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Delivery Driver Survives TX Elevator Plunge

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As a pizza delivery driver took a ride in an elevator, it broke and plunged seven floors down, a Texas restaurant says.

Finally, after the elevator fell seven floors, its brakes “kicked in” and stopped just 3 feet short of “slamming into the ground floor,” Woody’s Brick Oven Pizza and Grill said on Facebook late Saturday night.

The delivery driver was in a Raider Park elevator in Lubbock, KLBK reported.

Following the fall, he called his wife via iPhone FaceTime, and she recorded the call in a video the pizza joint shared to social media.

Text messages in a “work chat” included in the video show someone telling the delivery man to “stay calm” as several calls were made to 911 and help was on the way.

“Yeah I heard them knocking but now it’s quiet,” he replied.

The video of the rescue, which does not have sound, shows a firefighter wedging his hand between the door and the frame before he and another first responder managed to slide the door open.

The delivery driver was “a little frazzled” following the fall, his employer said, but he was able to safely exit the elevator.

The man was the pizza shop’s “late night” delivery driver, so Woody’s Brick Oven Pizza and Grill then called it a night.

power outage in the area, reported 30 minutes after Texas Tech’s football game, may have led to the elevator incident, according to WAFF.

©2021 The Charlotte Observer. Visit charlotteobserver.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Firefighters rescued a pizza delivery driver who plummeted seven floors in an elevator at Raider Park in Lubbock before the emergency brakes kicked in.

September 20, 2021 – By Kaitlyn Alanis – Source The Charlotte Observer

Military Plane Crashes into TX Neighborhood

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Two pilots were seriously injured and multiple houses damaged when a military aircraft crashed into the back yard of a home in Lake Worth on Sunday.Sept. 20, 2021

September 20, 2021 – By James Hartley, Emily Brindley and Haley Samsel – Source Fort Worth Star-Telegram

Two military pilots were seriously injured when they ejected from their plane before it crashed into the back yard of a home in North Texas during a training exercise Sunday morning.

No residents in the neighborhood, off Tejas Trail in Lake Worth, were injured, authorities said at a press conference Sunday afternoon. But families were displaced from three homes that had significant damage.

One of the pilot’s parachutes became tangled in power lines, and the other pilot landed in a nearby neighborhood, authorities said. Both pilots were taken to local hospitals, one in critical condition and the other in serious condition, according to a MedStar official. Two neighbors said they saw one pilot’s flight suit catch fire. The names of the pilots have not been released.

The Navy jet crashed in a back yard between the 4000 blocks of Tejas Trail and Dakota Trail shortly before 11 a.m. Sunday, according to Lake Worth police.

The neighborhood is near the Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base in Fort Worth, in an area that the military has identified as a potential accident zone, because of its proximity to where planes take off and land, police said at a news conference Sunday afternoon.

The cause of the crash is under investigation.

A statement on the Chief of Naval Air Training Facebook page said it was a Navy T-45C Goshawk jet trainer aircraft assigned to Training Air Wing 2 at Naval Air Station Kingsville, Texas, that crashed in Lake Worth, about two miles north of Joint Reserve Base Fort Worth.

“The two occupants ejected from the aircraft,” the Navy’s statement said. “The instructor pilot is in stable condition; the student naval aviator’s condition is unknown but he is alive and receiving treatment. Both were transported to medical facilities for evaluation.”

“The pilots were conducting a routine training flight that originated from Corpus Christi International Airport,” the statement said. “The cause of the crash is unknown.”

The Naval Safety Center will be in charge of the investigation. Officials from the Navy, Air Force and Lockheed Martin responded to the scene along with first responders from Lake Worth and Fort Worth, authorities said.

The Red Cross is assisting residents who had to be evacuated from their homes, Lake Worth Fire Chief Ryan Arthur said.

“This incident could have been much worse knowing this plane went down in a residential area here in Lake Worth,” Arthur said.

Lake Worth first responders have had regular training exercises to practice for the possibility of a plane crash, which is one of their highest priorities for emergency drills because of the area’s “unique position” near the military base, Arthur said. He said this is the first such crash during his time with the department.

The fire was contained to the plane, but the three homes were damaged by debris from the crash, officials said.

The accident also caused electrical outages within a two- to three-block radius, and the power may be out for a few days while the wreckage is removed from the area, authorities said.

Lt. Michelle Tucker, public affairs officer for the Chief of Naval Air Training in Corpus Christi, described the military’s process for evaluating damage and reimbursing homeowners.

“We have personnel go out to the scene, and they reach out to those individual homeowners directly, and they take care of those things for them, so it should be pretty seamless,” Tucker said. “That process is already in place, between our legal department and then environmental cleanup as well.

“They’re very, very thorough. They will return the property to as close as pre-crash conditions as possible, maybe even better, hopefully. That’s something that we definitely take very seriously. It’s really hard on homeowners.”

NEIGHBORS REACT

By mid-afternoon, authorities still had the crash site off Tejas and Dakota Trails blocked from traffic and media.

Monica Wilson and her husband live two houses down from where the jet crashed. She had just taken her grandchildren inside from the back yard when she heard the crash.

