Category: In The News

  • Pandemic Hitting Wildland FFs Harder This Year

    Pandemic Hitting Wildland FFs Harder This Year

    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.

  • MA Firefighters Save Man’s Life Aboard Plane

    MA Firefighters Save Man’s Life Aboard Plane

    North Attleboro firefighters jumped into action with life-saving measures when a man suffered a serious seizure on a flight from Boston to Chicago.

    September 17, 2021 – By Heather Morrison – Source masslive.com

    North Attleboro firefighters have been credited with saving a man’s life while they were on a Southwest flight from Boston to Chicago.

    On Thursday, current and retired firefighters, including North Attleboro Fire Chief Christopher Coleman, were on a flight from Logan International Airport to Midway International Airport, when a man on board began suffering from symptoms of a seizure, NBC Boston reported.

    The firefighters then began administering CPR and advanced life support and the man’s pulse returned, the North Attleboro Fire Department told the news station.

    “Well done North Attleboro Fire Department,” the town’s police department wrote on Faceobok. “We are proud to be able to work with these dedicated and professional firefighters and there fantastic Chief Coleman.”

    The group of firefighters had been traveling to Denver to visit the Fallen Firefighters Memorial, CBS reported.

    “The heroic actions of these firefighters today echo our mantra that we are never truly off-duty should any emergency occur,” North Attleboro Deputy Fire Chief Michael Chabot said in a statement to CBS. “Their swift action and determination, even at 30,000 feet in the air, is a testament to their unwavering preparedness and professionalism.”

    ©2021 Advance Local Media LLC. Visit masslive.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

  • Veteran Firefighter Tapped to Lead CA Department

    Veteran Firefighter Tapped to Lead CA Department

    Veteran firefighter Nick Luby, who is currently the assistant chief in Oakland, will become the next fire chief of the Alameda Fire Department.

    September 17, 2021 – By Peter Hegarty – Source East Bay Times

    Sep. 17—ALAMEDA, CA — A veteran Oakland firefighter will become the next chief of the Alameda Fire Department.

    Nick Luby, currently an assistant chief in Oakland, will take over the top spot, Alameda City Manager Eric Levitt announced Wednesday.

    Levitt initially said he was “very close to finalizing all the details” of the appointment in a Sept. 7 email to the City Council and top city officials. Luby will start Oct. 18.

    “I have found Nick to be an experienced leader and believe he will be a great fit for the city of Alameda,” Levitt said in the email.

    Luby will replace Edmond Rodriguez, who took over as chief in November 2017 from Doug Long, who retired a few weeks earlier after serving more than 29 years as an Alameda firefighter.

    In March 2020, Rodriguez went on medical leave. He did not return to duty and officially stepped down in December, Levitt said. Rick Zombeck, who has been with the department since 1983, has been serving as interim chief while the city searched for a permanent replacement.

    Twenty-six people applied for the post, Levitt said.

    “I am very excited to join the Alameda team and utilize my 23 years of experience to support and advance the Alameda Fire Department and the greater Alameda community,” Luby said in a statement. “As fire chief, I’ll work to ensure that we are unwavering in our responsibility to professionally serve our community 24/7/365.”

    The compensation package that Alameda will provide Luby was not immediately available. But when the city advertised the position, the annual salary range was described as $222,002 to $269,846, depending on the candidate’s qualifications.

    The amount does not include benefits, which will include a city-provided vehicle.

    Luby has worked with the Oakland Fire Department since 1999. He previously worked with Cal Fire for 18 months.

    “My wife and three daughters value the sense of community and diversity that residing in the Bay Area offers and are excited at the prospect of me becoming the leader of the Alameda Fire Department,” Luby said in his application. “My family is embedded in the East Bay, with all three children currently attending Oakland Unified schools.”

    He added: “It goes without saying the Luby family is ‘rooted in Oakland.’ This new career opportunity close to home will be a family adventure that we embrace and look forward to participating in together.”

