Island Avenue, NW. The firefighters tell the story of a commercial vehicle that was jammed into a dumpster in an effort to get rear position for a ladder truck. Click here. Also, click here for a slideshow

Connie Xinos, man who wants to fire Oak Brook, IL firefighters, has no regrets. Union wants to know why Village president didn’t speak up at meeting. Part 2 of the meeting audio.

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Entire letter to Village of Oak Brook President John Craig

Earlier coverage of this issue

The video above is the continuation of the now infamous September 22 meeting of the Village of Oak Brook, Illinois Citizens Finance Advisory Committee. It is the part where the discussion of a firefighter’s death in a neighboring jurisdiction is discussed. More on that in a moment.

As we first told you on Saturday, a member of this same group, Constantine Xinos, earlier in the meeting called for the firing of one Oak Brook firefighter each month until there are pension and staffing concessions. Xinos said, “Firemen, like cops, are street people. They only understand civilized force. That’s what they understand. You fire ‘em.” (That audio is in Part 1 at the bottom.)

Xinos, who says he likes firemen, talked yesterday with WLS-TV:

Xinos said he did not regret his statements.

“I regret nothing,” said Xinos. “You have to get people’s attention.”

It’s working. Just ask 17-year Oak Brook fire veteran and local union president George Grodek.

“We’ve dedicated our lives to the village of Oak Brook,” said Grodek. “To hear someone say because they don’t want to pay a property tax they’d like to ruin my livelihood and family’s wellbeing is just shocking.”

“I think what you heard at that meeting was frustration with a union contract that doesn’t give us a lot of flexibility,” said Oak Brook Village Manager Dave Niemeyer.

This is the same Connie Xinos who also had a public battle with an 11-year-old girl over library funding. I guess Xinos won that skirmish, because he brought the girls friend to tears. He later told the Daily Herald:

“I wanted that kid to lose sleep that night,” a grinning Xinos says Wednesday, as he invites me for a nearly two-hour interview in his Mercedes-Benz in the gated Oak Brook community where he lives. “This is the real world and the lesson, you folks who brought your kids here, is if you want something, pay for it.”

Shortly after the fire department discussion at the September 22 meeting the recent death of Hinsdale, Illinois Deputy Fire Chief Mark Johnson was brought up. This rapidly evolved into laughter as the group discussed the mortality of one of the committee members.

Mike Ward at Firegeezer has been working hard and doing some digging on this issue. Mike found the letter from Associated Firefighters of Illinois President Pat Devaney to Village of Oak Brook President John Craig. Devaney and others identify Craig as also being at the meeting. Here’s an excerpt from the letter: 

Quick Takes

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 Commercial fire in Falls Church, Virginia: I heard the sirens while standing outside the STATter911.com World Headquarters building on Saturday morning and was heading inside to turn on the scanner. But sad to say I immediately became distracted by some family matter and totally forgot about it. Clearly I am getting old and senile. But, despite my absence, there is video and photographic evidence of the fire on the second floor of a commercial building at 105. E. Annandale Road in Falls Church. There are some earlier photos here.

THE BIG STORY – Fire one firefighter/street person per month until they get the message: As you can imagine, there is a quite a lot of interest in and a growing number of comments about the recording we posted on Saturday from a meeting of an official committee of the Village of Oak Brook, Illinois where the firing idea was floated. The same person called firefighters and cops “street people” who only understand civilized force. Click here. It is worth your time to listen to the audio. It will give you insight into how a growing number people perceive firefighters and the money and pensions they are given to do this job. FossilMedic Mike Ward over at Firegeezer.com did a little research into the politics and the fire department in Oak Brook (and on top of it, he is apparently taking headline writing lessons from me). Make sure you click here to see what Mike discovered

Early video & audio from Manassas multi-home fire. Plus Dave showing his bias: Yes, I admit it. I am in favor of residential sprinklers and improved fire barriers for outside walls. I’m in agreement with Manassas Fire Marshal Frank Teevan that those two items can help prevent conflagrations like the one last Thursday that destroyed three-single family homes and damaged eight more. Like many, I’m not buying the arguments of NAHB. Click here for the audio & video from the fire, Dave’s rantings and ravings and lots of links to relevant studies.