“I’m still hearing it now,” she said hours after. “It’s not something that I’ll be able to forget.”

She said her mind tried to run through different possibilities of what the sound could have been: a car crash, a blown power transformer, two blasts from a short gun. None of those were loud enough to have been the sound, though, she said.

Then she and her husband saw a pilot coming down with a parachute. His flight suit caught fire when he hit a power line down the road at Olé Donut, she said. Wilson said she saw a Careflight helicopter come into the area.

Her grandchildren were terrified at the sound, Wilson said, but she was able to calm them down and get them back to their parents’ house.

The emergency response was startlingly fast, she said. First responders from Lake Worth, Saginaw and Fort Worth were already arriving in the area before she fully understood what happened. They must have been alerted that the aircraft was having problems and mobilized to respond before the crash, she concluded.

Sitting in a folding Buc-ee’s chair in front of her house next to her sister, Vanessa Morales, Wilson said she wasn’t sure she wanted to sit outside and watch as police and military personnel came and went on the other side of the yellow police tape, bordering the right side of her front yard. But she couldn’t make herself get up and go inside.

Instead, she took video and photo of what was happening. One video she took after the crash shows plumes of smoke billowing from behind her neighbors’ houses.

Wilson said it took a couple of hours before she started to process how serious the crash was — and how close it was to her home.

“Now it’s unnerving to live here,” Wilson said. “Now it’s gonna make me nervous when the planes fly through.”

Rey Martinez said he’s lived in his home on Dakota Trail for about 17 years. When he heard the loud noises, he stepped outside.

“When I came out, I saw the smoke, so I followed the smoke and that’s when I saw the plane on fire,” Martinez said.

He and a neighbor walked toward Olé Donut, the shop at the end of the block, and saw something hanging from the power lines, he said.

“We saw something hanging and [said], ‘Hey, I think that looks like a parachute or something.’ We went over there, the guy was still on the ground,” Martinez said. “He was on fire.”

The paramedics showed up quickly, Martinez said, and put out the fire with extinguishers from the donut shop.

Martinez also saw debris scattered in the neighborhood, including the seat of the plane that the pilot ejected. And just down the street, he saw the house where the plane itself had crashed.

“It was just a lot of fire,” he said.

Neighbors near the edge of the boundary also heard the crash.

Mary Joyner, whose mother lives near the crash site, said they were sitting at the kitchen table when they heard a “ba-boom.” In the same moment, the power went out.

Joyner said she assumed it was a blown transformer, and was confused when she saw people running down the street toward the source of the noise.

“That just wasn’t what I would’ve ever thought … an airplane crash would sound like.”

When she stepped into the front yard, she saw a plume of black smoke and smelled what she described as a metallic smell.

Joyner said her mother has lived in the house for more than 50 years. It’s the house where Joyner grew up, and over time they’d become accustomed to the daily sound of planes flying overhead.

But Joyner said she can’t remember another plane crash since she was a child.

“You live here all your life, you know it can happen, the planes are right here,” Joyner said. “You always have the thought.”

Down the block, the Cox family said they, too, have gotten used to the air traffic. But when the plane crashed, Aaron Cox and his father Jerry Cox both heard what they described as a dull “pop pop.”

Aaron Cox said he also felt vibrations in the ground at the same time. And then, all at once, the power cut out.

Then there was the smell in the air.

“When you’re starting a grill up and you’ve sprayed the lighter fluid, that’s what it smelled like to me,” Aaron Cox said.

By about 2 p.m., both the Cox family and Joyner said their power hadn’t been restored. Joyner worried about her mother, who needs electricity for her oxygen machine. Both families said they hadn’t received any notification of when power might return.

©2021 Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Visit at star-telegram.com Distributed by Tribune Content Age

MA Crews Battle Fire on Top Floor of Three-Decker

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Worcester firefighters had to knock out the walls on the upper floor and in the attic space to extinguish the two-alarm residential blaze Sunday.

September 20, 2021 – By Brad Petrishen – Source Telegram & Gazette

WORCESTER, MA — Thirteen people were displaced Sunday afternoon following a two-alarm fire at a three-decker on Hitchcock Road, city fire officials said.

The Fire Department responded to 18 Hitchcock Road around 3 p.m., finding everyone from the residence already outside and fire on the top floor, District Chief Charlie Rogacz said.

Firefighters extinguished the blaze after knocking out walls to get to flames inside the walls in the third floor and attic, Rogacz said.

The job was made trickier on account of the roof being knee-walled, Rogacz said, a configuration that makes reaching the fire more difficult.

Rogacz praised firefighters’ work using axes to hack through the slate roof to aid the effort.

Rogacz said the third floor sustained fire damage, while the lower floors had mostly smoke and water damage.

A collection of neighbors watched as firefighters shot plumes of water from the roof that flowed down the exterior of the building’s walls and reached the street.

As smoke stopped pouring from the roof, firefighters brought out medications to one of the displaced residents. Rogacz said the Red Cross would be called if any of the 13 residents needed assistance.