    In Oakland, Luby has served as an emergency medical technician, a paramedic and a trained boat operator, and he has been a swift water rescue technician.

    (c)2021 the Contra Costa Times (Walnut Creek, Calif.)

    Visit the Contra Costa Times (Walnut Creek, Calif.) at www.eastbaytimes.com

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

  • LAFD Captain Sues over Vape Shop Blast Injuries

    LAFD Captain Sues over Vape Shop Blast Injuries

    LAFD Capt. Victor Aguirre has filed a lawsuit after suffering disfiguring burn injuries in an explosive May 2020 fire at a building housing a vaping shop.

    September 16, 2021 – By Richard Winton – Source Los Angeles Times

    A Los Angeles Fire Department captain severely burned in a May 2020 explosion inside a downtown L.A. warehouse has sued the owners of the building and a vaping supply shop housed there, accusing them of hazardous activity, premise liability and negligence.

    Victor Aguirre and his wife, Claudia Aguirre, filed suit Wednesday in Los Angeles County Superior Court against property owner Steve Sungho Lee and his various companies along with the operators of Green Buddha and Smoke Tokes, a smoke and vape shop inside the East 3rd Street warehouse where the explosion occurred. Twelve firefighters were injured.

    After a criminal investigation by the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and the Los Angeles Police Department, they were charged with more than 300 criminal counts.

    The lawsuit claims Victor Aguirre, a 20-year veteran of the Fire Department and father of two, suffered catastrophic injuries in the explosion, including severe burns over much of his body and “devastating third-degree burns” to his hands. The burns resulted in so much damage that each of his fingers had to be partially amputated, and he has undergone 25 surgeries since. He was hospitalized for two months and has been able to return to the Fire Department in an administrative capacity.

    Aguirre, according to the suit, has been permanently disfigured, disabled and left with a lifetime of pain and suffering. The suit accuses the warehouse owner and operators of the vape shops of violating the law, storing large quantities of hazardous materials in an illegal and unsafe manner, maintaining them in an “ultrahazardous condition” and negligently summoning Aguirre and other firefighters to the scene.

    The business owners “negligently stored an explosive mix of hazardous materials. They are to blame for the horrific injuries Mr. Aguirre and the other 11 firefighters suffered,” said attorney Patrick Gunning, who represents the Aguirres.

    The blast happened in a section of downtown nicknamed “bong row” because of the concentration of retailers selling rolling papers, butane and other supplies associated with vaping, tobacco and the extraction of THC for marijuana vape cartridges. Those in the legal cannabis industry say many of the stores on 3rd, Boyd and Wall streets supply butane and other items in bulk to unlicensed cannabis distributors.

    In a report, the Fire Department determined the “excessive quantity” of nitrous oxide and butane containers inside Smoke Tokes fueled the fire, which damaged several other properties. The report also revealed that the LAFD had failed to inspect the building for at least a year before the blast. Fire Chief Ralph Terrazas has acknowledged that an inspection probably would have resulted in the seizure of many of the materials that fed the explosion.

    In the lawsuit, Gunning alleges firefighters believed they were fighting a “routine ventilation limited structure fire” but moments after entering heard a “popcorn-like” noise that rapidly escalated before a “jet-like rumble.” Aguirre, who was on top of the roof, was last off the building; the enormous explosion engulfed him and other firefighters as they scrambled onto the aerial ladder of a firetruck.

    Video and still images captured Aguirre engulfed in flames as he headed down the ladder after the explosion.

    None of defendants named in the suit could be reached for comment.

    In November, the owners of two smoking and vaping supply stores struck plea deals with prosecutors that call for their businesses to pay more than $100,000 to the city.

    As part of the agreement with the Los Angeles city attorney’s office, Smoke Tokes and Green Buddha must pay the Los Angeles Fire Department about $127,000 to compensate the agency for the investigation.

