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FDNY Policy Bans Civilians on Fire Boats after Visiting FF Killed in Crash

The policy comes after Belgium firefighter Sgt. Johnny Beernaert sustained fatal injuries while riding an FDNY boat that collided with another boat.

By Janon Fisher and Thomas Tracy – Source New York Daily News

NEW YORK — No civilians will be allowed to ride on New York City Fire Department fireboats unless the trip is approved by the department’s chief of fire operations, the FDNY said Friday — five months after a rogue fire boat trip ended in the death of a visiting Belgian firefighter.

The codified rules come as the estate of Sgt. Johnny Beernaert prepares to sue the city over the fatal June 17 East River crash, the Daily News has learned.

In a notice of claim filed with the city Comptroller’s office, attorneys for Beernaert’s estate say the department was “negligent in inviting and/or permitting civilians to ride as passengers” on Marine 1 Bravo, a 31-foot-long fireboat that docks in the Hudson River.

The still unfiled wrongful death lawsuit will be seeking damages for his wife Heidi Vermandel and their two children, the notice of claim, which was filed in September, states.

Beernaert and his wife were taking a ride across the East River at 11 p.m. when Marine 1 Bravo collided with the charter boat the Honcho near Pier 11. The Belgian suffered a head injury in the crash and died at Bellevue Hospital. Vermandel was not harmed.

At least two other civilians, identified as a retired FDNY firefighter and his wife, were also on the boat, but not injured.

The clarified FDNY policy, which was distributed to its members Friday, makes it clear that all “harbor familiarization tours not authorized by the Chief of Operations (or designee) are strictly prohibited.”

The city’s Department of Investigation recommended that the FDNY clarify its rules about civilian boat rides to make sure everyone is aware of the policy, an FDNY source said.

“Officers shall not permit passengers on FDNY marine vessels for non-emergencies, unless (they) are members of the department or are assisting in the performance of official department business or operations, or the officers have received approval through the chain of command,” the policy indicates.

Non-fire personnel are usually not allowed to ride on marine boats without permission, but in the past the approval came from officers at the Marine Unit, not by higher ups at headquarters, an FDNY source said.

“It’s not like the pilot of the boat can say, ‘Come on let’s go for a ride!’” the source said.

The policy goes on to say that any requests for civilians to ride on an FDNY fireboat must be submitted to the Chief of Marine Operations, who will then forward the request to the Chief of Operations office.

It also indicates that no less than one officer and two firefighters must be on any approved familiarization tours and conduct a safety briefing for all passengers who are approved to ride on the boat.

During the June 17 crash, an on-duty firefighter was driving the boat, but he was the sole Marine Unit member on board, a department source said.

The FDNY dry-docked three Marine 1 fire officers — a lieutenant, a captain and a battalion chief — following the crash, pulling them from their regular duties and assigned to administrative jobs within the Marine Unit.

Neither the firefighter on the boat, who passed all drug and alcohol tests following the crash, nor his superiors have been hit with criminal or disciplinary charges as the Coast Guard continues it’s investigation. An email to the Coast Guard was not immediately returned.

Multiple efforts to reach the owner of the Honcho have been unsuccessful.

Lawyers representing the Beernaerts’ estate did not return calls for comment.

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©2022 New York Daily News. Visit nydailynews.com. Distributed by Tribune C

FDNY FFs Honored for Dramatic Rope Rescue at High-Rise

“This, in so many ways, is everything the FDNY is about,” FDNY Commissioner Laura Kavanagh said at the ceremony.

By Kevin Macdonald – Source New York Daily News (TNS)

Four FDNY firefighters were honored Tuesday afternoon for their heroic efforts in rescuing tenants stranded in a high-rise Midtown apartment building engulfed in flames earlier this month.

Firefighters Darren Harsch, Adam Nordenschild, Artur Podgorski, and Belvon Koranteng each received proclamations for their daring rope rescues on Nov. 5, during a blaze in an apartment building on East 52nd Street in Manhattan.

“This, in so many ways, is everything the FDNY is about. This was the ultimate teamwork. Some of these members who were literally hanging off of a building together had just worked together that day, and they weren’t even in the same firehouse together,” Fire Commissioner Laura Kavanagh said during the ceremony at Engine Company 39, and Ladder Company 16.

The four firefighters rescued a desperate woman hanging from a window 20 stories above the street as dozens of people were trapped inside the building after an e-bike battery sparked the massive blaze.