William Pena, who lives at the home with numerous family members, including his wife and two children, spoke to investigators shirtless on the warm afternoon.

Pena said he was getting a haircut when his son called him and told him the house was on fire. He said he did not know when he might be able to go back inside.

©2021 www.telegram.com. Visit telegram.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Feds Suspect Arson in MO Historic Church Fire

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Federal and local investigators suspect arson is the cause of a weekend fire at the historic Harlem Baptist Church in Kansas City first built in 1907.

September 20, 2021 – By Robert A. Cronkleton – Source The Kansas City Star

Sep. 20—Federal and local fire investigators suspect arson is the cause of a fire over the weekend at a historic Harlem Baptist Church in Kansas City, North, a spokesman with the Kansas City office of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives said.

“They’ve determined that this was a set fire,” said John Ham, public information officer for the ATF in Kansas City. “Setting a fire in a house of worship is a federal crime.”

The church serves as the gathering place for the United Christian Fellowship. The congregation is mostly from the South Sudan.

The ATF, which has been investigating the fire with the Kansas City Police Department’s bomb and arson unit and an investigative unit from the Kansas City Fire Department, will take the lead, Ham said.

The fire was discovered about 9:15 a.m. Saturday at the church at 251 N. Baltimore Avenue, which is near Wheeler Downtown Airport.

When firefighters arrived, they saw smoke coming from the building. When they entered the church, they discovered that the front of the building and an area of stairs going down to the basement were fully engulfed in fire. It was determined that was where the fire started.

“As they started to egress that area, the stairway that led to the basement level of the church gave way,” Ham said. “That fireman that was on it was not hurt, thankfully. They were able to pull him out.”

The fire was brought under control a few minutes later, but not before it caused pretty heavy fire damage to the front of the church, Ham said.

“The actual sanctuary of the church was not impinged by fire,” he said. “The fire didn’t make it in there, but there’s smoke and water damage in there.”

Arriving firefighters noted that one of the two front doors was standing opened. Based on that, they contacted Kansas City police and the ATF, which has a Congressional mandate to investigate fires at houses of worship.

Federal and local officials have been investigating the cause of the fire since Saturday and determined by Sunday afternoon that it had been set, Ham said.

“We’ve recovered some very strong evidence, but anytime the community has information that they can share with us, it makes the investigation move that much more swiftly and give this church an opportunity for justice and an opportunity for healing,” Ham said.

Anyone with information about the fire is asked to call the TIPS Hotline at 816-474-TIPS (8477).

Fire investigators recovered a lot of forensic evidence that will be processed by the police department. Some of that evidence may be sent to the ATF’s fire laboratory.

Investigators have also conducted some interviews, which Ham said provided some promising information. They are also checking video from the surrounding businesses.

Once a suspect or suspects are identified, the ATF will work with the U.S. attorney’s office and the Clay County prosecutor’s office to determine which office has the better case.

The church is the last remaining original building of a community known as Harlem, which is just east of the Wheeler Downtown Airport. The name came from early immigrants from Northern Europe who said the topography of the area looked like Haarlem, a city outside of Amsterdam.

The area, which never incorporated, was founded around 1820 and served as a landing on the river for the steamboats bringing supplies and settlers. During it’s heyday, it had three churches, grocery stores, a livery stable, a saloon, a school, a justice court and two hotels.

Harlem Baptist Church was founded in 1907 as the Harlem Tabernacle Church.

“It was the center of social life for the community for 120 years,” said Jason Withington of Kansas City, one of the church’s trustees. “To find out that somebody intentionally set the fire, it’s just heartbreaking.”

The church became the Harlem Baptist Church until it ceased operations in 2005, he said. It sat vacant until the Sudanese congregation started gathering there about a dozen years ago. The church, however, still has a sign outside saying ” Harlem Baptist Church.”

Withington first found out about the fire when his cousin who owns the business across the street called telling him to get down to the church.

“Honestly, I started crying because this church has meant so much to me and my family,” Withington said.

The church is where he was baptized and where his father was baptized. His grandparents went to the church for 60 years. His grandfather was even a deacon at the church.

“It’s heartbreaking to hear,” he said. “Especially when you have a great appreciation for the history of Harlem … It’s really devastating.”

Withington said they have not been inside yet to assess the damage, so it’s too early to discuss what’s next for the church. He said hopes whoever set the fire turns themselves in.

There were no injuries in the fire and no one was in the church when firefighters arrived. The fire, however, put firefighters in danger.

“We’re very fortunate that we’re not standing here talking about a firefighter that’s in the hospital,” Ham said.

(c)2021 The Kansas City Star (Kansas City, Mo.)

Visit The Kansas City Star (Kansas City, Mo.) at www.kansascity.com

Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

NYC Teen Leaps to Death During Apartment Fire

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The distressed 18 year old ran away from responding FDNY firefighters and leaped to his death from atop a 10-story East Harlem apartment building.

Sept. 19, 2021 – By Elizabeth Keogh – Source New York Daily News

A Manhattan teen died Saturday when he jumped from the roof of his apartment building as firefighters fought a kitchen blaze in his 10th-floor apartment, witnesses and authorities said.