    In addition, Raheel Lakhany and Shafaq Sattar, who each owned one of the businesses, agreed to cease operating at the location of the fire. Their businesses pleaded no contest to four municipal code violations involving the improper storage of flammable materials and other fire code violations.

    Criminal charges against Lakhany and Sattar were dismissed as part of the deal.

    Charges are still pending against building owner Lee.

    Times staff writer James Queally contributed to this report.

    ©2021 Los Angeles Times. Visit latimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

  • Suspicious Fire Destroys MA Police Cruisers

    Suspicious Fire Destroys MA Police Cruisers

    Two Dracut Police Department vehicles were destroyed Wednesday night in a suspicious fire that erupted in a parking lot behind the station.

    September 16, 2021 – By Michael Bonner – Source masslive.com

    Police in Dracut are investigating a “suspicious” fire that destroyed two police cruisers in the department’s parking lot on Wednesday night.

    At about 9 p.m. on Wednesday, officers were responding to multiple calls when a shift supervisor received another call about a fire in the parking lot behind the police station, authorities said.

    Police said they found one marked cruiser fully engulfed in flames, which firefighters from Dracut quickly extinguished. A cruiser parked beside the on-fire cruiser also sustained significant damage. Both vehicles were totaled, police said.

    Police located a a woman, who they say is a person of interest, in the vestibule of the station after the fire was put out. She was taken to a local hospital to undergo an evaluation.

    No injuries were reported in the incident. This incident remains under active investigation, police said.

    ©2021 Advance Local Media LLC. Visit masslive.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

  • New MS Chief Takes Reins in His Hometown

    New MS Chief Takes Reins in His Hometown

    Jason Collier has taken over as fire chief in his hometown of Meridian, saying his main goals are increasing diversity and listening to his firefighters.

    September 15, 2021 – By Bianca Moorman – Source The Meridian Star, Miss.

    Sep. 15—Jason Collier became a firefighter because he wanted to give back to his hometown.

    “When I first started, I was in awe of people in positions like mine,” said the City of Meridian’s new fire chief. “I always had the ambition, but I never thought I would get the opportunity.”

    Collier, who has 25 years of experience in firefighting, replaces Ricky Leister, who retired in the spring. He’s been in firefighting since graduating from Meridian High School in 1995.

    “I started in July of ’96 when I was 19,” he recalled. “I started out as a volunteer firefighter when I was 17 out in Bailey, and I really liked it.”

    Since then, he’s served as a firefighter, driver, captain, fire marshal and deputy fire chief. Collier has spent most of his career in Meridian, besides an 18 month stint on the Gulf Coast.

    Collier said he returned to Meridian because he missed his hometown and his firefighters.

    “I wanted to come back…I hated being away from the fire department,” he said. “Even though I worked for another fire department, it wasn’t the same. This a real special place — we are like family and we take care of each other.”

    “They are like my second family and I will do anything for them,” Collier added. “Your fellow firefighters make this the best job, because you really looking forward to coming to work.”

    As far as goals, Collier aims to improve insurance rates, provide more training and bring the department to full capacity. The department has hired several new firefighters, so meeting full capacity is not far from reach, he said.

    Collier also wants to improve the department’s diversity.

    “I would like to have a more diverse fire department,” he said. “More female firefighters and more minorities.”

    Firefighter Eric McCurty said that since Collier became chief, he’s made it a priority to listen to his colleagues’ concerns.

    “He’s been already running the show for the while,” McCurty said of Collier’s leadership. “It’s awesome.”

    Firefighter Nathaniel Greggs agrees.

    “It’s great we’ve got someone we can rely on and trust,” he said.

    For his part, Collier is enjoying his new role.

    “I’m definitely humbled,” he said. “I feel like I’ve followed what the Lord has done for me in my life and career…He’s brought me to this position.”

    (c)2021 The Meridian Star (Meridian, Miss.)