“November 5, we saw what bravery looks like,” Mayor Eric Adams said during the ceremony. “Anyone who saw that video that went viral saw just how dangerous it was.”


©2022 New York Daily News. Visit nydailynews.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

New Orleans Firefighters Battle 4-Alarm Apartment Fire

Firefighters worked on extinguishing the first two sections of the Oakmount Apartments in Algiers as they collapsed, but not before the fire spread to four other sections.

Source: Firehouse.com

The New Orleans Fire Department responded to a 9-1-1 call regarding a fire at the Oakmount Apartments in Algiers.

The first fire companies arrived on scene at 1:10 a.m. and found a large vacant apartment complex with two sections of apartments fully engulfed in fire.

As the fire spread to adjoining adjoining sections, firefighters rescued several vagrants still in the complex.     

Crews worked on extinguishing the first two sections of apartments as they collapsed, but not before the fire spread to four other apartment sections.

A third alarm was called at 1:16 a.m. with a fourth alarm called at 2:02 a.m.

No injuries were reported. 

New Orleans Police, New Orleans Emergency Medical Services and Entergy also responded to this incident.   


Updated: NY Firefighters Battle Massive Plant Fire

Jamestown and other area firefighters battled a blaze that ripped through a former manufacturing plant.

Source: Firehouse.com

Firefighters from several departments battled a massive blaze at that ripped through a former Jamestown furniture plant Wednesday.

Flames quickly engulfed the former Crawford Furniture location on Allen Street shortly after the fire was reported at 11:20 a.m. 

Officials told the Post-Journal that they were concerned about the fire spreading to adjacent buildings as fire engulfed four-story building. Several collapses occured as the fire raged.

“This is a site that we (the city) have been under a current lawsuit with the owner Richard Rusiniak,” Jamestown Mayor Eddie Sundquist said told the Observer Today. “We have had the New York state DEC and federal EPA. It was really a matter of time before something bad happened without the owner securing it. We do not know the cause of the fire yet as we are here. We will send in investigators afterward.”

The fire was brought under control after four hours.

More than a dozen fire departments responded to the fire, according to the Post-Journal.

Numerous wildfire-related bills have been introduced in Congress

Summaries of 14 still pending

It seems like in the last year there has been more wildfire-related legislation introduced in Congress than in previous years. It’s hard to say why, but it could be related to a growing number of megafires, more communities destroyed, and increased activism in the wildland firefighter community.

Of course simply introducing legislation accomplishes nothing if it does not become law, except perhaps providing a talking point for the politician’s next reelection campaign. A cynic might suggest that some bills are introduced and press releases issued by members of Congress with no hope or expectation that they will pass. But it is difficult to tell which are real and which are vaporware.

With that in the back of our minds, here is a partial list of 15 bills and the dates they were introduced which have not passed in this 117th United States Congress (2021-2022). Only a few have made it to the committee hearing stage, and none have progressed beyond that.

H.R. 5631 — Tim Hart Wildland Firefighter Classification and Pay Parity Act. October 19, 2021. (Rep. Joe Neguse). This bill has numerous provisions, including raising firefighter pay, creating a wildland firefighter job series, providing health care and mental health services to temporary and permanent wildland firefighters, housing stipends, and other items. (More details are in the Wildfire Today article from October 19, 2021.)

H.R.5010 — FIRE Act. August 13, 2021. (Rep. Mike Garcia) This bill directs the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), in collaboration with the U.S. weather industry and and academic partners, to establish a program within NOAA to improve wildfire forecasting and detection.

H.R.2585 — FIRE Act of 2021. April 1,5 2021 (Rep. Dusty Johnson) Timber salvage sales. No later than 60 days after a wildfire is contained on such lands (1) the Forest Service, to the maximum extent practicable, shall complete a survey of the lands that were impacted by such wildfire; and (2) the Department of Agriculture (USDA) shall convert the timber sales applicable to such lands that were impacted by such wildfire to salvage sales. The bill designates a categorical exclusion for forest management activities where the primary purpose of the activity is for roadside salvage activities that allow for the removal of hazard trees that are within 200 feet of a roadway center line. Activities carried out pursuant to this bill shall be subject to judicial review in the same manner as authorized hazardous fuels reduction projects. A court may not order a preliminary injunction enjoining the USDA from proceeding with timber sales authorized under this bill.

