Category: In The News

  • Station Nightclub Tragedy Revisited on 20th Anniversary

    Station Nightclub Tragedy Revisited on 20th Anniversary

    Feb. 20, 2023 Fireworks ignited the ceiling, sparking a blaze that claimed the lives of 100 patrons.

    By Susan Nicol Source firehouse.com News

    Twenty years ago today, people crowded into a Rhode Island night club enjoying a rock band with friends when things went terribly wrong.

    Fireworks ignited the sound-proofing foam on the walls, causing the Station Night Club to erupt into an inferno. Panic set in as the crowd scrambled in the dark, choking from the thick toxic smoke to find a way out.

    Although there were other exits, many headed toward the door they entered. It was a deadly mistake for many.

    In the end, 100 didn’t make it out. More than 200 others were hurt in the fourth deadliest night club blaze in U.S. history.

    Before the ashes cooled, NFPA called an emergency meeting for authorities to review life and safety codes including ones dealing with sprinklers and occupancy, Gregory Harrington, principal engineer, told Firehouse.com.

    Just days before the Station Night Club tragedy, a stampede at an overcrowded nightclub in Chicago claimed 21 lives. 

    In that incident, 1,100 people had crowded in nightclub, which was only capable of holding 240. The exit leading from the second floor to the outside was too narrow, authorities said. 

    The Chicago incident was overshadowed by the Station Nightclub fire, officials say.

    Studies show that the majority of people who enter a building will use the same exit to leave even though there are others, Harrington said.

    Among the codes developed or modified after the nightclub tragedies require oversized doors at entrances and exits.

    Harrington said trained crowd managers also are required to be on duty to direct people to exits in the event of an emergency. “The number of staff increases with the occupancy level,” he explained.

    Survivors and families of the victims will never forget and have worked over the past two decades for changes.

    NFPA officials also established guidelines for automatic sprinklers in nightclubs. They are required in new venues with a capacity of 50 or more as well as in existing establishments with 100 or more.

    The biggest change was the elimination of ‘grandfathering’ buildings to allow existing nightclubs to forgo the sprinkler requirement. 

    Individual jurisdictions have to adopt NFPA life safety codes.

    On the night of the fire, a local TV station crew was filming inside the club and captured the fireworks igniting the foam ceiling as well as the panic that ensued. 

    Arriving firefighters encountered throngs of injured people.

    In 13 seconds, the video shows flames extending eight to 10 feet out the entryway as a line is stretched — through fleeing occupants, over injured persons on the ground and around parked cars and the tour bus. Nine seconds later, flames were out all front windows. 

    NIST fire engineers conducted an extensive investigation into the Station Nightclub fire. 

    “Measurements in a fire test conducted on a mockup of a portion of The Station nightclub platform and dance floor produced—within 90 seconds—temperatures, heat fluxes and combustion gases well in excess of accepted survivability limits.

    A computer simulation of the full nightclub fire suggests that conditions around the dance floor, sunroom and dart room would have led to severe incapacitation or death within about 90 seconds after ignition of the foam for anyone remaining standing in those areas – and not much longer even for those close to the nightclub floor,” according to their investigative report. 

  • SUV Slams into CA House, Strikes Gas Line, Sparks Fire

    SUV Slams into CA House, Strikes Gas Line, Sparks Fire

    Feb. 20, 2023 Oakland Battalion Chief James Bowron said two children in the car suffered minor injuries.

    By Carolyn Said Source San Francisco Chronicle (TNS) Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

    Feb. 18—An out-of-control car slammed into an Oakland garage on Saturday evening, shearing a gas main and igniting a major blaze that drew 30 firefighters.

    The fire was under control at 7:48 p.m — more than two hours after the crash was reported, said Michael Hunt, a spokesperson for the Oakland Fire Department.

    Until that time, firefighters were still controlling the blaze while Pacific Gas and Electric Co. was using an excavator to dig up the sidewalk to access the main line and shut off the gas, he said.

    The gas-fed fire could not be capped because it had the potential to cause an explosion.

    “We do leave the gas burning,” Oakland Fire Department Battalion Chief James Bowron said in a news conference on Twitter before the gas was shut off. “We’re holding the fire in check. Having the gas burn is the safest for everyone, it consumes all the fuel.”

    The car’s five occupants — two parents and their three preteen children — all extricated themselves safely from the vehicle and were sitting on the curb when first responders arrived, Hunt said. Two of the children were transported to Children’s Hospital “as a precautionary measure,” Hunt said, but none had significant injuries.

