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Welcome to the IAFF Frontline News Brief, distributed
twice a month to IAFF affiliate leaders and IAFF
members. We encourage you to forward this news to your
members and others in the fire service.
The Frontline News Brief is delivered directly by email
and is also published on the IAFF web site. You can view
past issues at
http://www.iaff.org/Comm/frontline/news.htm.
Your feedback is also welcome - email
pr@iaff.org with questions and
comments.
"Investigator Says Facts From Fire Will Be Emotionally
Difficult" (Charleston Post and Courier)
"Boston Vice President Loses Battle With Cancer"
(International Association of Fire Fighters)
"A NIST Initiative for the Fire Service"
(International Association of Fire Fighters)
"FEMA to Pay for Fire Fighter Overtime " (New
Orleans Times-Picayune )
"USFA Releases Emergency Incident Rehabilitation Manual"
(International Association of Fire Fighters)
"California Fire Fighter Loses Battle with Meningitis"
(International Association of Fire Fighters)
"Fire Fighter Joins Wellington Council" (Palm Beach
Post)
"Firefighter Files for Rep. Lim's House Seat"
(Gresham Outlook)
"Jury Says Volusia Fire Fighter Unfairly Fired"
(Daytona Beach News-Journal)
"Firefighters Travel to New Orleans to Help Fellow
Firefighters" (Lancaster Eagle-Gazette)
"Firefighters: We Fear for Our Safety" (Benton
Courier (AR))
"New CPR Technique" (CNN)
"Ladders, Personnel Factors in Fire Fighters'
Three-Floor Plunge" (CBC News)
"IAFF Receives Directors' Award From MDA" (Medical
News Today)
"N.H. Police, Firefighters, Oppose Increase in
Retirement Age" (Concord Monitor (NH))
"Time Runs Out on Paramedic Fire Fighter Quest" (The
Mountain Enterprise)
"Lack of Staff Driving Up Fire Department OT"
(Wilmington Star News)
"Orange County Pushes Out Private Ambulance Firm"
(Orlando Sentinel)
"New Aurora Fire Chief Quick to Take on Morale,
Diversity" (Denver Post)
"Minneola Firefighters' Personal Information Posted on
Website for Days" (WFTV.com--Eyewitness News 9
(Florida))
"Fire Fighters Union Fights Budget Cuts" (WYMT News
(Lexington))
"County Advances Ambulance Takeover" (Ocala Business
Journal)
"Stoughton Town Leaders, Fire Union Reach Agreement"
(Enterprise News)
"Police Pull Double Duty" (Home News Tribune)
"Arizona Local Regains Meet and Confer Rights"
(International Association of Fire Fighters)
"Robbinsville Fire Fighters Go Green" (International
Association of Fire Fighters)
"In Police and Fire Depts., a Bit o' Brogue Survives"
(New York Times)
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IAFF and MDA - - a Proud Tradition
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Investigator Says Facts From Fire Will Be Emotionally
Difficult
Charleston Post and Courier (03/17/08); Smith, Glenn
A fire investigation report is soon expected on the June
18 fire at the Sofa Super Store in Charleston, South
Carolina, in which nine city fire fighters died. The
report is likely to produce strong emotions in the
community and possibly renew calls for changes in the
fire department's leadership. The interest goes beyond
Charleston -- the head of the six-member panel
investigating the fire, Gordon Routley, says he is asked
about it wherever he goes. Fire fighters everywhere want
to know what happened so they can learn from it, while
IAFF spokesperson Jeff Zack says the report will likely
show that the Charleston Fire Department has a "unique,
damaging and wildly dysfunctional command culture" and
that there will be more calls for Fire Chief Rusty
Thomas to step down for failing to protect his fire
fighters with proper equipment and training.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Boston
Vice President Loses Battle With Cancer
International Association of Fire Fighters (03/14/08)
The IAFF has lost one of its most notable union leaders
and fire fighter safety advocate in the line of duty.
Boston, MA Local 718 Vice President Robert Kilduff died
March 13 after a courageous five-year battle with
occupational cancer. "I would be hard-pressed to find a
fire fighter more dedicated to the fire service than
Brother Kilduff," says IAFF General President Harold
Schaitberger. "When he learned he had cancer, he never
thought about himself. He dedicated the rest of his life
to making sure other fire fighters understood the
importance of early detection."
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
A NIST
Initiative for the Fire Service
International Association of Fire Fighters (03/25/08)
The U.S. Department of Commerce National Institute of
Standards and Technology (NIST) has developed and
launched a new web site that outlines the Institute's
efforts to develop and apply technology, measurements
and standards to better understand fire behavior,
control and prevention and to improve operations,
equipment, fire suppression, fire investigations and
disaster response.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
FEMA to
Pay for Fire Fighter Overtime
New Orleans Times-Picayune (03/26/08); Gyan, Joe Jr.