Firefighter dies on Virginia’s Eastern Shore: EasterShoreFire.com has funeral arrangements and information on the death of William “Hal” Clark at a brush fire on Friday in Accomack County. Clark was president and a life member of the Atlantic Volunteer Fire & Rescue Company.  

Firefighter shocked & burned at wildfire that also disrupts 911 service: In Bodega, California, Firefighter Ben Hakala came in contact with a live power line while fighting a wildfire over the weekend. 911 service to the community was disrupted due to the fire. Click here for the story.

Fireground audio & video from six-alarm Toronto high-rise fire: The audio has multiple maydays as firefighters tried to deal with a fire on the 24th floor. Check it out.

Connecticut chiefs explain how budget issues are impacting safety: Chiefs in Wilton, Westport and Fairfield talk about standards and safety issues when operating with less than four people on a fire truck. Read the story.

Raw video from Harris County, Texas apartment fire: A woman is reported have been on the phone with 911 for eight-minutes while trapped in this burning apartment building around 10:30 Friday night. The line went dead and she didn’t make it out. The fire damaged or destroyed 24 units. Click here to read more.

Fireground audio from Manassas, Virginia multi-house fire. Video as first crews arrive. Home builders group says sprinklers wouldn’t have helped. FM disagrees.

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 The story above includes video of the arrival of the first units. It was shot by Darryl Childress.   

NIST fact sheet on house to house fire spread

A Tale of Two Fires or A Roof and Contents (A July, 2007 look at two house fires in Leesburg, VA.)

A column on FireGeezer.com called “Suburban Slums” by Mike Ward, a retired fire/EMS captain from Fairfax County, VA

When firefighters from the City of Manassas and Prince William County arrived on the scene on Tillett Loop yesterday afternoon two, large single-family homes were already burning. Before long, a third was on fire and others were threatened. WUSA9.com reporter Peggy Fox reports a spokesman for the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) said residential sprinklers would not have made a difference in this fire because it started on the outside of a home.   

While acknowledging the difficulties presented by the fire starting on the outside, Manassas Fire Marshall Francis Teevan disagrees with NAHB. In the third video on this page Teevan says that sprinklers could have slowed the spread of this fire once it hit the interior of the first house. Teevan believes it might have given firefighters a chance to get ahead of the flames.

Click the image for more photos from Darryl Childress as firefighters arrived on the scene.

NAHB is the group that will also tell you about the dangers of water damage caused by sprinklers. Have of any of you seen residential sprinkler water damage to rival the destruction that occurred on Tillett Loop yesterday? Do you think NAHB will ask the residents which option they would prefer?   

As in many previous fires in similarly built neighborhoods FM Teevan cited the usual contributing factors that, taken together, account for this conflagration: lightweight construction; exterior walls of vinyl siding over particle board; houses built too close together.   

Unfortunately these homes and neighborhoods are built to code. Efforts by Virginia’s fire service to get residential sprinklers and other meaningful changes to the building code in an effort to prevent future neighborhoods from being built to burn have been unsuccessful. They have been thwarted by the building lobby, with NAHB leading the way.   

In 2004 I looked at this issue in a two-part report called Too Close for Comfort (video at the very bottom of this page). The report was inspired by a similar fire in Prince William County six miles to the west of the one yesterday. Two years after that fire at 8659 Trenton Chapel Way, history repeated itself with another multi-home fire that began at 8671 Trenton Chapel Way. Click here for video of the 2006 fire.   

