Category: In The News

  • Photos: Wind-Driven Fire in Cleveland Destroys Five Homes

    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

    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

    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.

    View Video

    “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, [email protected]

    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

    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.

  • Death Toll Reaches Three in ME Explosion, Fire

    Death Toll Reaches Three in ME Explosion, Fire

    Officials say a leak in a propane-powered appliance sparked an explosion at a Montville log cabin that claimed three lives.

    Source Bangor Daily News, Maine

    Apr. 14—MONTVILLE, Maine — Three men have died after a gas explosion and fire Wednesday afternoon leveled a residence on Darci Lane in Montville.

    First responders found Rocco Taddeo, 88, of Montville, dead inside the home. Homeowner Stuart Nichols, 74, and a relative of his, 78-year-old Robert Gorham of Buxton, were found outside the house, where they’d been thrown with the force of the explosion into some nearby trees, according to the Maine State Police. Both Nichols and Gorham were taken to Maine Medical Center in Portland to be treated for their injuries, but later died at the hospital.

    Early results of the investigation have established that one of Nichols’ propane-powered appliances had a gas leak, Shannon Moss, spokesperson for the Maine Department of Public Safety, said. A recently acquired used propane-powered cooking stove in the kitchen was among several propane-powered appliances in the small log cabin.

    Watch Video

    When the explosion and fire happened at about 3:30 p.m., Taddeo had been trying to light the stove, Moss said.

    The disaster took place at the end of a quiet dirt road in center Montville, an area where the neighbors seemed to all know each other. Nichols, a Vietnam-era veteran, lived in the log cabin and had a large garage on the end of Darci Lane. But both buildings were leveled Wednesday and vehicles parked in the yard were rendered charred metal heaps. Scorched trees surrounded where the homestead had stood.

    A Darci Lane neighbor who was one of the first on the scene said that the fire was like nothing he had ever seen before or could have imagined.

    “It wasn’t like a Bruce Willis action movie. It was beyond that,” the neighbor, who gave his name as Jimmy Edward, said. “It was an absolute inferno.”

    On Thursday morning, investigators with the Maine Fuel Board and the state fire marshal’s office took photos of the charred rubble that remained. Family members of one of the victims stood under an umbrella in the chilly rain, speaking quietly with investigators and looking at the scene of destruction around them.

    According to the Montville tax maps, Nichols owned 4-acre property that the town assessed at $47,500 in 2021.

    Edward’s home is separated from where Nichols’ house stood by a small group of trees. He was on his way home when he noticed smoke coming from somewhere in the vicinity of Darci Lane.

    “Right away, you knew it wasn’t someone burning leaves,” he said. “It was a structure.”

    He rushed towards his neighbor’s burning house. As he approached, he saw another man he thought was a volunteer firefighter also come running to help. He remembers the man was driving a Maine Energy truck, although an employee of Maine Energy said later Thursday that the company didn’t know of anything like that happening.

    “He’s running towards the inferno, which looked like a rocket ship upside down,” Edward said. “It was the craziest thing I’ve ever seen. When it went off, it went off.”

    The Montville Fire Department was assisted by firefighters from Liberty, Searsmont, Freedom, Morrill, Troy, Unity, Brooks, Washington and Palermo. Ambulance services from Liberty, Searsmont and Unity provided medical assistance.

    Edward said that it’s a shame that municipalities are having a hard time finding enough volunteer firefighters to staff their fire departments.

    “You don’t think you’ll need them, until it’s your house,” he said.

    (c)2022 the Bangor Daily News (Bangor, Maine)

    Visit the Bangor Daily News (Bangor, Maine) at www.bangordailynews.com

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

  • DC FF Injured Battling Fire in Vacant Dwelling

    DC FF Injured Battling Fire in Vacant Dwelling

    A DC Fire and EMS firefighter was injured battling a vacant building fire that extended to an adjacent property.

    A DC Fire and EMS firefighter was injured battling a vacant building fire overnight on the 5800 block of Georgia Avenue NW that extended to an adjacent property.

    Firefighters were called to the two-story dwelling around 11:45 a.m. Wednesday night, crew arrived to heavy fire conditions in a two-story vacant property, according to a tweet by DC Fire and EMS.

    Crews got a quick knockdown on the main body of fire then started to open up walls and ceilings to check for extension and extinguish hot spots.

    One firefighter received a non-life-threatening injury and was transported to a local hospital

  • Cleveland Fire Chief Announces Retirement

    Cleveland Fire Chief Announces Retirement

    After 33 years with the Cleveland Fire Department, and seven years as fire chief, Angelo Calvillo shared that he will retire in May.

    By Courtney Astolfi Source cleveland.com

    CLEVELAND, Ohio — Cleveland fire Chief c will retire in mid-May after nearly seven years as the department’s leader and 33 years as a city firefighter.

    The department will host a retirement event for Calvillo on May 5 at the Western Reserve Fire Museum, at which point he’s expected to announce his final day of employment with the city, according to a fire department spokesman.

    Former Mayor Frank Jackson named Calvillo to the department’s top job in 2015, initially as an interim appointment, later made permanent. As chief, Calvillo oversees roughly 700 employees and a $100 million budget.