Jefferson Parish fire districts secured a $540,000
commitment from the Federal Emergency Management Agency
for disputed overtime pay from Hurricane Katrina. The
districts asked FEMA to cover the overtime it paid to
fire fighters for 14 days after Katrina, when they were
asked to stand guard around the clock. The agency denied
the reimbursement of any overtime charges beyond the
first 48 hours.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
USFA
Releases Emergency Incident Rehabilitation Manual
International Association of Fire Fighters (03/14/08)
The U.S. Fire Administration collaborated with the IAFF
on the newly released, updated and revised Emergency
Incident Rehabilitation Manual. The new edition examines
critical topics related to emergency incident
rehabilitation, including operational issues, human
physiology, weather and technology. The report addresses
ways to better protect fire fighters and other emergency
responders through the use of proper protective clothing
and improved tactical procedures. The revised manual
updates the original USFA document published in 1992.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
California Fire Fighter Loses Battle with Meningitis
International Association of Fire Fighters (03/14/08)
The IAFF is sad to report the March 10 passing of
Murrieta, CA Local 3540 fire fighter Matt Moore. Moore
was hospitalized on and off since November 2007 with a
rare form of meningitis caused by exposure the
Balamuthia mandrillaris amoeba. It is so rare that less
than 150 people have ever been diagnosed with it.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Fire
Fighter Joins Wellington Council
Palm Beach Post (03/26/08); Robinson, Dwayne
Fire fighter/paramedic Matt Willhite squeaked out a
victory against local attorney Howard Coates Jr. in the
March 25 council runoff election. By a 42-vote margin,
Willhite will claim Seat 4 on the Wellington Village
Council in April. Two weeks ago, Coates came out on top
with 40 percent of the vote in the four-way Seat 4
contest. Willhite came in second with 34 percent. But
Willhite was the victor -- this time with 51 percent
support. "I think people saw me get into the race with
five weeks to go, and they saw for the four weeks me
standing on the street corners, knocking on doors, and
they saw a hardworking person," he said.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Firefighter Files for Rep. Lim's House Seat
Gresham Outlook( 03/14/08); Ureel, Michael
Fire fighter Greg Matthews is running as a Democrat for
the Oregon House of Representatives, saying politics is
a natural extension of his life of public service.
Matthews has been a fire fighter for 11 years. "I feel
like I'm very connected to this community, and I feel
strongly about the livability issues in Gresham," he
said. "It came down to a passion about Gresham and the
direction that we need to get into." Some issues that
are important to him are public safety, schools and a
living wage. Matthews has been endorsed by the Oregon
Education Association.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Jury Says
Volusia Fire Fighter Unfairly Fired
Daytona Beach News-Journal (03/22/08); Haug, Jim
After speaking out on the lack of staffing at Volusia
County fire stations and leading a no-confidence vote
against Fire Chief Jim Tauber, union official Kurt
Vroman was fired as a county fire fighter in 2004. A
federal jury in Orlando agreed that Vroman's dismissal
was a violation of his First Amendment rights, awarding
him $10,000 in damages.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Firefighters Travel to New Orleans to Help Fellow
Firefighters
Lancaster Eagle-Gazette (03/20/08); Cyphert, Anne
Darling
Twelve Ohio fire fighters are among a group that
traveled to New Orleans last month to help six fire
fighters rebuild homes that had not been reconstructed
after Hurricane Katrina. The IAFF has coordinated such
trips for the past three years, bringing fire fighters
with specialized skills to build homes in New Orleans
where fire fighters have had trouble obtaining
settlements from insurance companies. Fire fighter Keith
Noya said he received only $32,000 from his insurance
company for nearly $200,000 in damage, but with free
labor from Ohio fire fighters his home is almost in
move-in condition. "It was unbelievable how hard those
guys worked and how much they got done in the amount of
time they were here," Noya said. The fire fighters said
the labor they have contributed so far this year is
worth about $60,000, but that their bond is what is
important. "That's what we're supposed to do -- we're
fire fighters and we have camaraderie between us," said
Ohio fire fighter Chip Pritsel. Columbus, OH Local 67
and CME Credit Union made donations for gas cards and
meals.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Firefighters: We Fear for Our Safety
Benton Courier (AR) (03/18/08); Jones, Whit
Fire fighters in Bryant, Arkansas, say they fear for
their safety. Five fire fighters penned letters to the
mayor after Fire Chief Randy Cox allegedly exhibited
threatening and unstable behavior. Cox, who has been on
medical leave since February 18, carries a city-issued
handgun. The fire fighters say the fact that Cox is
armed worries them, especially because he allegedly
stated that "I am having a nervous breakdown and cannot
handle it anymore." Members of Bryant, AR Local 4606
recently issued a vote of no confidence in Cox. Among
the charges fire fighters have leveled against Cox and
presented to the city council are "serious concerns
about [Cox's] integrity, honesty, character and
professional fire service leadership skills."