The day before the Tillett Loop fire three people died in a fire in a townhouse cluster in Lorton, Virginia. One can imagine that residential sprinklers may have prevented that tragedy from occuring. But there is something else that is relevant to this discussion. As much fire as there was in the home of origin in Lorton the fire did not spread. Remember, the other homes in Lorton adjoin the one that burned and weren’t 12 or 16 feet away as in Manassas. Of course, the difference is the Lorton structure was built in 1973 and the Manassas homes were built almost 30-years later. Is that progress?  

Maybe it’s time for the victims of these firestorms to show up on the door step at NAHB headquarters and get a first hand explanation as to why residential sprinklers and improved fire barriers on outside walls are such a bad thing. There’s more below.     

   

Here’s more on the story from WUSA9.com:   

Firefighters could not stop the blaze from burning three houses to the ground and damaging five more in Manassas. People who live nearby watched in astonishment as the fire gained momentum.   

“It was crazy. The fire jumped from house to house, the wind just blew it,” said Renee Qura.   

The flames didn’t have very far to go.   

“They are very close. Too close together, ” Qura said.   

Angel Verdun said that several years ago, they had looked at buying a home in this neighborhood, but did because her husband felt there wasn’t enough space between the homes.   

Manassas Fire Marshal Francis Teevan says the closeness of the home contributed to the fire’s rapid spread, ” We’re looking at ten to sixteen feet between these houses. Certainly if you were on lots larger, a quarter to a half acre, you wouldn’t see the type of spread that we have here.”   

And, he says, the exterior walls are within code, but have the lowest rating for fire prevention.   

“Here you have particle board over vinyl siding, which burns very fast.”   

   

The homes also have no sprinklers, they’re not required to, but the issue is under heated debate. A spokesperson for the National Home Builders Association says sprinklers cannot stop fire when it comes from outside a building and would not have helped stop the spread in this care. Teevan disagrees.   

“It came from the outside, which means it went inside. So as soon as it would hit the first barrier of sprinklers, and we have water application, we probably could have held the fire in check at that point until the fire department came and extinguished it the rest of the way,” said Teevan.   

Teevan is also the president of the Virginia Fire Prevention Association.   

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Quick Takes

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Warehouse fire in British Columbia: Fire yesterday at a kitchen cabinet business in Surrey.

Daughter wants apology over man mistakenly declared dead in Prince George’s County: When PGFD paramedics misidentified flesh eating bacteria and related signs as decomposition following death (despite a Glenarden, Maryland man still being alive), the department handled the bad news in text book fashion. Rather than wait for those pesky reporters to uncover the mistake, Chief Spokesman Mark Brady was proactive. Brady sent out a press release before there was a leak and told the story himself. The initial coverage had little shelf life and disappeared from the news rather quickly. A good lesson and reminder for all of us about a story that had the potential to linger for days.

But here’s another lesson. Candor in your efforts to get the bad news out and over with doesn’t necessarily mean you can completely control the message. Now, almost four months later the story has surfaced again because the daughter of the man (who really died the next day) says she wants an apology from the medics who made the error. Click here to watch the latest story and here to read it.

Where telling your own story may not be the best choice: London Fire Brigade Chief Ron Dobson is being criticized for using a blog post to threaten the termination of 6,000 firefighters if the work force doesn’t agree to controversial changes in their contract. According to MarketWire.com, “The Fire Brigades Union regional official Paul Embery said, ‘We’ve heard stories of companies sacking employees by text, but this must be the first time an employer has threatened to sack people by personal blog.’” Read more.

Dave wants to see them fry over radio turkey fryer stunt. Image from WTSP.