S.3092 — FIRE Act. October 27, 2021. (Sen. Alex Padilla) The bill would, according to Senator Padilla, update the Stafford Act that governs FEMA—which was written when the agency primarily focused on hurricanes, tornadoes, and floods—to improve FEMA’s response to wildfires, including by accounting for “melted infrastructure” and burned trees as well as allowing FEMA to pre-deploy assets during times of highest wildfire risk and red flag warnings. The bill would also ensure cultural competency for FEMA’s counseling and case management services, help to ensure relocation assistance is accessible to public infrastructure in fire prone areas, prioritize survivors’ housing needs after disasters, ensure equity of assistance for tribal communities and tribal governments, and examine ways to speed up the federal assistance process and improve the availability of fire insurance. More info.

S.1734 — National Prescribed Fire Act of 2021. May 20, 2021. (Sen. Ron Wyden). The bill would appropriate $300 million each to the Departments of the Interior (DOI) and Agriculture (DOA) to increase the pace and scale of controlled burns on state, county, and federally managed lands. It sets an annual target of at least one million acres treated with prescribed fire by federal agencies, but not to exceed 20 million. It requires the two departments to hire additional employees. Overtime payments for prescribed fire could be paid out of wildfire suppression accounts. More info.

S.138 — Wildland Firefighter Pay Act. January 28, 2021. (Sen. Dianne Feinstein.) It would raise the maximum limit on overtime pay for federal firefighters. The current limit affects higher level employees at the GS-12 and above level, and some GS-11s depending on if they are exempt from the provisions in the Fair Labor Standards Act. Under the existing provisions if they work hundreds of hours of overtime they may reach the cap after which they earn no more money. In some cases later in the fire season employees who spent a lot of time fighting fires have been told they earned too much and were forced to pay some of it back. More info.

S.1116 — Federal Firefighters Fairness Act of 2021. April 14, 2021 (Sen. Thomas Carper.) Establishes for federal workers certain medical conditions as presumptive illnesses. Specifically, the bill provides that (1) heart disease, lung disease, and specified cancers of federal employees employed in fire protection activities for at least 5 years are presumed to be proximately caused by such employment if the employee is diagnosed with the disease within 10 years of employment; and (2) the disability or death of the employee due to such disease is presumed to result from personal injury sustained in the performance of duty. These presumptions also apply to fire protection employees (regardless of the length of employment) who contract any communicable disease at the center of a designated pandemic or any chronic infectious disease that the Department of Labor determines is related to job-related hazards.

H.R.6336 — Western Wildfire Support Act of 2021. December 20, 2021. (Joe Neguse.) Establishes a program to train and certify citizens who wish to be able to volunteer to assist USDA or Interior during a wildland fire incident, and a program to award grants to eligible states or units of local government to acquire slip-on tank and pump units for a surge capacity of resources for fire suppression. It requires the Joint Fire Science Program to carry out research and development of unmanned aircraft system fire applications.

S.2419 — Wildfire Smoke Emergency Declaration Act of 2021. (Sen. Jeff Merkley.) This bill authorizes the President to declare a smoke emergency and provide emergency assistance to affected communities under specified circumstances. Specifically, the President, upon determining that there is, or anticipating that there will be, a significant decrease in air quality due to wildland fire smoke in one or more states, may declare a smoke emergency. The governor or other agency of a state that is or will be affected may request such a declaration. If the President declares a smoke emergency, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and other federal agencies may provide emergency assistance to states and local communities that are or will be affected by the emergency, including grants, equipment, supplies, and personnel and resources for establishing smoke shelters, air purifiers, and additional air monitoring sites. The Small Business Administration may provide grants to any small business concern that loses a significant amount of revenue due to wildland fire smoke in an area in which the President has declared a smoke emergency.

S.2661 — Smoke-Ready Communities Act of 2021. August 5, 2021. (Sen. Jeff Merkley) Provides funding for infrastructure upgrades to public buildings to filter out wildfire smoke. It would also assist with local efforts to provide health information about wildfire smoke.

S.2421 — Smoke Planning and Research Act. July 21, 2021. (Sen. Jeff Merkley.) It would make available each year $80 million to fund research on the public health impacts of wildfire smoke and create a grant program for local community planning relating to wildfire smoke.

H.R.4614 — Resilient Federal Forests Act. (Rep. Bruce Westerman) Primarily related to the logging industry, it streamlines or avoids compliance with some requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act by establishing numerous categorical exclusions for projects on National Forest System and public lands. It does away with many of the environment regulations a logging company must satisfy before a timber sale takes place.