Firefighters responded at 4:23 p.m. to 440 E. 105th St., a New York City Housing Authority building in East Harlem.

When firefighters arrived at the 10th floor apartment, Jamel Martinez, 18, fled, said police sources.

Martinez’s family was not home at the time, said the sources. Witnesses said Martinez jumped from the building’s roof.

“He was a sweet kid. Respectable, decent, loving and caring. Just a beautiful kid,” said a 10th-floor neighbor. She added that Martinez had recently graduated from high school.

The neighbor said she and her daughter were napping in their home when the fire broke out.

“All of a sudden, we couldn’t see,” the neighbor said. “There was smoke everywhere.”

Firefighters banged on her door and told her and her daughter to stay put, the woman said.

But when they were able, they got out.

“We got up and we ran because the apartment was filling up with smoke,” she said. “We couldn’t breathe. We just ran.”

Twenty Fire Department units and 80 firefighters responded to the scene, officials said.

©2021 New York Daily News. Visit nydailynews.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

CA Wildfire Flames Reach Famed Giant Forest

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The KNP Complex fires in Sequoia National Park have entered the famed Giant Forest area, home to the General Sherman and other cherished towering sequoias.

September 19, 2021 – By Michael Cabanatuan – Source San Francisco Chronicle

Sep. 18—Flames from the KNP Complex fires in Sequoia National Park entered the famed Giant Forest area, home to the General Sherman and other named and cherished towering sequoias Friday.

Mark Garrett, a fire information officer, told The Chronicle he was heading to the grove of sequoias when he had to turn around as fire crossed the General’s Highway and neared the Giant Forest. Some of the crews clearing brush and doing controlled burns also fled the area, he said.

“It looks like the two fires merged into one and are going into Giant Forest,” he said, referring to the Colony and Paradise fires that make up the KNP Complex in the national park and surrounding national forests.

The General Sherman and the other tallest and most famous trees are partially wrapped in foil and encircled by protective barriers carved into the earth.

Fire officials said they were confident that the Giant Forest, about 3 square miles and containing about 2,000 sequoias, is well-protected against the flames with the floor of the forest cleared of most debris and a long history of prescribed burns to reduce fuel in the area.

“The General Sherman is wrapped and so are a lot of the other named trees,” Garrett said. “The others are at least raked and cleared around the bases so the fires won’t burn up to the canopies.”

During a town hall meeting in Three Rivers ( Tulare County), a fire official said firefighters were concerned about preventing the roots and bases of the giant trees as well as existing burn scars on their bark — known as “cat faces” — from catching fire.

The fire is moving northeast toward the Lodgepole area, where the park has a visitor center, campground, restaurants and housing for park employees, who’ve been evacuated. Structure protection crews have been hard at work in the area for the past couple of days, Garrett said.

Fire officials assured residents living south of the fire that while the tall trees are getting the most media attention, they’re prepared to evacuate communities and protect homes and businesses if the winds shift and the fire shifts direction.

The KNP Complex, a collection of fires ignited by lightning Sept. 10, had consumed 11,365 acres, growing by more than 4,000 acres in a day, and was 0% contained at midday Friday. The flames continued to advance toward the grove of giant sequoias and were expected to burn into the forest Saturday or Sunday, according to firefighters.

The General Sherman stands 275 feet tall and has a diameter of about 36 feet at its base. It takes about 20 people joining hands to encircle it. While its rank among the titans of trees is often debated, it is considered the largest tree by volume and the world’s biggest sequoia. Some California coastal redwoods are taller. The General Sherman is estimated to be 2,300 to 2,700 years old.

Fire crews on Thursday wrapped the base of the General Sherman and some other sequoias in the Giant Forest area with an aluminum insulation wrap to protect them from the flames. The trees have apparently been wrapped all the way around and up about 10 feet, though photographs released by the National Park Service show only part of the wrapping.

Wrapping the giant trees around their bases helps prevent damage to the cambium, a layer of the tree inside its thick bark, by protecting it against lingering fire burning on the ground, said Joanna Nelson, Save the Redwoods League’s director of science and conservation planning.

In addition to the foil wraps, crews have also dug protective lines around the giant trees and set controlled fires to clear some of the underbrush, debris and dried fuel in the 5-square-mile Giant Forest, home to about 2,000 soaring sequoias and the national park’s top attraction.

Steve Bumgardner, a videographer and former ranger, firefighter and tour guide in the park for more than 20 years, said the storied grove of trees is likely to survive the fire because the area has been well managed, including with controlled fires, for decades.

“If any grove can handle a fire it’s the Giant Forest,” he said. “It has had 50 years of prescribed burns.”

Nelson declined to speculate on the fate of the General Sherman but said she expects it will be well protected.

“The General Sherman has the aluminum wrap and will be defended by firefighters,” Nelson said. “There are specific trees that call out for special protection. When you’re famous as a tree, you get special care.”

But the weather appears to be changing, with onshore winds from the west picking up speed and pushing the flames, according to the Forest Service. Afternoon and evening winds of 15 to 25 mph are forecast with gusts of up to 40 mph.