We have been wondering what happened with the radio DJ turkey fryer stunt investigation. Now we know: Do you recall our coverage of one of the most idiotic radio stunts since WKRP’s Arthur Carlson determined turkeys don’t fly? (Click here and here.) The Tampa Fire Department and Florida State Fire Marshal believe using the fryer inside a van and in turn setting the van on fire was a criminal act. You aren’t going to get an argument from me. Both agencies want to see felony charges for arson and injuring a firefighter. The Tampa Fire Department is now accusing Hillsborough State’s Attorney Mark Ober’s Office with dragging its feet in filing the charges. According to news reports, Ober’s people have had the fire marshal’s report for six months. A spokesman says these things take time, something the fire department isn’t buying. I am not a legal scholar, but maybe you just charge the radio team with being criminally stupid and arrogant?  And if the State’s Attorney doesn’t see the importance of sending a message that you don’t tolerate setting things on fire just to attract a radio or Internet audience, maybe he’s the one who is stupid and arrogant. Read and watch the update.

Only you can prevent Dave: Patting myself on the back for my insensitive headline on a fire video from Oregon. Check it out for yourself

All firefighters now home after explosion: The last of four firefighters injured in the explosion of a house in Sacramento a week ago is out of the hospital. Click here for the latest.

Letting the public decide staffing levels: Firefighters in Palo Alto, California are the latest to turn to the citizens in helping to prevent staffing cuts. Here’s their story.

Don’t forget to come by and see me in Baltimore next week: For the third year in a row, Bill “Firegeezer” Schumm and Mike “FossilMedic” Ward have invited me to share their booth at Firehouse Expo. This year we are in Booth 738. Bill was thinking ahead when he ordered a larger booth. Apparently he has turned the place into a homeless shelter for fire service bloggers. I understand THE Fire Critic (not just any Fire Critic) Rhett Fleitz and Fire Daily’s John Mitchell will be originating their award winning Firefighter Netcast from the booth (just don’t block the view of the STATter911.com sign). By the time we are done I think the name will be changed to Firefighter Nutcast.

From the STATter911.com Archives: 1973 building collapse in Bailey’s Crossroads, Virginia kills 14.

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In March of 1973 I was just short of my 18th birthday and still living in Baltimore. Instead of showing up for my senior year of high school (had the highest number of unexcused absences in the junior year) I was attending the Community College of Baltimore, where I worked at the campus radio station, WBJC-FM. At the same time I was interning at WCBM radio (Bob “Smoke” Shilling, who sometimes checks out STATter911.com, was the news director).

Skyline 3My interest in the fire service was growing. While at CCB I was taking a fire science course along with my radio and TV curriculum. Around that time I somehow talked Baltimore City Fire Department Chief Thomas Burke into letting me spend a few weeks riding with his department. He set me up with Peter  O’Connor who was then Battalion Chief 2 and later chief of the department. While up until then I was only interested in the fire service as a buff, the time spent at Engine 6′s quarters convinced me I might want to try doing this stuff.

I read everything I could get my hands on about the fire service and began saving articles about significant incidents. One of those that caught my eye was from a place called Bailey’s Crossroads. I had never heard of it. But what happened there on Friday, March 2, 1973 was making big news. A middle section of a  26-story building under construction as part of the Skyline complex had collapsed. It took the lives of 14 workers and injured more than 30 others. This occurred well before Fairfax County had  an urban search and rescue team.

The reporter on the film is the legendary Mike Buchanan, one of the best reporters the TV business has ever seen. Mike was also instrumental in getting me hired at Channel 9.

I now live just down the street from the high-rise canyon that is Skyline. Through the blog I have gotten to know two people who lived in the area at the time. Both are now retired from the Fairfax County Fire & Rescue Department and should be familiar names to STATter911.com readers.

Skyline 4From Firegeezer Bill Schumm:

At the time, Co. 10 Bailey’s was still in the old firehouse on Rte.7 not far from the site. Two friends of mine (one of them Capt. Jim Small mentioned at the start of the tape) were working that day. They were in the firehouse when somebody came racing up to the bay door telling them that the new building just collapsed. They didn’t believe him and kinda gave it the “yeah, sure” treatment and started laughing it off. Then the tones hit. 

I didn’t work in that part of town, so never responded to the call. But I got up there a couple of days later with my 35mm. camera and got some good slides of the thing. They’re still around here somewhere, I think. 