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
New CPR
Technique
CNN (03/17/08)
A new version of emergency CPR, without breaths, triples
the survival rate in a new study. CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta
reports.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Ladders,
Personnel Factors in Fire Fighters' Three-Floor Plunge
CBC News (03/20/08)
Five Ottawa fire fighters were forced
to jump for their lives from the third floor of a
burning building in February 2007, partly because there
weren't enough personnel to deploy the only available
ladder long enough to reach them, an Ontario Ministry of
Labour report has found.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
IAFF
Receives Directors' Award From MDA
Medical News Today (03/24/08)
The Muscular Dystrophy Association awarded its highest
philanthropic achievement honor, the MDA Directors'
Award, to the International Association of Fire
Fighters. The award honors people and organizations that
have made outstanding contributions to MDA's battle
against neuromuscular disease in the areas of corporate
and organizational sponsorship, media and entertainment
industry support, and personal fundraising. MDA
President and CEO Gerald C. Weinberg presented the award
to IAFF General President Harold Schaitberger at the
Association's national headquarters in Tucson, Arizona.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
N.H.
Police, Firefighters, Oppose Increase in Retirement Age
Concord Monitor (NH) (03/18/08)
Fire fighters in New Hampshire are currently battling a
government initiative to raise the state's retirement
age. The House is considering a bill that would raise
the retirement age for new hires from 45 to 50. Fire
fighters say this change could seriously jeopardize
their recruitment efforts. Although the bill is expected
to pass, fire fighters say they will continue to oppose
it in the Senate.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Time
Runs Out on Paramedic Fire Fighter Quest
The Mountain Enterprise (03/21/08); Hedlund, Patric
"If it isn't fast, it isn't emergency response...We get
no rewards for same day service," said a DVD report
distributed to members of the Kern County Board of
Supervisors by Pine Mountain resident Scott Robinson
last week. The video explains why "90 percent of North
Americans" now rely on fire service-based emergency
medical services. "We have a standing army prepared to
respond quickly," Dr. Eugene Nagel, of the Miami Fire
Department, credited as a pioneer in EMS services, says.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Lack of
Staff Driving Up Fire Department OT
Wilmington Star News (03/16/08); Scott, Sam
Like many small and mid-sized cities, Wilmington, North
Carolina, is looking for a way to decrease the amount of
overtime hours accrued by the local fire department.
Over the past five years, the city's fire department has
far exceeded its overtime budget. The city manager has
proposed capping overtime hours and pulling fire trucks
out of service when fire fighters are absent instead of
immediately calling for backup. The fire department is
strictly opposed to pulling trucks, because doing so
would be dangerous to fire fighters and residents alike.
Wilmington currently adheres to the National Fire
Protection Association's recommendation of four fire
fighters on each truck. To do so, the department often
has to call in volunteers if a fire fighter is sick,
injured, on a training exercise or absent for some other
reason. The fire department recommends hiring more fire
fighters so that five personnel can be assigned to each
truck. This solution would solve the city's overtime
problem, but officials say it could cost more than $1
million a year. Ironically, the city's overtime hours
have plummeted in the last two months from 2,900 per
month to 260. The drop is reportedly thanks to a new
practice known as overhiring. The city council recently
allowed the department to train seven extra recruits in
its latest class of rookies. The so-called "overhires"
will be absorbed into the department as positions become
available.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Orange
County Pushes Out Private Ambulance Firm
Orlando Sentinel (03/18/08); Damron, David
Orange County leaders voted unanimously to take away the
ambulance business from a private company and hand the
job over to public fire fighters. The takeover, slated
for October 1, was aimed primarily at recouping the fees
patients pay for an ambulance delivery to a hospital.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
New
Aurora Fire Chief Quick to Take on Morale, Diversity
Denver Post (03/17/08); Illescas, Carlos
He doesn't play golf, says he's devoted to his wife and
is the highest-ranking Latino in the city. Fire Chief
Mike Garcia has been on the job four months. Already,
city leaders, fire fighters and others say he's a breath
of fresh air after the previous leadership and the right
man to lead the 329-member department. "Night and day,"
said Randy Rester, president of the Aurora firefighters
union.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Minneola
Firefighters' Personal Information Posted on Website for
Days
WFTV.com--Eyewitness News 9 (Florida) (03/17/08)
The city of Minneola, Florida, accidentally posted
several fire fighters' personal information on its web