S.487 — 21st Century Conservation Corps Act. (Sen. Ron Wyden.) The bill would provide funds to support a natural resource management and conservation workforce and bolster wildfire prevention and preparedness. Establishes a $9 billion fund for qualified land and conservation corps to increase job training and hiring specifically for jobs in the woods, helping to restore public lands and provide jobs in a time of need. Provides an additional $3.5 billion for the U.S. Forest Service and $2 billion for the U.S. Bureau of Land Management to support science-based projects aimed at improving forest health and reducing the risk of catastrophic wildfire. Establishes a $2 billion fund to provide economic relief for outfitters and guides holding U.S. Forest Service and U.S. Department of the Interior special use permits. Provides $2 billion for the National Fire Capacity program, which helps the Forest Service implement FireWise, to prevent, mitigate, and respond to wildfire around homes and businesses on private land. Provides $2 billion for the FEMA Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities (BRIC) program to improve resiliency for communities impacted by wildfire. Provides $6 billion for U.S. Forest Service, $6 billion for the National Park Service, and $2 billion for the Bureau of Land Management maintenance accounts to create jobs, reduce the maintenance backlog, and expand access to recreation. More information.

S.2650 — Wildfire Resilient Communities Act. August 5, 2021. (Sen. Jeff Merkley.)  Sets aside $30 billion for the U.S. Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management to boost catastrophic wildfire reduction projects. Provides financial and technical assistance to at-risk communities adjacent to Federal land, including through States, to assist the at-risk communities in planning and preparing for wildfire, including cosponsoring and supporting the expansion of the Firewise USA program, the Ready, Set, Go program, and the Living with Wildfire program.

Tractor-Trailer Hits, Flips DE Fire Apparatus

The Minquadale fire apparatus was responding to a crash scene when it was rear-ended by a tractor-trailer, causing the rig to overturn.

Three Minquadale firefighters were injured after the fire apparatus they were responding with was struck by a tractor-trailer Thursday evening.

The apparatus was responding to a vehicle accident around 7 p.m. when the tractor-trailer struck the rear of the pumper on Interstate 295 in New Castle County.

Officials told 6ABC.com that the force of the crash caused the apparatus operator to loose control of the apparatus, which hit a guardrail, causing it to flip on its side.

Extrication was required to free the injured firefighters.

They were taken to a local hospital with non-life threatening injuries. It is not known if the driver of the tractor-trailer was injured.

Photos: Wind-Driven Fire in Cleveland Destroys Five Homes

Cleveland fire officials said five homes, two garages and 12 vehicles were destroyed in the wind-driven fire Thursday afternoon.

By Cliff Pinckard Source cleveland.com

CLEVELAND, Ohio — A wind-driven fire tore through a neighborhood Thursday evening on the East Side, destroying or damaging five homes and multiple vehicles.

Seventeen fire companies and 80 firefighters battled the four-alarm blaze on Mannering Road, just south of Euclid Avenue in the Euclid- Green neighborhood, according to a news release from the Cleveland Division of Fire. The fire first was reported at about 5 p.m. in a home on the road but it quickly spread to nearby homes because of strong winds.

Along with five houses, two garages and 12 vehicles were damaged or destroyed in the fire, officials say. No cause of the fire has been reported.

There were no injuries reported, but 14 adults and two children were displaced by the fire. Firefighters were able to save two dogs and a cat.

Early Morning Fire Destroys TX Daycare Center

Water pressure was an issue as the Guardian Angel Child Development Center in San Antonio burned.

A fire that broke out around 5 a.m. Friday has destroyed the Guardian Angel Child Development Center, located in the 1600 block of Pleasanton Road.

The San Antonio Fire Department (SAFD) were forced to use defensive operations as the fire spread quickly throughout the U-shaped building.

Joe Arrington, a public information officer with SAFD, told KSAT.com that firefighters had to call on the San Antonio Water System to increase water pressure in the area. They were using at least three aerial ladder trucks at one time in an attempt to put out the flames.

That, combined with regular usage by nearby businesses, was taxing the water system.

Firefighters also had to navigate around numerous electrical lines in the area as they battled the fire. However, crews with CPS Energy arrived and quickly cut off the power.

The daycare center was not open at the time and firefighters did not find anyone inside.

Two VA Fires Send 11 Children to Hospital

Four children were critically injured after fires at a Portsmouth day care center and Suffolk apartment building where crews rescued several kids.

