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Collision Topples Ambulance

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Updated and video added:  Scroll down

amb c KTNV

AN AMBULANCE WAS STRUCK AND KNOCKED ON ITS SIDE in Las Vegas, Nevada, Thursday afternoon.  The AMR ambulance was responding on a call with lights and siren activated at 2:40 pm Pacific when it entered a wide intersection.  All cars in the area had stopped to give way to the ambulance except one car that proceded into the intersection and struck the amb. broadside, knocking it over.

All injuries were minor and only one person was transported for observation.  No other information has been released yet.

KLAS-TV has filed this video report:

It has been reported that a 2nd AMR unit was involved in a minor accident 15 minutes later and just a few blocks away.

Hat tip:  Ron

Updates From Here and There

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*  STATter911 has been giving full coverage to the bizarre incident of the exploding trash dumpster that killed a Wisconsin firefighter Tuesday.  The cause is now being laid at water-reactive metal shavings.  Read his updates that include some startling photos HERE first, then HERE, and finish up HERE

*  The 5-alarm fire in the vacated mill in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, has been attributed to a faulty chimney attached to a large wood stove that was being used to warm a storage room in the sub-freezing temperatures.  WPRI-TV wraps this one up:

*  Starkville, Mississippi, residents are still coming to grips with the deadly fire Tuesday that killed nine people (Firegeezer report HERE).  So far, the state fire marshal has not come up with a definite cause for the fire.  He has ruled out the electric space heater after learning that it had been disconnected and wasn’t operational.  WAPT-TV Ch. 16 Jackson has this follow-up report:

“Can You Walk to the Ambulance?”

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SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA HAS ADDED A NEW RESOURCE to its ambulance fleet starting with tonight’s New Year’s celebrations.  ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corp.) tells of their plans:

Sydney paramedics will now be able to reach patients locked in by massive New Year’s Eve crowds thanks to a new, pint-sized ambulance.  The latest addition to the NSW Ambulance Service, a micro car measuring a mere 250 centimetres (8 feet)in length, will be deployed for the first time on December 31 after a successful trial earlier this month.

tiny ambo a ABC TV

Premier Kristina Keneally, who was on hand to announce the $18,000 Smart car ambulance, says it will enable paramedics to manoeuvre through large crowds unlike regular ambulance vehicles.

“The advantage of the Smart car is that it will allow our ambulance service to have a quicker response, particularly when it comes to large events,” she said.  “We intend to use the Smart car in big events … we anticipate it will be in use every weekend.”

About 300 paramedics and 150 ambulance vehicles will be working in Sydney’s metropolitan area on New Year’s Eve, which is expected to draw 1.5 million people to Sydney Harbour.

The mini-ambulance contains all the essentials found in a regular ambulance, except for the cot, including oxygen resuscitation equipment, drug and first aid kits, and a defibrillator.  It also has the advantage of protecting paramedics from the elements, unlike ambulance motorcycles.

ABC broadcast this news snippet:

Firefighter “AIG” Problem

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For the second year, taxpayers are screaming about the end-of-year bonuses provided to Wall Street executives.

While the pile is money is much lower, career firefighters are encountering taxpayer anger. Let’s look at two issues:

TIME-TO-RETIRE

In the last half of the 20th century, some IAFF locals and state associations were successful in reducing the time required to qualify for a pension. Part of the argument was the punishing work conditions as a city firefighter in the 1940s and 1950s.

For example, if I was hired by Prince George’s County in the early 1970′s I could get a full pension after 20 years of service, instead of the 25 years needed to retire from Fairfax County. My ex, a civilian professional working in the fire department, always reminds me that she needs to work 32 years to get her county pension when she turns 55.

Sarasota County Fire Chief Kenneth Ellerbe

Chief Kenneth Ellerbe

Some departments have multiple retirement plans, based on when you started work. A person hired in PG today does not have the same generous retirement program enjoyed by the firefighters hired in the 1960s.

The issue with DCFD Chief Ellerbe on leave with out pay while working as the Sarasota County fire chief is an example of the nuances. When Ellerbe started with the District of Columbia fire department he needed to complete BOTH 25 years of service AND be 50 years old to start receiving a pension. Other DCFD members just need to achieve 25 years of time-in-service. Dave Statter, STATter911, provides the details HERE.

A December 26, 2009 Wall Street Journal article looked at the impact the recession has on local government. Conor Dougherty, writing in “As Slump Hits Home, Cities Downsize Their Ambitions” makes this observation:

More likely to be union members, government workers tend to be better paid and have greater job security than many of the taxpayers who pay their salaries. Benefits are often better, too. Virtually all full-time state and local workers have access to retirement benefits; in the private sector, about 76% of full-time employees had retirement benefits. Employment in local government peaked in August 2008 and has fallen by 117,000 since then, or less than 1%, compared with a 6.3% fall in private employment from its December 2007 peak. (full article HERE)

RETIREMENT BENEFITS

We posted an article about “Gilt-Edged Pensions” in response to an article published in the February 16, 2009 issue of Forbes magazine. Stephanie Fitch’s opening paragraph was designed to get your attention:

Your 401(k) isn’t doing too well, is it? But you’re footing the bill for some lucky stiffs who don’t have to worry about market crashes, medical costs or inflation.

The article featured police chief Glenn Goss. Goss retired as a Delray Beach police commander at 42 and took a job as the Highland Beach police chief. He gets a lifetime pension of $65,000 from Delray and, assuming he lives to the actuarial age of 78, represents a $2 million liability to Florida taxpayers. Fitch points out that there are “millions” of public safety employees with defined-benefit retirement programs.