    The city’s firefighters and their union, Cleveland Firefighters Association, IAFF Local 93, have had a tenuous relationship with Calvillo over the years.

    The union called for his ouster in 2019 for violating a charter provision that bars civil service employees from participating in political campaigns. Calvillo acknowledged during a 2017 deposition that he helped circulate petitions for Jackson’s re-election that year.

    The union sued in 2019, asking the court to compel Jackson to fire Calvillo for violating the rules. The lawsuit was dismissed in January, after the Eighth District Court of Appeals determined the union did not have proper standing to bring the case.

    Mayor Justin Bibb’s administration is already on the hunt for a new police chief, but it does not appear as if the open fire chief position has been posted yet.

    In other staffing moves within Bibb’s administration, interim Economic Development Director David Ebersole is set to leave his post next week. He was hired by the city in 2008.

    And Ricardo Leon — whom Bibb in January named as his senior equity strategist — appears to have bowed out before ever assuming the position. The Cuyahoga Land Bank last week announced it had hired Leon as its chief operating officer instead.

    Leon was previously the executive director of the Metro West community development corporation.

    The equity strategist position was meant to be one of four senior strategists within the mayor’s office focused on various issues. Chief Strategy Officer Bradford Davy said Bibb’s administration hasn’t decided whether it will seek to fill the position with someone other than Leon. Bibb got pushback from City Council during budget hearings about what some members saw as high staffing costs within the mayor’s office.

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

  • VA Fire Leaves One Missing, Multiple Homes Damaged

    VA Fire Leaves One Missing, Multiple Homes Damaged

    A massive fire ripped through the Ashburn neighborhood in Loudoun County damaging multiple homes and leaving one person missing.

    Source: Firehouse.com News

    Firefighters in Loudoun County battled an early morning two-alarm fire that has left one person missing and damaged four homes in Ashburn.

    Around 1:30 a.m., Tuesday morning firefighters responded to a reported home fire in Ashburn that was spreading to adjacent properties. 

    Firefighters arrived to find heavy fire on multiple floors of the home with fire quickly spreading to the houses on either side, according to Loudoun County Fire officials. Due to the amount of fire, a RIT team and second alarm were requested.

    Fire crews battled windy conditions attacking the bulk of the fire from the exterior as others worked quickly to contain the fire and search for occupants in the neighboring houses.

    Two residents from the primary fire building self-evacuated and were transported to a local burn center with minor injuries, one adult remains unaccounted for.

    Fire companies from Ashburn, Lansdowne, Moorefield, Leesburg, and command staff responded to the initial call.

  • MD Fireboat Sinks During Training Exercise

    MD Fireboat Sinks During Training Exercise

    March 29, 2022An Anne Arundel County Fire Department boat sank while crew members were conducting training evolutions.

    By Dan Belson – Source The Capital, Annapolis, Md. (TNS)

    An Anne Arundel County Fire Department boat sunk Monday afternoon off the coast of Gibson Island. The four people onboard have been rescued and are not injured.

    The county’s Fireboat 41, based out of Shady Side, started taking on water after 3 p.m. Monday amid heavy winds along the Chesapeake, and sunk shortly after, according to a fire department spokesperson.

    The boat was being used by the county’s Fireboat 19 team, based out of Cape St. Claire, for training Monday afternoon. Two of the firefighters on the boat were training for their boat certification, according to fire department Lieutenant Jennifer Macallair.

    The fire department’s fleet of fireboats typically respond to marine emergencies, such as water rescues. She said training operations for marine emergency personnel continue through hazardous weather conditions.

    Department of Natural Resources Police were able to bring the four occupants of the boat back to shore at Sandy Point State Park, said Lauren Moses, a spokesperson for that agency.

    (c)2022 The Capital (Annapolis, Md.)

    Visit The Capital (Annapolis, Md.) at www.hometownannapolis.com

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

  • CA Program to Divert EMS Calls to Nurse Line

    CA Program to Divert EMS Calls to Nurse Line

    A new program by Heartland Fire-Rescue and supported by the City of El Cajon would employ nurses to handle non-serious medical calls.

    Firehouse.com News

    The City of El Cajon is looking to improve it medical services by diverting low priority medical calls to nurses instead of sending EMS crews.

    On average El Cajon handles around 16,000 emergency calls per year, approximately a third are not considered true emergencies requiring a typical ambulance and fire apparatus response.

    Steve Swaney, Heartland Fire-Rescue chief, told Newsradio 600 KOGO, “We’ve done the same thing for 40 years: Someone calls 911 and we send everybody. It’s not sustainable.”

    With the current EMS system, dispatchers code call severity and send EMS crews where the call is critical or not. The new program gives dispatchers the option of transferring callers to a 24/7 nurse call center.

    The nurses would triage calls and provide resources to the callers including assisting them in finding non-emergency care and transportation if immediate care is not needed.

    The new program has a few additional steps that require approval before it would go into operation this summer. City leaders estimate the program could reduce responses by approximately 5,000 calls.