Category: Fire

New Year 2021 – At War with Vices

New Year 2021

As new year 2021 begins, I think now is the perfect time to reflect on where we have been this past year and where we are going. We saw the return of terrorism at a level we have not seen since September 11.

We saw a domestic terror incident in one of our greatest downtowns in America. The question is: are we ready?

New Year 2021

When celebrating New Year’s, we often make resolutions to lose weight, give up cigars or do better about some weakness. For me, I think the public safety industry’s biggest vice might be training. I am lucky to speak across the country and meet a variety of public safety professionals. Often I see us going through the motions with our training. When I see organizations that are uncommitted to training, I will usually inquire and hear that “we do this every day.” Generally, I do not believe that to be the case, but I do believe that you may be asked to respond to a unique situation. Without preparation, you will find yourself ill equipped to slay the dragon we face.

In the latter’s case I pray we do not play like we practice. It will lead to innocent people being unnecessarily hurt or killed just as quickly as not practicing at all. While walk-throughs have their place, are you really practicing enough on vehicle placement, hose deployment, SCBA failures and cardiac arrest management? These are some of the scenarios where we find ourselves in trouble on the fire ground and in emergency medicine.

New Year 2021 – New Training

Training is tough. It requires us to move away from every day issues like checking apparatus, handling public relations requests and responding to calls. It forces us to recognize that this industry changes almost daily. We have to keep up with those changes or find ourselves unable to answer the call.

Training has to be a resolution we plan to keep in 2021. It makes all the difference in every day performance.

Let me use my son as an example. He pitches with both arms like the major league baseball pitcher Pat Venditte. People are always amazed that he can throw strikes at a league par velocity with both arms. Other teams’ coaches will come up to me and remark on his talent. They don’t realize that his talent is not accidental. It is from training his body to throw with proper mechanics from both sides. His journey to throwing from both sides was not a eureka moment where the clouds parted and a voice arose which said, “Dodge, you will throw with both arms!” He just had a coach who would not allow him to play the infield as a left-hander other than first base. He wanted to play shortstop and thus began a journey where he taught himself to throw right-handed.

He has to do double the training to keep up now. The point is that it wasn’t a miracle. It was about training.

I challenge each of you to use the same mindset to become the responder you want to be and live up to the traditions set by one of America’s first firefighters, Ben Franklin, this New Year 2021.

If you are a firefighter, are you practicing for an SCBA failure? The life you save may be your own. If you are a medic, are you working with the EMTs in your system to practice pit crew CPR to provide the best chance of survival for your patient? If you are an officer, are you keeping up with building trends so that you can ensure your crew’s safety on firegrounds? Are you a stern father figure who requires your crew to be seat belted while making runs? Do you require each of your crewmembers to have their reflective vests on every call on a roadway?

These are the areas where our careless and inconsistent attitude toward training leads us down a dangerous path.

Let’s make New Year 2021 a year where we follow America’s first firefighter Ben Franklin and be at war with our own vices as they relate to training.

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Sacramento Santa Flies – And Crashes

Sacramento Santa

A Sacramento Santa flew – and crashed – when his paraglider flew into power lines. Santa was rescued after Sacramento Metropolitan Fire District cut through the red tape of power lines near Seventh Avenue in Rio Linda, according to the Sacramento Metropolitan Fire District.

Sacramento Santa

 

The man was rescued just after 1:30 p.m. and was not injured, Vestal said. The cause of the crash is under investigation.

Sacramento Santa

The man, dressed as Santa, was delivering candy canes to children in the neighborhood when he got stuck after 11 a.m., according to Capt. Chris Vestal. Photos shown on social media show the man riding a paramotor, a harness and glider powered by a small engine and fan.

Sacramento Santa

No reindeer were injured as a result of this paragliding accident, but perhaps next time he can use a Ladder truck like FDNY.

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Nashville Christmas Morning Explosion Intentional

Nashville Christmas Morning Explosion

A Nashville Christmas morning explosion rocked the streets as officers were responding to a report of shots fired in the area.

Metro Nashville Police Department officers responded to the call of shots fired around 5:30 a.m. CT Friday Christmas morning. On arrival they found a motor home parked in front of an AT&T transmission building at 166 2nd Avenue North. A recorded message that indicated a bomb would explode in 15 minutes was heard coming from the RV, Metro Nashville Police Chief John Drake said during a news conference.
Nashville Christmas Morning Explosion
Officers saw no immediate evidence of shots fired but they requested the department’s hazardous devices unit and started to evacuate neighborhood residents, police said.
The RV exploded at 6:30 a.m. CT as the bomb squad was responding, police spokesman Don Aaron said.
“We do believe this to have been an intentional act,” he said. “Significant damage has been done to the infrastructure there on 2nd Avenue North.”
At least three were injured this morning in the blast, including a police officer who had been evacuating the area.
The FBI Memphis office is seeking information and digital media from today’s explosion in Nashville, Tennessee. Tips can be submitted digitally at fbi.gov/nashville or by phone by dialing 1-800-CALL-FBI. There have been several recent threats against the FBI and others.