    Visit The Meridian Star (Meridian, Miss.) at meridianstar.com

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

  • Chicago Firefighter Shot in Face in Drive-By Shooting

    Chicago Firefighter Shot in Face in Drive-By Shooting

    Off-duty firefighter Timothy Eiland, 32, was shot in the face in a fatal drive-by shooting while leaving a birthday party Saturday on Chicago’s South Side.

    September 13, 2021 – By Katherine Rosenberg-Douglas – Source Chicago Tribune –

    Six people were shot — one of them fatally and another critically injured — on the Far South Side Saturday night. An off-duty Chicago firefighter and a 15-year-old girl were among the wounded, officials said.

    Authorities said the six people were outside and walking to their vehicles in the 300 block of East Kensington Avenue in West Pullman around 9:40 p.m. Someone in another vehicle “fired multiple rounds, striking the victims,” according to a police media notification.

    A 42-year-old woman was shot twice in an arm and once in her armpit, police said, and she was taken to University of Chicago Medical Center, where she was pronounced dead at 10:28 p.m., according to preliminary information from the Cook County medical examiner’s office.

    She was identified as Schenia Smith, of the 15300 block of Evers Street in Dolton, according to Natalia Derevyanny, a spokeswoman for the medical examiner’s office. Reached by phone Sunday, a woman who identified herself as Smith’s aunt said Smith is survived by her children and her mother, but she declined additional comment.

    Four other people, including the off-duty Chicago firefighter, were taken by paramedics from the Fire Department to area hospitals for treatment of their injuries. A fifth person, a 31-year-old man, later arrived at Little Company of Mary Hospital in a private vehicle, police said.

    Police said the injured firefighter, a 32-year-old man, had been shot once in the face and was in critical condition at University of Chicago Medical Center. Larry Langford, a spokesman for the Fire Department, said the firefighter remained in critical condition late Sunday.

    Asked for additional details about the man’s career, such as how long he has been with the department, Langford said: “He has been on a few years and is assigned to a South Side firehouse.”

    Others injured included:

    • A 38-year-old man was shot once in the stomach and was in fair condition at University of Chicago Medical Center.
    • A 15-year-old girl was shot once in the arm and she was listed in fair condition at Comer Children’s Hospital.
    • A man, 22, was shot once in the arm and once in the leg and he was taken to Roseland Hospital where he was listed in fair condition.
    • The 31-year-old man who self-transported to Little Company of Mary Hospital suffered a graze wound to his head and he was listed in fair condition.

    The attack was at least the second shooting with multiple victims in Chicago on Saturday. Four people were shot, one fatally, in the Grand Crossing neighborhood on the South Side around 5 p.m., according to police.

    No arrests had been made in either shooting, and the cases remained under investigation Sunday, police said.

    ©2021 Chicago Tribune. Visit chicagotribune.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

  • Watch CA Firefighters Knock Down RV Fire

    Watch CA Firefighters Knock Down RV Fire

    Raw video shows San Diego firefighters aggressively attacking a raging RV fire to prevent the flames from spreading to nearby vegetation.

    September 13, 2021 – Video from ONSCENE TV.

  • N.C. firefighter dies of COVID-19; wife also hospitalized, still battling the virus

    N.C. firefighter dies of COVID-19; wife also hospitalized, still battling the virus

    Firefighter Jeffery Hager, 46, served with the Charlotte and Huntersville fire departments

    September 12, 2021 – By: Joe Marusak – The Charlotte Observer

    CHARLOTTE, N.C. — A longtime firefighter has died of COVID-19, the Charlotte Fire Department said Saturday.

    “It is with the heaviest of hearts that we announce the tragic passing of Charlotte Firefighter Jeffery Hager, a 24-year veteran with the department,” fire officials said in a statement.

    Charlotte Firefighter Jeffery Hager, a 24-year veteran with the department, died of COVID-19.
    Charlotte Firefighter Jeffery Hager, a 24-year veteran with the department, died of COVID-19.

