Tag: Fire

Dallas 911 Not Responding

Dallas 911 Not Responding

The City of Dallas has multiple questions to answer about the Dallas 911 not responding after a deaf woman, Zarea Dixon, was found dead in her home when police officers took over an hour to respond to her call for help.

In a separate incident it took more than six minutes to respond to an apartment fire in North Dallas.

Dixon called 911 to report her boyfriend had broken into her apartment along South Polk Street and attacked her with a knife.

An interpreter with Sorensen Translation Services relayed that Dixon had been attacked stating her “ex-boyfriend broke into her house, beat her up and tried to stab her with a knife.”

Dallas 911 Not Responding

Dixon provided the suspect’s name, description and date of birth to the police through the translator. She also said he had left her home.

Dixon “declined an ambulance but stated she ‘needed the police,'” according to the affidavit.

In addition to the non response to this woman, Dallas Police has not responded to multiple other incidents.

Additionally, Dallas police never took a report on three students burned by fireworks launched at them in North Dallas.

Dallas 911 Not Responding To Fires Either

At another event, sixty to seventy firefighters responded and saw flames coming from the second floor of the three-story apartment building upon arrival last week.

The fire quickly spread to the third floor and then into the attic space and roof of the building requiring the additional alarms by Dallas Fire Rescue.

Dallas Fire Station 29 is approximately one mile away or roughly three minutes.

Dallas 911 Not Responding

In comments to the media, Dallas Fire Fighters Association President Jim McDade said, “When the first companies got there — there was an enormous amount of fire, probably due to a delay in response,” McDade said.

There were no deaths or injuries, but more than twenty apartments were destroyed and more than one hundred residents displaced.

Slow responses can endanger firefighters. In New York, a firefighter with Brooklyn’s Ladder 170 lost his life last weekend.

Schuylkill County Death Toll Grows To 5

The death toll in Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania motor vehicle collision grew to five as of latest reports from the county coroner’s office in the accident caused by whiteout conditions on Interstate 81 Monday, March 28, 2022.

Schuylkill County Whiteout MVC

In addition to those killed, several victims were flown by medevac to local trauma centers for treatment.

A state police trooper was among those injured when his patrol vehicle became part of the chain-reaction crash. He was taken to a local hospital for evaluation. Two other state troopers died earlier this month near Interstate 95 outside Philadelphia in an unrelated accident.

Schuylkill County Weather

There was a quick onset of heavy snow combined with fog conditions which created the dangerous conditions in Schuylkill County near Foster Township.

At least one tractor-trailer to caught fire and another truck carrying acetylene cylinders was near the blaze due to the accident.

Rowlett TX Helicopter Crash

Emergency crews from Dallas were dispatched to a Rowlett TX helicopter crash this afternoon per Dallas local news.

Few Details In Rowlett TX Helicopter Crash Yet

The National Transportation Safety Board is reportedly already on scene, but the pilot has died per public safety sources. This is believed to be the first fatality accident since the Eastern China Airlines crash earlier this week.

Rowlett TX Helicopter Crash

The Rowlett Fire Department provides emergency and non-emergency services to an area of 21 square miles with a residential population of 62,000. We have 90 firefighters (30 on shift) which staff four stations on a 24-hour basis. The Rowlett Fire Department responds to over 5,000 incidents annually.

 

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FDNY Firefighter Fee Part of Attack on US Capitol

FDNY Firefighter Fee

The worst news is true as headline read for the Fire Department of New York: Retired FDNY firefighter Fee was part of attack on US Capitol.

FDNY Firefighter Fee

Thomas Fee, 53, of Freeport, Long Island, admitted in text messages to an acquaintance he was part of the riot and sent a photo of himself surrounded by rioters inside the US Capitol Rotunda, according to court papers.

FDNY Firefighter Fee

Fee who is seen in the US Capitol during the attack has a history of racist behavior.

In 2004 at his volunteer firehouse, Fee repeatedly taunted a black physician. He was suspended from his Hempstead volunteer fire department for the behavior, but no action happened at FDNY because no crimes were charged.

The announcement about FDNy Firefighter Fee follows a statement last week from the Fire Commissioner saying FDNY would cooperate with federal authorities regarding any allegations.

FDNY Firefighter Fee, FDNY, NYPD – All With Ongoing Issues

IAFF Local 22 endorsed President Donald Trump for re-election in October 2020, but since then there have been multiple reports of problems in New York’s public safety departments.

FDNY Firefighter Fee

An on duty NYPD officer used his vehicle while on duty to broadcast pro-Trump messages in violation of directives not to engage in politics on duty. Additionally, the department’s division director for equal opportunity, James Kobel, has now retired rather than face an administrative hearing over chat room posts he made which were racist in nature.

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FDNY Commissioner On January 6 Capitol Attack

January 6 Capitol Attack

The Fire Department of New York (FDNY) put out a statement on the presence of active or retired members from the FDNY ranks during the January 6 Capitol attack.

January 6 Capitol Attack

The statement says “department members, whether active or retired, must not engage in conduct that tends to bring the Department into disrespute…” Both FDNY and the New York Police Department are facing multiple issues of this nature.

Yesterday it was reported that James Kobel submitted his resignation paperwork in advance of a deaprtment administrative hearing over racist posts he had made under an alias.

January 6 Capitol Attack

Several FDNY and other fire department jackets and hats were seen during the January 6 Capitol attack.

January 6 Capitol Attack

In October 2020, IAFF Local 22 endorsed Donald Trump for re-election, despite the national union coming out strong for Vice President Biden. The same month a patrol officer was suspended for using his patrol car to broadcast pro-Trump messages.

 

AMR Ambulance Fire In Washington

AMR ambulance fire

An AMR ambulance fire in Washington state cost another unit and endangered two providers and patient.

A Washington American Medical Response ambulance was destroyed after catching fire early Saturday morning.

The ambulance caught fire in Federal Way with two AMR employees and a patient inside per local news.

The occupants escaped the rig and South King firefighters responded and extinguished the blaze. One AMR employee, an EMS provider, was taken for evaluation and been released.

AMR Ambulance Fire Continues AMR Woes

2020 had several AMR ambulance accidents including the arrest of one of their drivers in Mississippi for drunk driving.

 

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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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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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