Thursday, February 23, 2012

Will You Be Remembered Or Forgotten?

Don Erbin, Jr. is the Fire Chief of Kuhl Hose Company, Greene Township, Erie, PA. Don and I have known each other for over a decade. My parents don't live too far from him, and when I visit them, I always work in a visit or two with Don while I am there. I am honored to have been allowed to, over the years, partake in training with Kuhl Hose Company, as an attendee and as a trainer. I even have a few different Kuhl Hose Company shirts that I proudly wear around here!

I have used him as a vent, as a sounding board, and just shot the shit in general with him. He has also used me as a vent and sounding board over the years. My only regret in our relationship is that we live 900 +/- miles apart, and I cannot serve with him as a member of KHC.

Recently, there have been several deaths in the fire service community in Erie County, PA, including two LODDs. It hits on a personal level for me, in part because of my friendship with Don, and in part because my parents live there too, and my dad is still an active member of the Corry Fire Department - Standford Hose Company. When news from Erie County hits the wires, I pay close attention.

Don wrote a nice piece up, and shared it with me this morning. I asked him for permission to publish it on An Ordinary Fireman, and he graciously has allowed.

So, with no further adeiu, Will You Be Remembered or Forgotten?

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Will You Be Remembered -
Or Forgotten?
Don Erbin Jr. 23-Feb-2012


Fire Chief Don Erbin, Jr. Kuhl Hose Company, Greene Township, Erie, PA


Recent personal exposure and involvement with several line of duty deaths, and many other firefighters who have passed after countless hours and years of fire service dedication I’ve thought a lot about how will you or I be remembered? Will we be remembered, or will we be quickly forgotten.

We teach weekly fire or EMS training and can name several case studies or refer to several different NIOSH report. Quickly someone’s name or agency gets mentioned with positives, negatives and suggestions. We’ve remembered these firefighters/departments most often because of the things that happened. We learn and teach from these incidents in the hopes of not having a repeat occurrence of events. I can also mention names of those who are well published; are YouTube featured, or have a BLOG or web site stating the latest and greatest fire service ideas and opinions and they are remembered for various reasons.



What about you? How will you be remembered or will you be forgotten?

Let’s first start with your own department. Where do you stand? Are you someone who has earned your place in the rank and file? Have you earned your place on the apparatus? Do you have the training and education to keep yourself from harm’s way as much as we can in our job? Do you demand respect and so called rights of the fire service just because you signed your name once?

Maybe you will be remembered as the knucklehead who drove 85 mph to an outside odor of smoke when you’re SOG states that this is a non-emergency response, but because it’s always been done that way you tote the “TRADITION” banner. There is always the possibility you will be remembered as that guy who thrives on drama and dissention rather than taking the time to listen to other opinions or ideas and agreeing to disagree sometimes.

A better option is to hope you will be remembered as someone that has put in countless hours training, educating yourself and others, knows lots but remembers there is always room for improvement, has humility, and is a friend that some of our brothers and sisters sometime need.

Will you be remembered as a true fire service leader? No rank required. A leader is one who leads or guides. Will you lead and guide or be remembered as that guy who yells and barks orders from a book or manual rather than leading and teaching as you go.

How will you look to others outside your agency? Don’t act or think the world isn’t all about you or I. Brother firefighters know each other and talk. If you’re well known it’s more likely not for being a good leader or firefighter. What have you done? Do you even know what you’ve done? Maybe not the case but bad news travels much faster than good news.

Will you be remembered because you and your crew risked a lot and saved a lot? Did you save grandma and the baby? Did you make a good stop on a quickly advancing fire because of coordinated efforts of hose line deployment, ventilation and search teams? You’re training counts.

Our job as firefighters is dangerous most days and we have safety haters in our profession. I hope for you and your family that you’re not remembered because of something dumb that you or someone else has done because of lack of training, knowledge or skill. Read LODI or LODD reports and you can learn a lot.
So how would I like to be remembered you might ask?

Well I would like to be remembered as a leader not just by my own department, but abroad. I want to be someone who leads his troops, not by demanding things that I won’t do myself, but as someone who is right there with them no matter the situation. As General George Patton once said “No good decision was made from a swivel chair.”

I want to be remembered as a knowledgeable firefighter, friend and mentor, someone with humility who gives praise to others that deserve it rather than trying to take it for myself.
So where will you be?

Possibly you will be forgotten in a few months, weeks, or a year? Have you made an impact on your department, the fire service, your community? Have you accomplished things that will make a name for you and your agency that show your commitment? Maybe you will just be another face that came and went and a few months later no one can even remember your name.
Remembered or forgotten, you decide?






Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Tango Mike Mike

Ok, so this isn't firefighting related, and yet I think it can be, as an example of true heroism. There are some folks in the fire service who expound "We don't need any dead heros." I agree, to a point. But, we accepted the responsibility when we applied.

Here is a fine example of what it is to be a hero.
Tango Mike Mike

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Sprinkler System Success Story - Olathe Kansas - 02/05/2012 @ 1030hrs

GOOD THAT THE SPRINKLER SYSTEM WORKED AS DESIGNED! BRAVO!

CLICK HERE FOR NEWS REPORT

No injuries. Smoke alarm worked. Sprinkler worked. $2000 damage.

To all those that oppose sprinkler legislation, THIS IS PROOF THEY WORK! FACT - be it in a retirement community, hospital, nursing home, apartment/condo complex, hotel/motel, individual homes, stores, shopping centers, WHATEVER - a properly designed and maintained sprinkler system minimizes fire destruction and more importantly SAVES LIVES!!!!

Saturday, February 4, 2012

A Good Day At Work

This morning around 0300 we handled a fire at local business; it was in a big "box store" type building. Came in as an alarm, also as a burglar alarm, police en route.

As we arrived, police officers on scene walk up to us reporting smoke inside. We drove a 360 and saw smoke through a couple windows, nothing heavy, looked like fog. Stopped at the truck entrance and got out. The captain decided this is where we're making entry.

The FF grabbed a halligan bar, and I got my Lil' Rex (as found HERE ). Door is a power sliding door, aluminum frame, with glass, typical of many commercial doors. It has a mortise lock, with an extended cylinder that has a protective sleeve. The captain called for a K-Tool, but, as it turns out, that wouldn't have worked, as the cylinder sticks out too far. However, locks like this are exactly what the Lil' Rex is for!

I used the halligan bar to tamp the Lil' Rex over the lock cylinder. Once it started to bite, I then let go and gave it a few good whacks with the halligan bar. Then, I put the spike in, pried up, and POOF! the cylinder popped out. Then I used the end of the key tool to trip the lock, thus unlocking the door. Total damage caused by entry ops: one mortise lock assembly. Not much compared to a door.

(Imho, one inherent problem with the Lil' Rex is the adjunct tool design - you insert the spike of a halligan bar to pry. Works great as long as you can pry up (or whatever direction you tamped the tool into the lock), but sometimes a little side to side motion is needed to help loosen the lock cylinder. I have seen pictures and videos of modified Lil' Rex tools where they remove the spike sleeve and weld on a slot for the adze, like what it's on the K-Tool and R-Tool. I have found that if you really whack the Lil' Rex in place, like I did tonight, this helps it get a better, tighter, more secure bite on the lock cylinder, and reduces the need for side to side rocking. However, it means you will likely need another tool to remove the lock cylinder out of the Lil' Rex's teeth!)

After gaining entry, I was sent to hook the pumper into the sprinkler system, so that's what I did. It's around back. I spotted close to the plug, hand jacked a section of 5" to the sprinkler connection, hooked it to the discharge, flushed the plug, hooked up a Jesus line (that's what we call a short section, not sure of the origin), turned on the hydrant, and radioed command I'm ready to support the sprinkler system on his order. Command then said we won't need the sprinklers pumped, so I started breaking down.

Ladder 1 came back to help, which was nice. I was hustling, five inch is heavy, and the hydrant was super sticky, & I was a touch winded. Once we were done I pulled around front again and joined my crew inside.

The fire itself was odd. There was an apparent power failure believer to be lightning related, which kicked on the generator. It appears the voltage spike caused some of the low-voltage components in the fire/security alarm system (of all things!) to overheat and ignite.

Fire damaged maybe two square feet of area (the guys used a can to put it out) but did what I personally would estimate as thousands in damage to their alarm system, and maybe more.

Indirect costs will include lost business, repair costs, plus the risk of gremlins - what else was damaged? Hard telling until it's found, ya know? My guess is they'll reopen in a few days.

We ran a CO call earlier in the shift that at first was thought to be a low battery. Nope. It was real. We were in masks for an hour there. Evacuated all four of the building's units too. Cracked heat exchanger.

I like days like this, where we make a difference, and prevent bad headlines like "Four Families Killed by Carbon Monoxide" & "Fire Leaves 150 Jobless", ya know?

Thanks for reading.

Stay safe, and God bless!

Ken