    The 46-year-old Hager died Friday afternoon “after valiantly fighting COVID-19 for several weeks,” according to the statement.

    COVID also hospitalized his wife, Amee, friends posted on a Go Fund Me fundraiser for their four children. Her condition was unknown on Saturday.

    Hager joined the fire department on March 12, 1997, “and served the community until his death,” according to the statement. “We ask that you please keep family, friends and fire department members in your thoughts and prayers during this difficult time.”

    Jeff and Amee Hager tested positive for COVID on Aug. 23, fellow firefighter Anjie Davis Blackmon posted on the Go Fund Me fundraiser she established to help the family.

    Jeff Hager also served on the Huntersville Fire Department since 2013, according to Blackmon.

    The couple was admitted to a hospital on Aug. 28. On Sept. 3, their conditions worsened, she said.

    Family members are caring for the Hagers’ children — ages 14, 13, 7 and 6, she said.

    “Amee is a fantastic stay-at-home mom, often assuming the role of both mother and father with Jeff’s work schedule,” Blackmon said.

    “As a fellow firefighter, I know that if I were in need of help, Jeff would be there to help,” she said. “Right now Jeff, Amee and their children desperately need our help.”

    The Huntersville Fire Department joined the effort, tweeting photos of the family and the link to the fundraiser.

    “Needing some prayers for one of our members & his family,” the firefighters tweeted. “A dedicated, beloved member & a VERY active public servant & his family. Not often we ask for help…we often avoid it. We’re the helpers. But we need your help today.”

    Blackmon hoped to raise $10,000 for groceries, clothing and any other immediate need expenses for their children. She also hopes to devote part of the money to “maintaining their home for the day that they can all be rejoined as a family.”

    By Saturday, 358 people had contributed a total of $38,000.

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

  • ‘The little truck that could’: Md. fire chief reflects on station’s Pentagon response on 9/11

    ‘The little truck that could’: Md. fire chief reflects on station’s Pentagon response on 9/11

    Chief Micky Fyock’s 1950s-era Mack Ladder Truck 16 was the only apparatus small enough to get inside the Pentagon

    September 11, 2021 – By Mary Grace Keller – For The Frederick News-Post, Md.

    FREDERICK COUNTY, Md. — Micky Fyock had just finished his supervisor shift at the Frederick County 911 center when he got a phone call the night of Sept. 11, 2001.

    The Woodsboro Volunteer Fire Company chief answered the call. A dispatcher told him the Pentagon needed Woodsboro’s 1950s era Mack Ladder Truck 16 to help contain the fire that started after American Airlines Flight 77 crashed into the building.

    The Woodsboro Volunteer Fire Company chief answered the call. A dispatcher told him the Pentagon needed Woodsboro’s 1950s era Mack Ladder Truck 16 to help contain the fire that started after American Airlines Flight 77 crashed into the building.
    The Woodsboro Volunteer Fire Company chief answered the call. A dispatcher told him the Pentagon needed Woodsboro’s 1950s era Mack Ladder Truck 16 to help contain the fire that started after American Airlines Flight 77 crashed into the building. (Woodsboro Volunteer Fire Company)

    “I thought somebody was messing with me,” Fyock said.

    But the need was real, and it was urgent.

    Like Woodsboro fire station’s engine bay doors, the Pentagon’s entrance stood 10 feet tall, and they needed apparatus small enough to get inside. Someone in D.C., Fyock doesn’t know who, remembered that Woodsboro had an older, smaller truck that just might fit.

    Fyock directed the local 911 center to dispatch the call like they would for any other fire. The first four qualified firefighters to arrive went with Fyock, and they headed for the Pentagon.

    The truck only held two people and wouldn’t go faster than 55 mph, according to Fyock. The other three firefighters followed in a duty vehicle.

    Fyock doesn’t remember much about the journey, but he does recall how eerily empty the roads were. He only saw one other vehicle.

    When the Woodsboro crew arrived, they had to hand over their cell phones before entering the Pentagon. Their target was the inner courtyard, nestled within the rings of the building.