    It appeared that mechanical failure was the cause, Hunt said.

    The house associated with the garage was unoccupied at the time. A neighboring garage and house, which appeared to be under construction, also caught fire and sustained minor damage, Hunt said.

    The car was traveling on Campus Drive below Merritt College. It crossed Redwood Road at a high rate of speed and came onto Sereno Circle, where it hit a curb and traveled an additional 40 yards or so into the detached garage where it hit the residential gas main, Hunt said. No other vehicles were in the garage.

    No neighbors had to be evacuated, and there was no danger to the rest of the neighborhood, Hunt said.

    “It was a great job by crews to contain the fire to the primary structure of origin and to keep the fire away from the rest of the home,” he said.

    San Francisco Chronicle staff writer Jordan Parker contributed to this report.

  • PA Firefighters Battle Blaze at Former Church

    PA Firefighters Battle Blaze at Former Church

    Feb. 20, 2023 Firefighters encountered heavy fire showing from the vacant Edwardsville church.

    By Firehouse.com News

    Firefighters from several departments spent Suday battling a blaze at the former St. Hedwig’s Roman Catholic Church.

    Crews encountered heavy fire coming from the windows about 6:30 a.m., according to The Times Leader.

    The fire spread up a staircase inside the building, across a second-level balcony and kept going. 

    Firefighters remained on the scene for more than eight hours to hit hot spots. T

    The church has been vacant since 2007 when it was closed by the Diocese of Scranton during a diocese-wide consolidation effort.

    The former school building next door, owned by Catholic Social Services, was not damaged by the fire.  

    The cause is under investigation. 

    No injuries were reported. 

  • Widow of Fallen WA Firefighter Awarded $750K from City

    Widow of Fallen WA Firefighter Awarded $750K from City

    Feb. 20, 2023 Bellingham Firefighter Neil Carlberg, a 33-year veteran, died of esophageal cancer in 2018.

    By Robert Mittendorf Source The Bellingham Herald (Bellingham, Wash.) (TNS) Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

    Feb. 19—Bellingham has settled an occupational disease lawsuit with the wife of a former firefighter.

    City Council members unanimously agreed Monday, Feb. 12, to pay Sheila Hanlon, wife of the late Neil Carlberg, a total of $750,000 in her claim against the city to receive his pension.

    “This has been a really long case for the city, and for the widow. I think it’s been very difficult, and so hopefully with this settlement, Miss Hanlon hopefully can go forward and heal with her husband’s memory,” Councilwoman Lisa Anderson said as the agreement was discussed in the City Council meeting.

    “You can never put this behind you but perhaps the litigation part can be put behind her and she can go forward and hopefully heal from the process,” Anderson said.

    Carlberg, who was a Bellingham firefighter for 33 years, retired in 2011 and died of esophageal cancer in 2018.

    Hanlon had sought to prove that her husband’s cancer was work-related, and that he deserved benefits and honors that are reserved for firefighters who are killed in the line of duty.

    ‘A good firefighter’

    Hanlon, a former Fire Department dispatcher, asked The Bellingham Herald for privacy after the settlement was announced, and didn’t want to comment for this story.

    Carlberg finished his career as a driver/engineer at Station 2 in Fairhaven.

    “Neil was a good firefighter,” said Bellingham firefighter Todd Lagestee.

    “We learn more and more every day how many cancer-causing aspects there are to the job of being a firefighter,” he told The Bellingham-Herald. “From sleep disruptions, to acute and chronic stress, to PFAS (“forever chemicals”) actually being in our fire gear — not to mention smoke exposure and absorption through our skin and diesel exhaust. Cancer is a deadly epidemic for firefighters.”

    Washington state law presumes that certain cancers are a result of the work that firefighters perform in and around burning buildings and encountering hazardous chemicals in a variety of situations.

    Studies have shown that firefighters face a 9 percent increase in cancer diagnoses and a 14 percent increase in cancer-related deaths compared to the general U.S. population, according to the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health.

    John Swobody of North Whatcom Fire and Rescue died in 2018 of lung cancer, and his line of duty death designation meant that his treatment costs were covered and he was awarded posthumous honors. His survivors also received extra benefits.

    This story was originally published February 19, 2023, 5:00 AM.