To the south of the KNP Complex in Sequoia National Forest, the Windy Fire on Friday had grown to 6,849 acres with 0% containment. Residents of the Tule River Indian Reservation and areas nearby were urged to monitor the fire’s progress.

That fire has prompted evacuation orders for two communities and burned into a portion of the Peyrone Sequoia Grove, forest officials reported — though because the area is inaccessible, an assessment of the damage to giant sequoia trees may take days to complete.

In northeastern California, the Dixie Fire burning across five counties was at 960,641 acres and 88% contained on Friday. The Caldor Fire near Lake Tahoe was 218,876 acres and 71% contained.

(c)2021 the San Francisco Chronicle

Visit the San Francisco Chronicle at www.sfchronicle.com

Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

One of Europe’s premier fire service events is coming to America’s shores

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INTERSCHUTZ USA will bring the world’s best in fire and EMS training, equipment and technology to Philadelphia in October 2021

September 17, 2021

ontent provided by INTERSCHUTZ USA

As the world begins to reopen, the fire service needs to train and gather more than ever. INTERSCHUTZ USA fills that need, bringing to America what audiences around the world have always enjoyed at INTERSCHUTZ (Germany), a success story that dates back more than 60 years. The show, taking place this October, will showcase the world’s best in training, equipment and technology for firefighters, fire rescue personnel and EMS personnel.

This October 13-16, Philadelphia, PA will be transformed to a hub for the fire service and related outfits, featuring three full days of exhibits including fire service manufacturers, providers and resources from the U.S. and around the world. Attendees can participate in intensive workshops, three days of comprehensive conference sessions, product demonstrations and networking opportunities available to all attendees.

INTERSCHUTZ,  Germany's premiere fire event, is bringing training, technology and equipment for fire and EMS to the U.S. for the first time in October 2021.
INTERSCHUTZ, Germany’s premiere fire event, is bringing training, technology and equipment for fire and EMS to the U.S. for the first time in October 2021. (INTERSCHUTZ)

Conference sessions and trainings at the show will discuss timely topics for the fire service and will be led by highly-vetted instructors. The show’s Incident Management sessions are now live at interschutzusa.com/training. The remaining conference sessions will be made public throughout the summer on a track-by-track basis, including an Instructor Track in partnership with the International Society of Fire Service Instructors (ISFSI), content around Recruitment and Retention, content around Diversity & Inclusion, a Leadership track and EMS content.

Show Manager Rachel Lesczynski is excited to get this year’s show off the ground: “INTERSCHUTZ USA brings the global fire service perspective to the U.S. It is vital that we engage fire service leadership from around the world, not only to identify topics and need but also to secure appropriate instructors. Support from the Conference Advisory Board, Philadelphia Commissioner Adam Thiel and the global INTERSCHUTZ family was instrumental in our ability to bring this conference to Philadelphia; being able to finally gather again in person will give attendees the chance to experience hands-on demos and face-to-face interactions with peers.”

ACTIVITY AND EDUCATION LEADING UP TO THE SHOW

With training needs as they are in the U.S., INTERSCHUTZ USA knew it could create opportunities to keep the fire service engaged even before in-person events were ready to take place. Show organizers created the INTERSCHUTZ USA Digital Shift, a year-round webinar series. Each session, taking place at least once per month, covers a specific issue like “Making the Case for the Half-Story in Your Size-Up,” which took place on May 18. Presenters include leaders in the U.S. fire service, INTERSCHUTZ USA speakers and Conference Advisory Board members. Content leading up to the show will be released soon, between show conference session announcements.

All Digital Shift webinars are free with advance signup. To learn more and participate, visit https://interschutzusa.com/webinars/

INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES AND EMS

INTERSCHUTZ USA will provide expertise and perspectives from around the world on common fire service topics. The show aims to provide the opportunity for broader views and conversations among a global fire service united in protecting its citizenry. 

Similarly, INTERSCHUTZ USA 2021 will offer dedicated EMS/Rescue content. Too many U.S. fire rescue events fail to address this in their curriculum, even though an incredibly high percentage of fire service responses are EMS. INTERSCHUTZ USA changes that paradigm.

BUILDING ON A STRONG HISTORY

The Philadelphia fire community has provided local support to make sure the event is not only a valuable training opportunity but also an exciting opportunity to network with peers and industry leaders. When combined with the city’s access to the eastern U.S. – Philadelphia is within a four-hour drive of 44% of the U.S. fire service – its strong sports presence, renowned American history, phenomenal dining, shopping and more, it is clear why Philadelphia will be the place to be this October.

THE LEADING BRAND IN FIRE AND RESCUE

INTERSCHUTZ USA is the most recent addition to the INTERSCHUTZ Worldwide portfolio, which includes AFAC (Australia), CEFE (China) and REAS (Italy). Audiences around the world have enjoyed the unique emotional experience, personal encounters and feeling of common purpose provided by INTERSCHUTZ (Germany), the world’s largest trade show for fire and rescue services for over 50 years. Taking place every five years in Hannover, Germany, INTERSCHUTZ attracts a unique mix of commercial and non-commercial exhibitors. Companies unveil their latest innovations at the show, while fire and rescue service professionals show the latest in equipment and systems in action on an outdoor demonstration ground.