    “We went inside and they told us that because of the jet fuel in the building basically they had decided to not fight fire that night but just to hold it where it is,” Fyock recalled.

    Authors Patrick Creed and Rick Newman detail the effort in their book, “Firefight: Inside the Battle to Save the Pentagon on 9/11.”

    Working alongside other fire crews, Truck 16 aimed its 65-foot ladder and hose at the roof, the authors wrote. The truck lacked remote control to operate the hose, so firefighters rigged a pulley system with ropes to move the hose around. Once it was stable, firefighters in pairs took turns directing the water.

    Fyock, chief then and still chief now, supervised the group. They were on scene for about 13 hours, he told the News-Post. A three-star general loaned Fyock his cell phone so he could check in with command.

    When Fyock found time for breaks, he took in the scenes around him. Exhausted firefighters slept on body bags, and inside the Pentagon, knee deep in water, Fyock came upon a hole where the cockpit came crashing through.

    Body parts were scattered around it. He later realized they must have belonged to the terrorists who hijacked the plane.

    Eventually, fresh fire crews started to arrive at the Pentagon, along with food trucks. In the midst of the new flurry of activity, Fyock noticed a man in a suit, just standing there staring at the wreckage.

    Fyock asked if the man needed anything.

    “I was at the dentist,” the man told him. “But my fellow workers weren’t.”

    Fyock put his arm around the stranger, and they sat on a bench.

    “I just held him for a while,” Fyock said.

    The man left eventually, but Fyock never got his name.

    Twenty years later, Fyock feels like it was yesterday.

    “The visions I saw will never leave me,” Fyock said. “In my lifetime, I’ve seen a lot of tragedy.”

    But he’s also seen a lot of good.

    “I remember the morning of the 12th we had our ladder up, and it was flowing water, and we put an American flag on the end of the ladder,” Fyock said.

    As the sun beamed down on the water and the flag waved, a rainbow appeared.

    “I said, we’re gonna be all right,” Fyock said.

    Relieved of duty, Fyock and his crew returned to Woodsboro.

    After two decades, Fyock is the only member of the 9/11 crew who is still active with the Woodsboro Volunteer Fire Company.

    Truck 16 eventually became too old to meet modern needs and was sold to collector and longtime firefighter Kyd Dieterich, who was once fire chief in Hagerstown. Though he retired from career firefighting, he still volunteers on the Board of Directors at the Funkstown station in Washington County.

    When Dieterich worked in fire truck sales, he knew Woodsboro planned to sell Truck 16 not long after 9/11. After Woodsboro didn’t get any enticing offers, Dieterich made a bid. The company accepted it, and Dieterich moved the truck to storage in Hagerstown.

    He’s kept it in good condition and rolls it out every now and then for special occasions such as parades.

    “It’s part of our nation’s history. It’s something that I think our citizens should be proud of,” Dieterich said in an interview.

    He believes Truck 16 should stay in the area and, ideally, be on display.

    Clarence “Chip” Jewell, president of the Frederick County Fire & Rescue Museum in Emmitsburg, thinks he can help.

    Jewell, a retired director of volunteer services at Frederick County and currently assistant chief and president at Libertytown, would love to see the truck displayed at the museum. It’s just an idea in its infancy at this point, but it’s a hope he has for the future. The museum would need to be expanded to fit the truck.

    “It really is an iconic piece of fire apparatus,” Jewell said, adding it has become known as “the little truck that could.”

    When the 9/11 anniversary comes around, Fyock tends to stay at home. At 69 years old, he has 56 years of volunteer fire service under his belt. There have been times in those years he questioned whether he’s had enough.

    Then he gets another call.

    “You get reborn again, because you know you did good, you’ve helped people,” Fyock said. “You know you have a purpose.”

    (c)2021 The Frederick News-Post (Frederick, Md.)McClatchy-Tribune News Service