  • Sixth FDNY Staff Chief Requests Demotion, Return to Field

    Sixth FDNY Staff Chief Requests Demotion, Return to Field

    Feb. 20, 2023 Deputy Assistant Chief Michael Massucci said he was transferred from chief of uniformed personnel and sent to the toolroom in the Bureau of Tech Services to humiliate him.

    By Thomas Tracy Source New York Daily News (TNS) Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

    A sixth FDNY staff chief has requested to be demoted and put back in the field as high-ranking firefighters continue to fume over a leaked audio recording of a closed-door meeting with Fire Commissioner Laura Kavanagh, the Daily News has learned.

    Staff chiefs at the Feb. 3 meeting, which included Chief of Department John “Jack” Hodgens, the most senior uniformed official in the FDNY, and Chief of Fire Operations John Esposito, were outraged after learning that a recording of the gathering was shared with The News.

    Kavanagh, the city’s first woman fire commissioner, is heard on the recording telling chiefs she wanted more “innovative, outside the box thinking.” Instead, over the course of 40 minutes, the chiefs assailed her with questions about their personal cars, vacation carryovers and what she meant when she said there is no “bullying” of subordinates allowed.

    “Is it fair to say that despite the point I made, the majority of the questions here today were about pay and vacation and cars?” Kavanagh asked the chiefs, according to the recording.

    In a letter sent to Kavanagh on Thursday, Deputy Assistant Chief Michael Massucci asked to be booted back to deputy chief. Massucci complained that he was transferred from his post as chief of uniformed personnel and sent to the bureau of operations without cause.

    “I have never had any disciplinary issues or complaints filed against me and have been well respected by my subordinates and superiors throughout my career,” Massucci wrote, adding that the transfer was made “without any reasonable explanation, except to state that you are taking the bureau of personnel in a different direction.”

    “My reassignment to the Bureau of Operations and placing me in the toolroom in the Bureau of Tech Services was an attempt to humiliate and disgrace me amongst my superiors, subordinates, coworkers and friends. Stating later that my skillsets were being better utilized in my new position was yet another attempt to further disgrace me,” Massucci wrote. “The lack of transparency and the lack of truthfulness, not only with me but with the entire Uniformed Executive Staff, has brought me to this decision. I can no longer function as a Deputy Assistant Chief under your administration.”

    Massucci joins Hodgens, Esposito and FDNY Deputy Assistant Chief Frank Leeb who have requested in writing to be demoted to deputy chief and moved out of the department’s MetroTech headquarters in downtown Brooklyn. Two other chiefs have made the same request, but not in writing, sources said.

    Kavanagh demoted Assistant Chiefs Fred Schaaf, Michael Gala and Joseph Jardin to deputy chief earlier this month after Hodgens would not perform the deed, sources said. The three chiefs were considered “bad apples” and refused to act on Kavanagh’s directives, a source in the fire commissioner’s camp said.

    Schaaf was the Queens borough commander when allegations of racism were made in a firehouse. Sources said he resisted transferring and disciplining some firefighters in the aftermath.

    Jardin was chief of fire prevention where he objected to allowing buildings to self-certify their fire safety systems, sources said. But he also was the subject of a series of complaints with the city’s Office of Equal Employment Opportunity over his tough-guy management style. The Fire Prevention Division has the largest black workforce in the FDNY.

    Gala, a disciple of former Chief of Department James Leonard who clashed with Kavanagh, sued over allegations he was passed over for promotion for criticizing a diversity push in the FDNY. Gala was considered a divisive element in the department, one source said.

    “She [Kavanagh] can move people in the department to better the safety of the department and all New Yorkers,” a source with knowledge of the commissioner’s thinking told The News.

    Now, the chiefs are trying to determine whether recording the closed-door meeting violated department policy, a high-ranking FDNY source with knowledge of the drama said.

    “In the past, firefighters would get in trouble if they videotaped or audiotaped anything happening at the firehouse, so the same should apply here,” the source said.

    “At a department meeting of any kind, you are free to speak, exchange ideas and discuss them,” the source said. “If you’re going to be taped outside the minutes of the meeting then that stifles the debate and the conversation.”

    In past FDNY administrations, demotions, particularly at the higher ranks, almost never occurred, one FDNY source said.

    “It just didn’t happen,” the source said. “If they weren’t doing their job, they just wouldn’t get promoted any more. If there was a real issue, the commissioner would just ask them to retire.

    “Now everyone is up for grabs,” the source said.