Gallery: Apparatus on Display at Firehouse Expo 2021

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Check out some of the custom rigs on display across the show floor as Firehouse Expo made its 2021 return this week in Columbus, OH.

September 16, 2021 – Source firehouse.com

All the top apparatus manufacturers have been on hand this week for Firehouse Expo 2021 at the Greater Columbus Convention Center in Columbus, OH.

Check out a diverse array of some of the emergency response vehicles they brought along in the images below:

KY Fire Department Celebrating 150th Anniversary

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The Lexington Fire Department has several events planned in the coming weeks as it marks 150 years of service to the community.

September 17, 2021 – By Christopher Leach – Source Lexington Herald-Leader

Sep. 17—The Lexington Fire Department will host multiple events, beginning next week, to celebrate the department’s 150th anniversary.

Battalion Chief Jordan Saas described the celebration as a ” Kentucky Derby style” party, which will feature seven separate events starting Sunday and lasting until Oct. 3. All events are free and the public is invited.

More information can be found on the Lexington Fire Department’s Facebook page.

The department’s roots go back to Sept. 7, 1871. The department has grown tremendously from the 15 personnel and two steam engines available in 1888.

Now, there are 24 stations spread out across Lexington and 597 firefighters on staff.

Through the various events, the city’s more than 300,000 residents can see inside and compare the city’s older and newest fire stations. They’ll also get to look at antique and modern equipment up close.

Sunday: Main Street parade, more

The celebration will kickoff on Sunday with a fire truck muster and parade. The muster will take place from noon-4 p.m. at the Regal Cinemas in Hamburg on 1949 Star Shoot Parkway.

Multiple antique apparatus will be on hand for people to discover.

The parade will occur downtown on Main Street beginning at 6 p.m. The parade will start at Midland Avenue and finish at Mill Street.

Approximately 70 trucks and apparatus are expected to be featured in the parade. It’s the first time the department has hosted a parade since 2014.

Tuesday: Tour oldest firehouse

There will be two open houses as part of the 150-year celebration, the first of which will take place on Tuesday from 6-8 p.m. at station No. 4 on 246 Jefferson Street. The open house will have a festival-like atmosphere and firefighters on site will offer tours of the station.

Station No. 4 is the department’s oldest operating firehouse. It’s named “Vogt Reel House” for Henry Vogt, a former chairman of the Fire Committee of the Board of City Councilman.

Sept. 25: Gathering highlights one station’s long history

Firehouse No. 3 on Sept. 25 will celebrate its 100-year anniversary. The station opened in 1920 but didn’t celebrate last year due to COVID-related health and safety concerns.

The event will take place at 370 Merino Street from 8 a.m.-noon.

Mayor Linda Gorton will make a proclamation at the station at 9 a.m. All past firefighters at the station — along with the public — are encouraged to attend.

“They wanted to essentially celebrate it this year, and so we just folded them into the 150th celebration,” Saas said.

Sept. 28: Important blood drive

The department will host a blood drive on Sept. 28 at its Union Hall on 2205 Thunderstick Drive. It will last from 6:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.

“Our goal, our very lofty goal is to get 150 donations in one day, one donor for every year that we’ve been around,” Saas said.

The department has partnered with the Kentucky Blood Center to ensure all blood donated will stay local in Fayette County and the bluegrass region. Saas said 110 people are currently signed up to participate in the blood drive.

The first 150 people to sign up will receive a free commemorative 150th anniversary challenge coin and travel mug. Anyone interested in participating should visit the department’s Facebook page.

Sept. 29: Newest station opens its doors to public

The second open house will occur from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Sept. 29 at fire station 24 on 2754 Magnolia Springs Drive..

Firehouse No. 24 is the department’s newest station, which opened just over two years ago. The department hosted the two open houses at the oldest and newest stations to show the progression and growth the department has made in the last 150 years.

“For example, station 4, it’s a single bay. It’s a single company house. There’s only three people that are assigned there. It’s very tall, very narrow, very small plot of land,” Saas said. “Then you go out to station 24 and you see that it’s three bays. It’s several thousand square feet, big. It’s on one or two acres of land. 24 actually has the fire department’s first elevator in the department.”

Oct. 3: Festival at Lexington park

The closing ceremonies for the anniversary will take place on Oct. 3 at the department’s annual Fire Prevention Festival. It will take place at Masterson Station Park from 2-6 p.m.

Over 40 vendors are committed to the event. There will also be a vaccination station for COVID-19 and the flu.

(c)2021 the Lexington Herald-Leader (Lexington, Ky.)

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Pandemic Hitting Wildland FFs Harder This Year

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As wildfires rage across Western states, COVID-19 cases and pandemic-related supply chain issues have made it harder to deploy firefighting resources.

September 17, 2021 – By Sophie Quinton – Source Stateline.org

As wildfires rage across Western states, flattening rural towns and forcing thousands of people to evacuate, coronavirus cases and pandemic-related supply chain problems have made it harder to deploy firefighting resources to where they’re needed, fire officials say.