By Caitlyn Burchett Source The Virginian-Pilot

Four young children are in the intensive care unit and six others are still being treated at the Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters following residential fires in Portsmouth and Suffolk.

A spokesperson for CHKD confirmed 10 fire victims, ages 2 to 9 years old, were transported to the area hospital’s emergency department Wednesday afternoon after fires broke out at a townhouse in Portsmouth and an apartment in Suffolk.

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“As of noon today (Thursday), four of the 10 fire victims were in the intensive care unit of CHKD,” Elizabeth Simpson Earley said.

The other six children, Earley added, are being treated in the general care unit. Additional details, including the nature of the children’s injuries and which fire the four in ICU were victims of, were not available.

A total of 11 children escaped multi-family structure fires Wednesday — with nine being rescued from 4516 Greenwood Drive in Portsmouth and two others from the 400 block of Smith Street in Suffolk.

The Portsmouth and Chesapeake fire departments responded at approximately 1 p.m. to a reported fire with victims inside the Greenwood Drive townhome. A public record search confirmed that Indoor/Outdoor Reach LLC, a child care service, operated at that location. Attempts to reach Portsmouth’s Office of Economic Development to verify the business were not returned.

Two children were trapped on the second story of the burning building, said Julian Williamson, deputy chief of the Portsmouth Fire Department. The pair were rescued by Portsmouth fire crews and transported to a local hospital in critical condition.

Seven other children escaped the blaze on their own. However, five of the seven were transported to a hospital for non-life threatening injuries. The remaining two children were evaluated and stayed at the scene.

The Portsmouth Fire Marshal’s Office is investigating the circumstances, Williamson said.

Asked about initial reports that said only children were in the home at the time, Williamson said investigators have “not received any information that says anything different.”

Around the same time, at approximately 1:20 p.m., Suffolk Fire & Rescue responded to an apartment fire with victims trapped inside a building in the 400 block of Smith Street.

Suffolk fire crews pulled two children from a unit.

“Both were evaluated at the scene for possible smoke inhalation and were transported to an area hospital,” said Tim Kelley, spokesperson for the city of Suffolk, in a news release.

Kelley confirmed that one of the children was in critical condition.

The blaze, which was not marked under control until 3:15 p.m., nearly two hours after the initial call came in, also resulted in the hospitalization of three firefighters for heat exhaustion. One firefighter had been released from the hospital as of Thursday, while the other two remained. They were listed in stable condition.

The Smith Street fire in Suffolk displaced 11 people, including five adults and six children, according to Kelley.

The cause of the fire is still being investigated.

The American Red Cross will be assisting the victims of both fires.

Caitlyn Burchett, 727-267-6059, caitlyn.burchett@virginiamedia.com

Staff writer Ali Sullivan contributed to this report.

©2022 The Virginian-Pilot. Visit pilotonline.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

U.S. Marshals Rearrests Woman Who Killed PA Firefighter

Khanyae Kendall, who caused a crash that killed Harrisburg Fire Lt. Denny DeVoe, was captured by the Fugitive Task Force after removing her ankle bracelet.

By Jenna Wise Source pennlive.com

A woman accused of violating parole less than two weeks after she was released from prison in the vehicular homicide death of a Harrisburg firefighter was arrested Thursday morning, authorities said.

The U.S. Marshals Fugitive Task Force said officers took 23-year-old Khanyae Kendall into custody around 8:30 a.m. on the 17000 block of King James Way, Gaithersburg, Maryland. She was turned over to Montgomery County authorities to await extradition back to Pennsylvania.

Kendall was released from prison March 10 after serving part of a 5–12 year sentence on vehicular homicide charges filed after the March 10, 2017 crash that killed Harrisburg firefighter Denny DeVoe. She took off her electronic ankle monitor and fled March 16, authorities said.

Kendall, who was pregnant at the time of the crash, was also on PCP when she stole a car and drove through the intersection at 14th and Walnut streets, broadsiding DeVoe’s car, authorities said. DeVoe was on his way to what turned into a fatal house fire when his car was hit. Kendall left the scene. She pleaded guilty in 2018.

“It’s the Marshals Services’ duty to help ensure that those convicted of serious crimes are held fully accountable,” U.S. Marshal Martin J. Pane said Thursday. “It is my sincere hope that the citizens of Harrisburg will find some measure of comfort knowing Kendall is back in custody.”

©2022 Advance Local Media LLC. Visit pennlive.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.