Nashville Christmas Morning Explosion Update

Authorities have found what they believe to be human remains near the site of the explosion in downtown Nashville on Christmas morning, according to two law enforcement officials familiar with the ongoing investigation.

The remains have been sent to the medical examiner’s office for analysis.
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Merry Christmas 2020

From everyone at Never Forget 9-11 Foundation we wish you a very Merry Christmas 2020 and hope the New Year brings us all closer together. We wanted to share the quote below from one of our favorite holiday stories in hopes that we all find these days to be filled with charity, mercy, and general good acts of kindness. These are the same traits that brought America together in the aftermath of September 11 and together we accomplish so much more than apart.

We hope you will remember the many front line responders (police, fire, EMS) and hospital workers who work today to bring you safety while you spend time during this pandemic, COVID19.

Christmas 2020

An Old Quote For Christmas 2020

“…and it was always said of him, that he knew how to keep Christmas well, if any man alive possessed the knowledge. May that be truly said of us, and all of us! And so, as Tiny Tim observed, God bless Us, Every One!” – Charles Dickens, A Christmas Carol

 

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Corvallis Firefighter in Opioid Investigation

Corvallis Firefighter in Opioid Investigation

A Corvallis Firefighter in opioid investigation by city investigators has resigned their position.

Per a city press release, the City of Corvallis had opened an investigation after receiving information on December 7 that a Corvallis firefighter assigned to an ambulance took opioids from the vehicle’s onboard supply.

Corvallis Firefighter in Opioid Investigation

“These thefts constitute a grave breach of the public trust,” City Manager Mark Shepard said. “Corvallis Fire Department employees, like all City employees, are held to the highest standards of ethics and accountability. The City of Corvallis is committed to working with our partners and getting to the bottom of these thefts.”

Sherpard continued, “We are working with Corvallis Professional Firefighters, our local firefighter union, to review our internal procedures and add new controls where appropriate to ensure that this does not happen again.”

Firefighters have made multiple headlines from criminal behavior in recent months. A Texas firefighter has been charged with murder and Paramedic Edward Blake was accused of being a serial rapist.

Corvallis Firefighter in Opioid Investigation Continues

Access to these dangerous and highly addictive narcotics is tightly controlled by Fire Department policy and federal drug laws. According to the preliminary investigation, the firefighter falsified documents and supply logs to cover up repeated thefts over a period of at least 18 months. The firefighter resigned at the outset of the City’s investigation on December 8.

Investigators said the firefighter falsified documents and supply logs to cover up repeated thefts over a period of at least 18 months.

Corvallis Firefighter in Opioid Investigation

Details of the investigation have been turned over to the Oregon Health Authority. The City of Corvallis is cooperating fully with the Oregon Health Authority’s investigation.

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The First Five To Receive COVID19 Vaccine

“The First Five” to receive COVID19 Vaccine in our nation’s capital have been announced. Washington D.C. officials have reported that five members of the D.C. Fire and EMS will be among the first in the district to receive the COVID19 vaccine on Wednesday.

The five members, dubbed “The First Five” in a district press release, are Acting Fire and EMS Chief John Donnelly, Medical Director Dr. Robert Holman, Lts. Joseph Papariello and Keishea Jackson and Firefighter-EMT Julio Quinteros.

“Today, we have hope. After a long and tragic nine months, help is finally on the way,” D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser said in a statement. “The First Five are sending a strong message about the importance of this vaccine to protect them, their families and loved ones, their patients and coworkers, and our entire city.”

Kaiser Permanente is distributing the vaccine when it receives its initial doses this Wednesday. The district will receive an initial allotment of 6,825 doses that will be distributed between Kaiser Permanente and five other hospitals. The follow other parts of the country in vaccine distrubution including New York where Sandra Lindsay received the first dose in a non-trial setting.

The First Five To Receive COVID19 Vaccine

“I’m getting vaccinated for my city. In the last nine months, I’ve seen COVID devastate my department,” said Jackson, one of The First Five, in a statement. “I’ve seen my brothers and sisters go into the hospital. I’ve seen them with severe symptoms – things we never thought we would see. I’m getting vaccinated for my coworkers, I’m getting vaccinated for my family, and I’m getting vaccinated to make a change.”

The First Five To Receive COVID19 Vaccine

Some jurisdictions are moving fire and EMS out of the initial distribution of vaccinations despite a push by the International Association of Firefighters and others. Part of the reason may be the public firefighter unions in New York saying more than fifty percent of their members will not take it.

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IAFF Says Firefighters First In Line For COVID19 Vaccine

Firefighters First In Line For COVID19 Vaccine

The International Association of Fire Fighters (IAFF) says firefighters first in line for COVID19 vaccine and is urging Governors to give firefighters and emergency medical personnel “the highest priority” when vaccine for COVID19 is released.