More firefighters appear to be falling ill with COVID-19 and quarantining this year than last year, the officials say, because of the highly contagious delta variant and mixed adherence to COVID-19 safety measures such as masking, vaccinations and social distancing.

“Last year, I actually was incredibly, pleasantly surprised by how little COVID it seemed like we had,” said Melissa Baumann, president of the National Federation of Federal Employees’ Forest Service Council. Her union represents U.S. Forest Service employees, including wildland firefighters who work for the agency.

“I did not hear of whole [fire] crews going down, right and left,” she said. “I’m hearing that this year.”

In addition to the extra stress it puts on fire crews, the uptick in cases has alarmed some officials in Western states, who say fire-prone communities need all the help they can get to fend off dangerous blazes.

“On the fire line and in camps, COVID-19 not only threatens the health of firefighters but our ability to deploy critical firefighting resources to the fire lines,” wrote Washington state’s commissioner of public lands, Hilary Franz, to the U.S. secretaries of Agriculture and the Interior last month. “At a time when we need them the most, we cannot afford to have any get sick.”

Four or five wildland firefighters have died from complications of the virus this year, said Burk Minor, executive director of the Wildland Firefighter Foundation, a Boise, Idaho-based group that supports families of such firefighters killed in the line of duty. “I don’t recall any fatalities from COVID last year,” he said.

National fire leaders are collecting data on COVID-19 activity associated with large fires, and some government agencies are tracking when their employees get sick. But there’s no publicly available data on the total number of wildland firefighters nationwide who have fallen ill with COVID-19 or had to quarantine after exposure.

Deploying enough firefighters, support staff and equipment to protect communities was always going to be tough this year, even without the delta surge. Fire risk has been high and many federal firefighting crews are understaffed, particularly in California.

More than 5.5 million acres have burned nationwide so far in 2021, slightly below the nearly 6.1 million acres that had burned by this time last year, according to the National Interagency Fire Center, which coordinates nationwide firefighting efforts.

As fall approaches, blazes aren’t letting up. “It looks much like it would in August, in the worst years,” said Jim Karels, fire director with the National Association of State Foresters.

Fires have been so unrelenting that this year the United States could spend a record number of days under the national center’s two highest wildfire mobilization levels, Karels said, meaning most of the nation’s wildland firefighters, engines and other pieces of equipment are deployed.

COVID-19 has added to the pressure. There have been several recent instances in Washington state where positive cases affected firefighting efforts, said Sarah Ford, communications director for Franz’s agency, in an email to Stateline.

A federal crew headed to the Muckamuck fire recently had to turn back after crew members fell ill with the virus, Ford said. An air tanker at the Air Force base at Moses Lake had to be temporarily grounded after its crew tested positive, she said. And an entire leadership team battling the Walker Creek fire had to be replaced because of members testing positive.

In her letter, Franz asked the two cabinet secretaries to require their firefighters to be vaccinated and make COVID-19 vaccinations available at fire camps they manage.

Supply chain disruptions also have affected firefighting, Karels said. “It really started out with the impacts of logistics, of not enough truckers, of not enough people able to hire catering, supplies and fuel,” he said. Those problems have eased up somewhat as the year has gone on, he added.

Spokespeople for federal firefighting agencies say employee safety is a top priority. They say agencies are requiring social distancing, masking, hand-washing and other safety measures at work.

“We learned many lessons from the 2020 Fire Year about how to respond most effectively given the challenges brought on by the pandemic,” U.S. Forest Service spokesperson Babete Anderson wrote in an email to Stateline. “We have continued to employ those successful practices in our firefighting plans in 2021.”

The Democratic governors of Oregon and Washington have moved to require state employees, including firefighters, to be vaccinated for COVID-19. Other Democratic Western governors, such as California Gov. Gavin Newsom, require state employees to be vaccinated or regularly tested for infection.

Karels said firefighters may be falling ill after being exposed to COVID-19 elsewhere. “It’s been a tough summer when it comes to the delta variant and COVID across the country,” he said.

The pandemic ultimately hasn’t prevented fire crews from getting the job done, he noted. “We haven’t had an event where, because of COVID, we haven’t been able to fight a fire.”

Numbers detailing how many firefighters are ill or quarantined are hard to find.

The National Wildfire Coordinating Group, which sets national wildfire operations standards, says on its website and in memos that managers of large wildfire incidents must report COVID-19 activity to a tracking system.

Stanton Florea, a spokesperson for the National Interagency Fire Center, which fields questions about the coordinating group, said he wasn’t aware of any such tracking system. He referred Stateline to the Agriculture Department, which oversees the U.S. Forest Service, and to the Interior Department.

A small fraction of Forest Service fire personnel have contracted the virus, spokesperson Anderson said. As of Sept. 4, the latest data available, 421 had tested positive in 2021, and 497 tested positive last year, she said. The agency typically employs 14,500 firefighters.

The Interior Department, which usually has a staff of about 5,000 firefighters each year, declined to provide data on COVID-19 cases.

