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Deadly VA Plane Crash Sparks 35-acre Brush Fire

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Jan. 7, 2023 Suffolk Fire & Rescue officials said the small plane crashed in field and sparked a brush fire that took several hours to contain.

By Hannah Eason Source The Virginian-Pilot Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

SUFFOLK, Va. — Two people were killed Saturday in a plane crash that caused a large brush fire in Suffolk, according to local and state officials.

The small passenger airplane was fully engulfed in flames after the crash, state police said, causing a large brush fire in the 3900 block of Carolina Road. Firefighters located the plane crash about a quarter mile away from Carolina Road.

The crash caused a large area of trees and brush to catch fire, threatening homes in the nearby area.

The “rapidly-progressing” fire was spreading across approximately 35 acres of open field and forest, according to a release from Suffolk Fire & Rescue. All residents were safely evacuated.

Police say the crash occurred at 12:16 p.m. Shortly after 3:45 p.m., the Suffolk fire department marked the fire as contained.

The 3900 block of Carolina Road will remain closed until further notice.

IL Chief Dies Month after Collapsing at Fire Station

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Jan. 7, 2023 Maroa Fire Chief Larry Peasley collapsed at the fire station on Dec. 7.

Source Firehouse.com News

Almost a month after Fire Chief Larry Peasley collapsed at the Maroa Countryside fire station, he has passed away.

Peasley, 76, was getting his gear on at the station for a mutual aid response to the Clinton Volunteer Fire Department on Dec. 7 when he collapsed.

According to the U.S. Fire Administration statement, he suffered cardiac arrest and other firefighters began performing CPR on him immediately. 

He was taken to the hospital where he was being treated until he died on Jan. 4.

Peasley served the department for more than 40 years, according to a statement they released.

A visitation will be helo Jan. 9 at Calvert’s Funeral Home in Clinton, IL. The funeral will be Tuesday, Jan. 10th at 11 .a.m at the Maroa Methodist Church.   

Last All-Volunteer FD in TX County Transitions to Combination

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Jan. 6, 2023 The South Hays Fire Department will transition to a combination department as the number of volunteer responders dwindled in the area.

Source Firehouse.com News

As a growing Texas community struggles to keep its volunteer fire department ranks strong, Hays County is investing in more paid firefighters.

The last fully volunteer department in the county, South Hays Fire Department has had 18 unfilled positions for a while. 

Fire Chief Robert Simonson told KVUE.com said those vacancies meant they were unable to staff a station “for a long time.” 

“Volunteering is becoming almost outdated,” Simonson said. “Most people aren’t able to work in the same communities that they live in.”

“We were experiencing extremely long wait times, and we were having to rely on other people to cover our runs in that area,” the chief added.

Applicants will be required to have all state certifications.

“I just want everybody in the community to know that this is the best thing that could happen, and the best thing – we’ve managed to do it without a tax increase,” Simonson said.

FDNY Firefighters Remember Tragic Bronx Twin Park Blaze

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Jan. 6, 2023 FDNY firefighters and officials recalled the deadly fire that ripped through the Twin Park apartment building in the Bronx one year ago Monday.

Source Firehouse.com News

One year after a FDNY firefighter took on heroic feats to rescue dozens of residents from a Bronx apartment building fire, they also recall the tragedy they responded to.

On Jan. 9, 2021, Bronx firefighters were dispatched to the Twin Park apartment building and, within hours, more than a dozen people were killed and scores were rescued as smoke filled the high-rise building.

“We were dealing with so many worst case scenarios,” Capt. John Hunt told News12. “It looked like a battlefield.”

“It’s almost like a tornado that you’re going into,” said Hunt. “Very acrid, thick smoke that’s stuck right to your face inside, right to the thermal imaging camera to the point where I couldn’t see.”

Firefighters rescued 64 residents that morning. 

“Normally, when you go to a fire, you report in with your tools, equipment, hose, and everything, we didn’t need any of that, we needed staffing, people to do CPR, to carry people, to pull people downstairs,” said Battalion Chief Jeffrey Facinelli said. “So it really transitioned from a fire operation to a mass casualty incident at that point.”

“Even when they first get the phone call about how many critically injured patients there were, I had to ask them to repeat themselves a couple of times. You just don’t hear that,” FDNY Commissioner Laura Kavanagh recalled.

FL FF Trying to Get Job Back Following Two Terminations

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Jan. 6, 2023 Orange County firefighter Matt McMahon, who was diagnosed with PTSD, was terminated a second time after he refused to work a paramedic shift.

Source Firehouse.com News

An Orange County Fire Rescue firefighter if fighting to get his job back after being diagnosed with PTSD and being terminated for a second time. 

Matt McMahon, a former U.S. Marine, joined the fire department in 2006 as a firefighter/EMT. 

After seeing the life-saving measures that firefighter/paramedics carried out, McMahon funded his own paramedic license, according to WFTV.com.

“I became a firefighter and an EMT, which is exactly what my pre-employment contract states, so I was not a paramedic [when I started],” McMahon said. He attended 52 weeks of training, plus 100 clinical hours in order to obtain the license. 

As his career went on, the interactions as a paramedic began to weigh on him. 