Harry Diezel was working at the training center then and he told me about loading up the recruit class on the bus and going down there to search for victims. They used a technique where the whole group would stand along the top of the collapsed debris and everybody would simultaneously stomp on the concrete while yelling. Then at a signal, all would stop and there would be total silence on the entire work site while people would listen for any kind of a response from underneath. Never got any, though.

From FossilMedic Mike Ward:

I would occasionally play cards at a buddy’s house. We were sophomores. His parent’s house was just north of Route 7, in the shadow of the high rise complex.  We hung out at the scene while the sun set Friday night. 

Three or four ambulances were lined up on Leesburg Pike with their rear doors open. The drama was offset when I realized that they were shut down. With 19 months as a VFD weekend warrior, it was the first major, multi-jurisdictional event I witnessed. Not much was going on so we went back to his house.

Around midnite I went back to the scene. A DCFD jeep with a portable generator had a floodlight focused on the corner of the smaller section of the building. About 2 am I was in the crowded Krispy Kreme, listening to conversations.

Skyline 2

Quick Takes

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House fire in Buffalo: Shawn McMahon and Don Murtha shot this fire last night at 275 Strauss Street. There is a report of one person burned. Their still pictures can be found here. Click here to listen to the fireground audio from Erie County Fire Wire.

Explosion in Cleveland: We have audio from FireSceneAudio.com and brief early video following yesterday’s explosion that destroyed three homes and damaged many others in a Cleveland neighborhood. Here’s our coverage.

4K a year to volunteer in one part of Prince George’s County, Maryland: The Bowie Volunteer Fire Department has presented an incentive plan to the Bowie City Council that would allow active volunteers to receive a stipend of up to $4000 each year. At the same time the firefighters want Bowie to consider operating its own fire department, separate from the short staffed PGFD, and similar to what is done with the Bowie Police Department. Virginia Terhune has the story at Gazette.net.

It’s the cover up: A good reminder of how not to handle things when they go wrong. Two Fond du Lac, Wisconsin police officers were fired recently and two firefighters received lengthy suspensions after one of the cops became involved in an off-duty crash. The firefighters were passengers in the car and according to fdlreporter.com had been drinking. The news reports indicate what made things worse was the cover up of the crash that came about with the assistance of an on-duty officer and the firefighters. Here are the details.

Firefighter to return to work after child rape charges dropped: More than a month ago a Worcester, Massachusetts firefighter was arrested at the firehouse and charged with raping a seven-year-old girl who was “well known” to him. A grand jury found there was no evidence to move this case forward and the charges will be dropped. The firefighter is expected to soon be back to work. Here’s the story.

Mayor Menino on firefighter’s raise: Boston’s mayor writes a column on the 19% raise an arbitrator awarded firefighters and says the money isn’t there. Check it out.

Now retired firefighter and son to stand trial for murder: An update on that ugly road rage scene in Philadelphia. A now former Philly firefighter and his son have been ordered to stand trial in the beating death of a man. Here is the latest.

An announcement for jobs where you might want to keep your bags packedFossilMedic Mike Ward posts the announcement for the medical director and assistant medical director positions in the DC Fire & EMS Department at Firegeezer. I lost count long ago how many people have filled that post in the almost 30-years I have been covering the department. I do know this will be the third medical director since Chief Dennis Rubin took over three years ago. 

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.

    Quick Takes

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    PGFD second-alarm: Despite all of the controversy, they still fight fires in Prince George’s County, Maryland. This is Chief Spokesman Mark Brady’s video of a fire yesterday afternoon at a storage facility in Landover Hills. The report was for smoke coming from a storage locker in the 3800 block of 64th Avenue. Brady says the firefighters found heavy smoke coming from a whole row of lockers. Two firefighters injured their hands during overhaul. One was sent to Baltimore for a hospital that specializes in hand trauma.