  • Civilian Dead After Tesla Slams into CA Ladder Truck


    Civilian Dead After Tesla Slams into CA Ladder Truck

    Feb. 19, 2023 Four Costa Contra firefighters, who were injured in the crash, jumped out to help the car’s occupants.

    By Robert Salonga Sourec Bay Area News Group (TNS) Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

    WALNUT CREEK — A driver died after crashing a Tesla sedan into the side of a fire truck that was part of a response to an earlier crash near an Interstate 680 offramp early Saturday, authorities said.

    The fatal collision was reported around 3:50 a.m. near the Treat Boulevard offramp from northbound I-680, according to a California Highway Patrol dispatch log.

    The Contra Costa County Fire Protection District confirmed the crash in a tweet accompanied by photos that was posted Saturday morning. In the post, the fire agency stated that firefighters were tending to a non-injury collision when the driver of a Tesla sedan hit the right side of a ladder truck.

    Fire officials said the driver died at the scene, and that a passenger riding in the Tesla had to be cut out of the car and was taken to a local hospital with unspecified injuries. Photos show that the front of the sedan was crushed, and damage to the right side of the fire vehicle.

    Four firefighters were also taken to the hospital for evaluation of what were later described as minor injuries, according to the fire district.

    “Slow down and move over when approaching vehicles,” the fire district added in its tweet.

    Additional information was not available Saturday evening.

  • WI Fire Chief Collapses, Dies After Training Drill

    WI Fire Chief Collapses, Dies After Training Drill

    Feb. 19, 2023 Lake Mills Fire Chief Todd Yandre left a training drill and was in a gym when he collapsed.

    Source Firehouse.com News

    The Lake Mills community is grieving the loss of their fire chief.

    Fire Chief Todd Yandre died Feb. 15 after attending a training drill, WKOW reported.

    Yandre collapsed at the gym where he went after training, officials said, adding that it was his tradition.

    Despite efforts of his colleagues, he could not be revived.

    “His passion was the fire department and training future firefighters,” Yandre’s brother, Mark told reporters.

    Mark, who is the assistant chief, said his brother was dedicated and spent more than 41 years.

    Visitation will take place on Saturday Feb. 25 at the Lake Mills Elementary School from 3- 7 at 155 E. Pine Street. Visitation will be held from noon to 2 p.m. Sunday at the same location.

    The service will begin at 2 p.m.   

  • MD Apartment Fire Leaves One Dead, Three Firefighters Injured

    MD Apartment Fire Leaves One Dead, Three Firefighters Injured

    Feb. 19, 2023 Montgomery County firefighters rescued residents from the Silver Spring high-rise.

    Source Firehouse.com News

    A high-rise fire in an apartment building in Silver Spring has left a woman dead and 15 others injured.

    Three Montgomery County firefighters suffered injuries as well but are expected to recover, WUSA reported. 

    Chief Scott Goldstein said the Arrive Apartments are made up of two connected buildings with roughly 1,200 to 1,300 residents.

    The buildings had sprinkler systems, but those sprinkler systems were limited to stairwells and other mechanical areas. There were none in the hallways or units.

    Goldstein said the fire was contained to one apartment.

  • Retired FDNY Asst. Chief Pfeifer Named First Deputy Commissioner

    Retired FDNY Asst. Chief Pfeifer Named First Deputy Commissioner

    Feb. 18, 2023 Retired Asst. Chief Joseph Pfeifer is credited with founding the FDNY’s Center for Terrorism and Disaster Preparedness.

    By Thomas Tracy Source New York Daily News (TNS) Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

    A retired FDNY 9/11 hero was tapped as Fire Commissioner Laura Kavanagh’s second in command Saturday.

    As the department’s First Deputy Commissioner, retired Assistant Chief Joseph Pfeifer, 67, will hold the second-highest civilian rank in the FDNY, the department said.

    The appointment will undoubtedly tamp down criticisms by department staff chiefs that Kavanagh — the city’s first woman fire commissioner — doesn’t include them in her staff moves and makes decisions for the department with a tight circle of aides with little or no firefighting experience.

    Yet Kavanagh’s critics call Pfeifer’s appointment nothing more than “window dressing” as staff chiefs continue to prepare a mass exodus from FDNY headquarters next month.

    Pfeifer, who retired in 2018, “served as one of New York City’s Bravest for decades,” Kavanagh said in a statement. “(He) created partnerships and programs that enhanced the safety and training of our members, and has always been there for our city, especially on our darkest days.