“It was a 19-year-old kid, who had decided to take his own life. My son was probably at that point 14, just started his high school years,” McMahon told the television station. 

As the calls continued, “I remember becoming increasingly more anxious with my son,” McMahon recalls.

He asked his supervisors if he could drop is paramedic and resume working as a Firefighter/EMT in February 2021.

According to a lawsuit, the department allowed the move and shortly after, he was terminated. 

“Instead of proceeding with [an] interactive process and discussing other options or accommodations, he was charged with violations of county policy, operational regulations, OCFR rules, and standard operating procedures,” Attorney Rachel Rodriguez wrote.

He filed a grievance and was reinstated with the condition that he maintained his paramedic license. At that time, he had been diagnosed with PTSD and was attending therapy.

He was terminated when he refused to work a shift where he was assigned in a paramedic role.

“It wasn’t necessarily me I was worried about, it was the citizens of Orange County,” McMahon told the television station.

“That one time I ask for help, not asking for a dime, not wanting to medically separate and take 30 grand or whatever they’re giving out, I just want to go back to being an EMT … ‘we don’t care about him,’ that’s how I felt,” McMahon said.

Body Found Amid Hoarding Conditions Day after WI Fire

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Jan. 6, 2023 Milwaukee firefighters searched the home Tuesday and on Wednesday, they found the body of a man in the debris.

Source Firehouse.com News

Milwaukee fire officials confirmed that a body was found Wednesday, the day after firefighters battled a structure fire.

Fire Chief Aaron Lipski told Fox6Now.com that crews conducted “multiple searches” in the “all accessible areas” of the home, which was filled with debris.

Lipski added that conditions were “nearly impossible given the extreme hoarder conditions throughout the building.”

Officials said the man was 70 years old.

“We do not make that statement lightly,” Lipski said. “We scrutinized all areas where firefighting took place, considered the location of the deceased person, and have reviewed the available evidence.”

An investigation is underway on the cause of the fire.

PA Man Sentenced for Endangering Firefighters at Fire

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Jan. 6, 2023 Michael Inman was hit with charges including recklessly endangering another person and arson in the 2019 Wyoming Borough laundromat fire.

By Ed Lewis Source The Times Leader, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Jan. 5—WILKES-BARRE — Despite being acquitted by a Luzerne County jury of setting a fire inside the 8th Street Laundromat more than three years ago, Michael Inman was sentenced Wednesday for endangering firefighters and police officers.

Inman, 33, of Monument Avenue, Wyoming Borough, was charged by Wyoming Borough police with igniting a fire in the basement of the laundromat on Eighth Street on Aug. 16, 2019.

As firefighters battled the blaze, Inman rushed inside claiming he wanted to find his cellular phone. Inman initiated a struggle causing a police officer to stumble into several laundry machines, court records say.

After Inman was handcuffed and placed in a cruiser, he kicked open a door that struck an officer.

Following a two day trial before Judge David W. Lupas in October, a jury found Inman not guilty on two counts of arson and a single count of burglary.

Inman was convicted of criminal mischief and recklessly endangering another person.

Lupas sentenced Inman to six-to-20 months on the two convicted counts to be served at the county correctional facility. He was also ordered to pay $501 in restitution for damage to the the cruiser’s door.

Attorney Andrew J. Katsock III represented Inman.

Colleagues Surprise FL FF as He Finishes Cancer Treatment

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Jan. 6, 2023 Bradford County Fire Rescue Lt. Jason Hersey was diagnosed with Stage 2 colon cancer during his annual physical.

Source Firehouse.com News

A Bradford County Fire Rescue fire officer who was diagnosed with cancer during his annual physical received a surprise from his brother and sister firefighters as he left the hospital after the last treatment.

Lt. Jason Hersey was diagnosed with Stage 2 colon cancer last summer.

As he left the MD Anderson Cancer Center in Starke, and firefighters from Bradford County and Jacksonville were they to celebrate his last treatment, according to WCJB.com. He also rang the bell that indicated it was his last treatment.

“This is what the brotherhood is all about,” Hersey told FirstCoastnews.com.

Two Chicago Firefighters Injured at House Fire

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Jan. 5, 2023 A mattress broke the fall of one of the firefighters who fell through the floor.

Source Firehouse.com News

A mattress broke the fall of a Chicago firefighter early Thursday morning.

The firefighter fell through the first floor into the basement as crews battled a fire in Lawndale, CBS reported, adding that he will be OK.

Another firefighter suffered a leg injury and was taken to a hospital for treatment.

Flames were coming through the roof of the home on Komensky Avenue.

The cause remains under investigation.

AL Truck Flips Responding to School Alarm

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Jan. 5, 2023 Two Semmes firefighters self-extricated and suffered minor injuries.

Source Firehouse.com News

Two Semmes firefighters suffered minor injuries when their ladder truck crashed on the way to an automatic alarm at a school Wednesday morning.

Chief Kevin Brooks told Fox10: “When they had the accident, they self-extricated themselves out, so they were out there when the first units arrived on scene to help them.”

The two were released after treatment at a hospital.

On the department’s Facebook page, firefighters said the loss of the truck will not hinder service to its residents. 

At 10 a.m. Thursday, Semmes firefighters held a ceremony to dedicate a new engine.