    You will want to read this – Father & son, chief & assistant chief, both arrested during fire at son’s home: The man whose house was on fire Sunday in the Village of Powell in Monroe Township, Pennsylvania was not happy with the way firefighters were going about their business. That man ended up on the wrong end of a state trooper’s stun gun and was arrested. So was his father. The two men are the ranking officers of a neighboring fire company. Check it out.

    An amazingly tragic series of events: I will let you be the judge of whether justice was served with the rapid fire news that keeps coming out of DeKalb County, Georgia. From, by all accounts so far, a very flawed response to an elderly woman’s call for help, to a report by fire officials, to the termination of three officers and a firefighter, to the immediate resignation of the fire chief took just eight days. I am sure there is something, but nothing comes immediately to mind of any other fire service incidents that compare to how quickly and severely this one was handled. We have the latest from Georgia with yesterday afternoon’s sudden departure of Chief David Foster. Click here.

    Steve Skipton once again on the scene: Click the image for Steve's series of pictures at PhillyFireNews.com of a fire yesterday afternoon at 768 Division Street in Camden, New Jersey.

    Steve Skipton once again on the scene: Click the image for Steve's series of pictures at PhillyFireNews.com of a fire yesterday afternoon at 768 Division Street in Camden, New Jersey.

    A must see interview with an injured firefighter: We mentioned this yesterday, but hadn’t yet watch the video from our sister-station. Click here to watch the interview from Cory Broich’s hospital bed. The Clearwater, Minnesota firefighter has been hospitalized since last week after being struck by a vehicle on I-94. The firefighter has a number of operations ahead on his badly mangled legs before he will be able to attempt walking again. He talks about trying to crawl away to avoid being hit again. You will also see Firefighter Broich with his five children who can’t wait for daddy to be home again (could be three weeks).

    Command “badly let down” firefighters: That’s one of the conclusions of the investigation in Australia of the deadly “Black Saturday” fires from a year ago in Marysville. Read the latest.

    Mayor says he didn’t do it: In Lancaster, Pennsylvania, Mayor Rick Gray says the standoff with firefighters about layoffs is “not my decision”. He puts that at the feet of firefighters. Read more.

    Mayor says he did it: In Chillicothe, Ohio, Mayor Joe Sulzer says he ordered Chief Bruce Vaughn to reprimand two firefighters who spoke up about issues at a council meeting. The mayor says speaking in such forums about policy issues is “a management right”. The firefighters say it is also a union right. Read more about the dispute.

    Drugs and alcohol in Boston: Random testing is still at the center of a long contract dispute, but there already is a more limited program in place for Boston firefighters. One TV station investigated and shows the results from the drug and alcohol screening of new employees and those who show signs of impairment. Click here.

    Same problem in Pittsburgh: The mayor and the union are pointing fingers at each other over missing a deadline for a new drug and alcohol policy after some high profile incidents. Here’s the latest. Click here for our previous coverage.

    Watching the axe swing in New York: City Council members aren’t sure this time they will be able to restore what could be drastic cuts for FDNY. They are talking about the possibility of 20 companies and 500 firefighters. Click here for a good summary of the politics by The New York Times. And here for a little history lesson from FossilMedic Mike Ward that includes a classic newspaper headline.

    And, similar budget issues at the other end of the country: In the City of Los Angeles they are studying the possibility of fire department layoffs. Read more.

    His kind of town: We finally added Steve Redick’s second video of a busy Sunday night in Chicago. Two extra-alarm fires about two-hours apart destroyed a church and a restaurant. Redick, who dispatches those fire trucks when he isn’t chasing them, also has two books on fire rigs in and around Chicago. Click here to watch the video, listen to the fireground audio and read the details. Also, Firegeezer adds his own views of the two fires with Larry Shapiro’s fine photos.

    More from East St. Louis, Illinois: The firefighters make their case about furloughs and budget cuts in an already thin department. Click here. You may recall our recent posting, with video, of just how thin they are running in East St. Louis.