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UPDATE – Raw video & fireground audio: Old mill fire in Cornwall, New York. Watch collapse. Command has difficulty getting firefighters off roof & out of building.

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In Cornwall, New York (Orange County) firefighters are still dealing with a fire at a former mill that came in just before 11:00 this morning. Here are all eight parts from Paul Anderson's video (bmxking1504 on YouTube). The still frames below are from Anderson's video and show the fire's spread. The top one is what it looked like when he arrived and below it is how it appeared at the end of Part 4 (not yet sure of the time interval).

In the audio above the first unit went on the scene with "fire showing all over". At 3:47 Cornwall 1 advises, "This is going to be an exterior attack. Nobody in this building."

At 16:45 the announcement is made again that this is an exterior operation. At 17:20 there are a series of messages from command telling units to get off the roof and indications from command that those orders are not be followed fast enough.

At 27:00 command becomes aware there are other firefighters operating on the interior and again orders everyone out of the building.

At 28:45 command is told that there are eight firefighters operating in the building and the roof is about to collapse. Command orders again that this is a defensive operation and tells units to sound their air horns.

There is a significant collapse at 1:15 on Part 5.

From YNN News:

A 911 call reporting the fire on Mill Street came in shortly before 11 a.m. and firefighters are still working at the site. Part of the building is still on fire, but officials say it is now under control.

The former mill is now being used to house seven businesses, which are now destroyed.

From RecordOnline.com:

More than 20 businesses — tech companies, food companies, food, furniture and art supply firms — are housed in the former Firth carpet company complex.

150 firefighters from 14 are fire companies are battling the stubborn fire. The flames are working their way through the large series of connected buildings that once housed the Firth mill company of Cornwall.

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Marco Island Fire Rescue ambulance delay report says hospital, FD & other agencies failed to meet community expectations. Chief says citizens deserve answers.

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Read 65 page report from City of Marco Island Fire Rescue Department

On Marco Island, Florida, Chief Michael Murphy is calling for state investigators to look further at what the fire department discovered in its own report into why it took almost an hour before an ambulance was ready to take 80-year-old Paul Anderson from an urgent care facility to Naples Community Hospital after he suffered a stroke on October 2. Anderson died at the hospital. The Marco Island Fire Rescue Department report concluded "that the system failed to meet the needs of our residents and did not meet the expectations of service that our residents and businesses should expect.'

Here's part of the report's summary:

On the morning of October 2nd a Marco Island resident brought his friend who was not feeling well to the NCH Marco Island Healthcare Center. The patient was checked into the facility for evaluation. The patient needed transport to the Naples Community Hospital for treatment. As described in the Deputy Chief’s report numerous efforts were made by the friend personally, the NCH Marco Island Healthcare Staff through 911 calls and our own personnel to obtain emergency transport for the patient all of which were hampered and delayed. The one critical issue was the fact that an ambulance owned by Naples Healthcare System was not staffed at 800: AM and the crew did not arrive until after 9:00 A.M. This issue became compounded by the actions of other agency personnel not on the scene, following directives in some cases, making phone calls, making assumptions despite seven requests resulting in delaying and cancelling, the ambulance in our station, an ambulance coming from Isle of Capri, and the Medflight Helicopter. In addition, a needed medication requested by the NCH Transport Medic in charge of the call was not on the NCH Transport ambulance or on our Fire Unit and had to be retrieved from the NCH Marco Island Healthcare Center for her to administer in treatment of the patient. However the medication is carried on Collier County EMS ambulances.  

Here's an excerpt from the story by WBBH-TV:

NBC2 uncovered NCH is supposed to have a paramedic on staff during hours that coincide with the urgent care center's hours; but the day Anderson was taken there, a paramedic wasn't scheduled to work until an hour after the office opened.

"I'm not clearly pointing the finger at NCH in this issue.  There are multiple failures to the system that resulted in this case," Murphy said.  "There were potentially violations of a COPCN, there were potentially violations of Duty to Act with response to 911, and I think our citizens deserve an answer."