    “Having already worked closely with Joe for many years, I am thrilled he has returned home to the FDNY and joined our executive leadership team,” she said.

    Mayor Adams hailed the hire on Saturday, claiming Pfeifer “embodies what it means to be New York’s Bravest.”

    Pfeifer joined the fire department in 1981 and was the first FDNY chief to respond to the World Trade Center on 9/11. His brother, FDNY Lt. Kevin Pfeifer, died in the terror attack.

    The retired chief has been credited with founding the department’s Center for Terrorism and Disaster Preparedness. He was also the FDNY’s chief of Counterterrorism and Emergency Preparedness for 17 years after 9/11, where he helped shape strategic planning, intelligence sharing and interagency response to terror related incidents, department officials said.

    “With nearly 40-years of experience with the FDNY, he is an excellent choice to assume one of the highest-ranking positions in this great department and is someone that New Yorkers and firefighters can count on to innovate in all aspects of fire prevention and safety,” Mayor Adams said.

    Kavanagh was the FDNY’s first deputy fire commissioner under former Fire Commissioner Daniel Nigro. When she became acting fire commissioner after Nigro retired last year, Lizette Christoff, the department’s deputy commissioner of budget and finance, was made acting first deputy fire commissioner.

    No one has taken on the position full time since Kavanagh was promoted, FDNY officials said.

    Since he retired, Pfeifer has been an adjunct associate professor in Columbia University’s School of International Public Affairs and the director of crisis leadership at the Columbia Climate School’s National Center for Disaster Preparedness.

    The retired chief said he is looking forward to his new challenge.

    “The heart of FDNY is the ability to unify efforts to solve complex problems in the face of great tragedy,” Pfeifer said. “Our united team is a sign of resilience to reflect on the past and envision the future so that we can enhance the present.”

    As of Friday, at least six staff chiefs, including Chief of Department John “Jack” Hodgens, the most senior uniformed official in the FDNY, have asked to be demoted to deputy chief and be moved back to the field, claiming that there’s been a complete breakdown of communication between Kavanagh and the FDNY’s highest uniformed ranks. The chiefs are asking to be moved into their new roles by March 6.

    Hodgens and the other chiefs asked to be reassigned after Kavanagh demoted Assistant Chiefs Fred Schaaf, Michael Gala and Joseph Jardin to deputy chief, and then called other top chiefs on the carpet in a closed door Feb. 3 meeting where she demanded more out of the box thinking and fewer inquiries about vacation rollovers and personal cars.

    “The lack of transparency and the lack of truthfulness, not only with me but with the entire Uniformed Executive Staff, has brought me to this decision,” Deputy Assistant Chief Michael Massucci wrote this week as he asked to be booted back to deputy chief.

    A high-ranking FDNY source with knowledge of the ongoing turmoil didn’t believe Pfeifer could bring the outraged staff chiefs back into the fold.

    “He has a bit of history with the fire department and has some gravitas, but some are angry he took the job,” the source said about Pfeifer. “He’s going to bring some credibility to Kavanagh when the other chiefs leave, but that’s about it.”

  • GA Firefighter Reportedly on Lam from AL Still Collecting Paycheck

    GA Firefighter Reportedly on Lam from AL Still Collecting Paycheck

    Feb. 18, 2023 Douglas County Firefighter Daymetrie Williams was charged with felony burglary two years before he was hired.

    Source Firehouse.com News

    A Georgia firefighter on the lam from Alabama for a felony charge is still getting paid.

    Douglas County Firefighter Daymetrie Williams has been on paid leave since November, according to 11 Alive.

    The felony burglary charge occurred two years before he was hired in Georgia in 2021.

    The Georgia Bureau of Investigation said that the fire department didn’t do a background check on him until March 2022, almost a year after he was hired.

    Williams’ personnel file, obtained by reporters, showed he was written up twice in the span of a few months. He got a written reprimand for an “altercation with an employee” and probation for “unwanted leering.” 

    Checking with universities where he claimed to have obtained degrees in fire science and psychology proved interesting.

    West Virginia University said it had no record of Williams even attending its campus, let alone earning a fire science degree while West Virginia State University confirmed he graduated, but did not obtain a degree in psychology, the station reported.

    County officials provided a short statement saying the county is investigating the allegations.

    Williams makes $46,000 a year.