“The level of risk to responders has never been greater than it is today,” the organization stated in a letter to the  National Governors Association.

According to the IAFF, more than 30,000 career firefighters have had known on-duty COVID-19 exposures, which has led to more than 17,000 of them needing to quarantine or isolate. Nearly 150 career firefighters also have been hospitalized because of the virus, and at least 19 firefighters have died from coronavirus.

“All this, despite PPE use and rigorous decontamination procedures, makes vaccinating fire fighters and emergency medical personnel all the more urgent,” the IAFF wrote. “The virus not only places the lives and health of responders at risk, it also poses a risk to the larger community as well as to fire fighters responding to emergencies in homes, businesses and elsewhere before they may be aware of an infection.”

Firefighters First In Line For COVID19 Vaccine

The IAFF went on to state that vaccinated first responders will allow them to continue serving their communities during the pandemic. Not giving firefighters and emergency workers priority for the vaccine could create challenges for municipalities across the country.

“Absent adequate vaccination, responders will continue to be subject to lengthy quarantines when they are exposed to COVID-19 positive individuals, imposing significant costs on local governments as they backfill positions or operate understaffed, increasing response times and negatively impacting public safety,” the letter stated.

Currently, 132 firefighters and emergency medical workers are quarantined, and 188 personnel had been diagnosed with the virus since July 1, according to the International Association of Fire Chiefs.

Firefighters First In Line For COVID19 Vaccine

The virus is also taking its toll on responder ranks. Some in the profession argue to maintain public safety responders must be given the peace of mind knowing they are protected.

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Texas Firefighter-EMT Charged With Murder

A Texas firefighter-EMT has been charged with murder in the fatal shooting of an Odessa Fire Rescue firefighter-EMT.

Texas Firefighter-EMT Charged In Murder

Police say the two Odessa Fire Rescue members rented a campground together in Pueblo County, Colorado. Pueblo County deputies received a call from the campground on Wednesday night about shots being fired, and arrived to find Odessa Firefighter-EMT Michael Mack, 30, deceased with a gunshot wound to his head next to a vehicle.

Deputies found Evan Gaw, 30, also a firefighter-EMT with Odessa Fire Rescue, in a field nearby. Gaw was arrested and charged with second-degree murder in Mack’s death. Authorities say a gun was recovered at the scene.

According to News West 9, the City of Odessa released a statement that said, “On Thursday, November 12, 2020, Odessa Fire Rescue was made aware of an incident in Pueblo County, Colorado, which involved two employees. This incident resulted in the death of Michael Mack, a firefighter/EMT with OFR, and the arrest of Evan Gaw, also a firefighter/EMT with OFR. Odessa Fire Rescue, along with the City of Odessa, would like to extend our deepest condolences to the Mack family. Michael Mack was an outstanding employee and individual, who will be greatly missed. ”

The Pueblo County Sheriff’s Office said in a statement that the investigation into the incident is ongoing.

Texas Firefighter-EMT

As of Friday morning, Evan Gaw was still in custody of the Pueblo County Sheriff’s Office. It was not clear when a bond date would be set. An off duty EMT was murdered and died this month from injuries sustained working his second job as a patrol officer.

 

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Categories: Fire

San Francisco Firefighter LODD

San Francisco Firefighter LODD

A San Francisco Firefighter LODD was announced Wednesday. The San Francisco Fire Department reported that Jason Cortez suffered a fatal injury during a company-level training accident on Wednesday morning.

Cortez, 42, fell three stories during a training drill at the department’s Mission District training facility, suffering severe head injuries per local news reports. Immediate ALS measures were taken, and Cortez was transferred to San Francisco General Hospital, where he was pronounced dead approximately one hour later.

San Francisco Firefighter LODD

A 13-year veteran of the SFFD and a son of a retired San Francisco firefighter, Cortez reportedly started as an ambulance paramedic at Station 49, before moving to the SFFD Academy and graduating as a paramedic-firefighter.

Cortez was assigned to Station 3 in the city’s Tenderloin District — the busiest fire station in the nation, according to SFFD spokesperson Lt. Jonathan Baxter.

Baxter added that this was a trying time for the department, as Cortez was very well-liked at the department and served as an advocate for public safety.

Family members, firefighters, paramedics, police officers, California Highway Patrol officers, and other emergency responders gathered to salute Cortez as he was transferred from San Francisco General to the San Francisco Medical Examiner’s office.

The San Francisco Firefighters Union Local 798 Twitter account posted a tribute to Cortez with photos of the firefighter with one of his sons and his father.

San Francisco Firefighter LODD Union Photo

San Francisco Firefighter LODD

The last LODD in San Francisco Fire Department prior to Jason Cortez was in 2011. The Guardians of the City website lists LODD deaths for San Francisco Firefighters. Cortez’s death was the second training accident LODD within a week.

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