site. The documents posted comprised union membership
applications that contained names, addresses, phone
numbers and Social Security numbers. Minneola's mayor
says there will be no punishment for the posting because
it was a simple mistake. City officials say the
applications were accidentally scanned for the site. The
city will now provide fire fighters with one free year
of credit monitoring. Most fire fighters seem satisfied
with the city's quick response and solution. However,
some feel the posting was a veiled attempt to prevent
them from unionizing.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Fire
Fighters Union Fights Budget Cuts
WYMT News (Lextington) (03/18/08); Roberts, Sherelle
There's an old saying that change is good. But first
responders say that's not the case, when it comes to
saving lives. They say, the way they do it now works
just fine. "We've had three person staffing on the
ambulances for over 30 years," says Mark Blankenship
with the Lexington Professional Firefighters union. But
that 30 year service tradition -- of two paramedics and
one driver per patient -- needs to change, according to
a team of hired money-saving consultants.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
County
Advances Ambulance Takeover
Ocala Business Journal (03/19/08); Latham Carr, Susan
The Marion County Commission has voted 4-1 to approve a
proposed organizational structure to the county's Fire
Rescue Department, which includes adding 254 staff
members to provide ambulance service. County Fire Chief
Stuart McElhaney's preliminary budget indicates he can
add the service at or below the current ambulance
service's present budget of roughly $20 million.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Stoughton Town Leaders, Fire Union Reach Agreement
Enterprise News (03/17/08); Alspach, Kyle
The town's fire union and town leaders have reached an
agreement concerning compensation for a Stoughton fire
fighter who is on active military deployment in Iraq.
Captain Douglas Campbell will be paid the difference
between the base salary he receives from the town and
his weekly military salary as a member of the
Massachusetts Air National Guard. Campbell also will be
allowed to receive health insurance from the town and
will retain his seniority benefits, which include
longevity pay and vacation accrual.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Police
Pull Double Duty
Home News Tribune (02/11/08); Bourbeau, Mary Ann
Police officer Greg Wilson was the first emergency
responder to arrive at an apartment fire on November 23.
He donned fire department turnout gear and used an axe
to force his way through a door, where he found heavy
smoke and fire in a hallway. Wilson conducted a search
for occupants and when he found none, he exited the
building and gave an update to fire fighters, who had
just arrived. Wilson was able to help in this way
because in addition to working as a police officer, he
is an emergency medical technician and a volunteer fire
fighter. Wilson is one of four police officers who are
certified EMTs, and one of three who are trained fire
fighters. The four are part of a new Emergency Services
Unit (ESU), formed about six months ago by the police
department.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Arizona
Local Regains Meet and Confer Rights
International Association of Fire Fighters (03/24/08)
Buckling under pressure from the Professional Fire
Fighters of Arizona (PFFA) and Maricopa, AZ Local 4561,
the Maricopa City Council has voted unanimously to grant
Local 4561 meet and confer rights.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Robbinsville Fire Fighters Go Green
International Association of Fire Fighters (03/13/08)
Robbinsville, NJ Local 3786 is the first public safety
entity in the United States to participate in the
TerraPass carbon offset program. The local purchased two
TerraPass carbon offsets for its frontline emergency
response vehicles -- Engine 40 and Ambulance 140-10 --
to spark community awareness about the dangers of global
warming and climate change.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
In
Police and Fire Depts., a Bit o' Brogue Survives
New York Times (03/17/08); Lueck, Thomas J.
The Irish brogue has been disappearing from the nation's
fire departments over the last several years as fewer
Irish immigrants fill vacant positions. Lt. Mike Lyons
has been a member of the New York Fire Department since
1996. He sees his accent as an advantage because it
helps him get attention from the public. Even though the
number of Irish immigrants joining U.S. fire departments
has declined, respect for the Irish heritage is stronger
than ever. The Emerald Society, a brotherhood of current
and retired Irish-American fire fighters, currently
boasts approximately 7,000 members. The society offers
scholarships to Irish-American students, fields teams in
Gaelic football and sponsors pipe and drum bands. The
pipe and drum bands "have played at funerals for every
ethnic group," says Captain Liam Flaherty. "The Irish
bands have become a symbol of the ... fire departments,
no matter who you are."
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
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copyright 2008 International Association of Fire
Fighters
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