Regional fire officials and front-line firefighters told Stateline that they’re hearing more about COVID-19 cases this year than last. At least a dozen fire crews — or members of crews — in California have had to quarantine this year, said a California-based U.S. Forest Service fire and aviation leader who spoke to Stateline anonymously for fear of reprisal from their employer.

“I’ve heard of crews being stood down for upwards of two weeks at a time, and I’ve heard of crew members staying behind because they tested positive,” the official said. “It’s really all across the board.”

The National Wildfire Coordinating Group’s health committee issued recommendations last year for reducing the spread of COVID-19 among fire personnel. The recommendations included everything from preventing crews from commingling to conducting briefings remotely and distributing boxed meals at fire camps to promote social distancing.

Although those recommendations remain in place, as of this summer adherence has declined, according to a mid-July memo from the committee’s leader.

“Currently, reports from the field indicate very limited application of … infection control measures (e.g. mask wearing, hand hygiene, physical distancing … ) taking place on incidents among any personnel,” wrote L. Kaili McCray, chair of the medical and public health advisory team.

Both vaccinated and unvaccinated people should wear masks and keep their distance from one another, unless they’re actively engaged in fighting a fire, McCray advised. He declined to answer questions, referring Stateline to the National Interagency Fire Center’s communications team.

Firefighters, like everyone else, were ready for life to return to normal in the spring and early summer, when COVID-19 cases were dropping and vaccination rates were rising, the California-based Forest Service official said. “In general, we’ve dropped our guard a bit.”

The threat posed by the virus isn’t top of mind for most firefighters, the official said, because crews also face threats such as falling trees and extreme fire behavior on the job. “I would also say, as firefighters, and as managers of risk, on a day-to-day basis we have a higher tolerance for risk.”

Firefighters are subject to different COVID-19 vaccination and testing requirements depending on their employer.

U.S. Forest Service employees, for instance, must submit a form declaring their vaccination status and wear a mask on the job if they’re unvaccinated. Although unvaccinated federal employees are supposed to be tested regularly, the Agriculture Department doesn’t yet run a surveillance testing program.

Those requirements will change. A federal task force is now hashing out the details of Biden’s new vaccine mandate for federal agency employees and contractors.

Washington state, meanwhile, requires all state employees to get vaccinated by mid-October and to quarantine for 14 days after exposure to the virus. That’s a higher standard than the latest federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidance, which says local public health officials can allow exposed people who test negative for the virus to end their quarantines after seven days, and says that fully vaccinated people should get tested, but do not need to quarantine unless they have symptoms.

There may still be a gap between official policies and what’s happening on the ground. Ben Elkind, a Forest Service smokejumper and a member of Grassroots Wildland Firefighters, an organization that advocates for federal wildland firefighters, said he hasn’t yet had time to fill out the vaccine attestation form. “Nobody’s talked to me about it at all, because I’ve been busy on fires,” he said.

“I haven’t even seen a computer for a month,” he added in a later conversation.

Recently assigned to the Bull Complex fire in Oregon, Elkind said he worked with people who’d been exposed to COVID-19, yet he couldn’t find an easy way to get tested on-site before heading home to his wife and two young kids. “I asked about testing, and there really wasn’t any way for me to get that done,” he said.

A public information officer for the Bull Complex fire said in an email to Stateline that there have been only three confirmed cases of COVID-19 among fire personnel assigned to that fire so far (there are currently 594 people working on the fire, according to incident information posted online).

Emergency test kits are available to firefighters, the officer said, though health facilities elsewhere offer the most accurate testing.

It’s not clear whether the latest state and federal vaccine mandates will go into effect early enough to reduce the spread of COVID-19 among firefighters this fire season.

Washington state’s October vaccination deadline, for instance, comes after the wildfire season typically ends there. Federal agencies should make sure their employees are fully vaccinated by Nov. 22, according to the latest guidance from the Biden administration’s COVID-19 safety task force.

Unions that represent wildland firefighters also want to be able to negotiate the details of the new policies.

CAL FIRE Local 2881, the union that represents employees of California’s state firefighting agency, has filed a complaint over Newsom’s July announcement that state workers be vaccinated or tested weekly for COVID-19.

“We are not pro-vaccine or anti-vaccine. We believe that that’s an individual choice, and as a union, we shouldn’t be involved in a personal decision,” said CalFire Local 2881 President Tim Edwards. He said the union filed the complaint because it wants to be able to negotiate changes to working conditions.

“We felt they did something without negotiating,” he said, “or even talking to the bargaining units or the unions.”

And some firefighters may refuse vaccines, although it’s hard to say how many.

Baumann said that internal surveys suggest that 70% of unionized Forest Service employees have been vaccinated. Although her unvaccinated members have been angry and vocal about having to follow additional safety protocols, she said, it’s important to remember that they’re in the minority.

“It appears that those who are anti-vaccination, and anti-testing, are very loud,” she said. “So we have to make sure we listen to those voices that aren’t being so loud.”

©2021 The Pew Charitable Trusts. Visit at stateline.org. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.