Defined-benefit plans provide pension income to retired employees on the basis of a formula that accounts for a worker’s years of service at a firm and earnings. Distributions are typically made for the remainder of the employee’s life, making the plan similar to an annuity. Definition from Tax Policy Center of the Urban Center and Brookings Institution HERE

Forbes article HERE, Fossilmedic column HERE.

Sarasota’s reporting on Chief Ellerbe points out that the combination of DCFD pension and county salary approaches $250,000 a year. There is nothing illegal or improper about this situation, but generates the same anger as the federal government payout of Wall Street bonuses.

WHEN THE MONEY RUNS OUT

Forbes, The Wall Street Journal and The Economist have a pro-business, anti-labor editorial point-of-view.  Even with this bias, they make a couple of points that we cannot ignore.  A December 10, 2009 article in The Economist, makes the following observation in “Welcome to The Real World“:

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… public-sector workers are spoiled rotten. Government employees earn 21% more than private ones and are 24% more likely to have access to health care. Only 21% of private workers enjoy a defined-benefit (DB) pension, which guarantees retirement income based on years of service and final salary. But 84% of state and local workers still receive DB plans. Article HERE

Defined benefits retirement program obligates the municipality for decades. To meet that obligation, local governments are reducing health benefits, laying off employees and reducing expenditures. It may not be enough.

The City of Vallejo filed for Chapter 9 bankruptcy on May 06, 2008 (HERE). One of the goals of filing for bankruptcy was to break existing public safety labor contracts and pension obligations.

I am sad that 50 years of efforts to improve the working conditions of career firefighters is crumbling in the face of the 2008 recession.

Even if the economy starts to grow today, we are two to three budget cycles away from significant increases in local government revenue. Some think that we will not see a rapid return to the growth and revenue during the 1990′s.

The experts interviewed in The Economist article say it time for a fundamental restructuring of work conditions, pay and benefits.

What do you think?

Mike “FossilMedic” Ward

Tragic Fire Claims Octogenarian Couple

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A FIRE IN NORTH TONAWANDA, NEW YORK, early Wednesday morning took the lives of a couple who had been married for more than 60 years.  Ronald Moyer, 88, and his wife Margaret, 89, had lived in the same house since Ronald came home from serving in WW II and built the house himself.  They had five children and 20 grandchildren.

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Buffalo News / Scull photo

The Buffalo News reports:

Assistant North Tonawanda Fire Chief Richard Kozak, among the first of about 30 paid and volunteer firefighters to respond, said that when they arrived, “the front of the house was fully involved, with flames coming out the front window.”

Firefighters also spotted two partially melted vehicles, one in a garage, and neighbors told them they believed both husband and wife were inside the house.

“We made an aggressive interior attack,” Kozak said. “We had the female victim out of the house really quick. We went through the bedroom window, and she was in the bedroom.”

Margaret Moyer was brought outside to a waiting ambulance, where she was pronounced dead.

Heavy fire conditions and a collapsing roof hindered the search for her husband, who was found a few minutes later on the opposite side of the house, near a stairwell, fire officials said.

Early investigation indicates that the wood stove used for heating may have been overloaded with logs and the hostile fire started there.

WIVB-TV Ch. 4 has this video report with some fire footage included:

It’s Always Midnight Somewhere

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THE NEW YEAR HAS ALREADY BEGUN in those places closest to the International Date Line.  And being located in the first time zone, Auckland, New Zealand, is the first major city to celebrate the arrival of 2010.  Here’s what it looked like there when it was still 7 am Eastern time today:

Morning Lineup – December 31

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“Once in a Blue Moon ….”

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TONIGHT’S FULL MOON WILL BE THE 2nd full moon during this calendar month, the first was on Decmber 2. Whenever this happens, the second full moon is called the “blue moon” by many.  The moon really doesn’t look blue, so how did this expression get started?

The phrase “blue moon” dates back to a 16th-century proverb:

If they say the moon is blue,
We must believe that it is true.

In other words, it indicated an obvious absurdity, like “the moon is made of green cheese.” For a long time the term “until a blue moon comes” meant “never.” But in more modern times it evolved into “once in a blue moon” meaning “rarely.”

And rarely does the two-full-moon phenomena occur. The last one occurred in May 2007.  The phases of the moon take 29.5 days to go full cycle, so it has to start on either the 1st or 2nd day of a month to have time to come around again.  Even more rare, two blue moons occurring in the same year happens only once every 19 years or so. The last time that ocurred was 1999 in January and March.

The months of the double blue moons are almost always January and March. That is because the short month that falls in between them, February, is a key ingredient in this once-every-19-year phenomenon. For January and March to each have two full moons, it’s necessary for February to have none at all. Since February is usually 28 days long, and the average span between full moons is 29.5 days, if a full moon occurs at the end of January, it’s possible for the next full moon to skip February entirely and fall in the beginning of March.

Somewhere along the way in the mid-20th century, the blue moon became associated with lovers’ escapades and romantic mischief.  This was popularized when a motion picture was released in 1953 titled The Moon is Blue and was a romantic sex comedy starring William Holden.  You might want to put that on your Netflix order.

*  *  *  *  *

This is also New Year’s Eve and I’d like to wish all of you a very happy, successful and safe New Year 2010.  And I especially want to thank you for dropping by and reading our humble blog every day.  It’s very rewarding for us at Firegeezer to know that you are there and hearing from you in emails and comments is simply great.  We’re closing in on our 3rd anniversary online in just a couple of months and we have some new features planned for this upcoming year that I hope you will enjoy.  We’re not changing, just expanding.  So, thanks again, and Happy New Year!

Now let’s get this equipment checked out.  I’ll get the coffee started.

Fire at the Pyromaniac’s

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THE APTLY-NAMED PYROMANIACS FIREWORKS SHOP went up in flames this morning (Wednesday).  The Fort Wayne, Indiana, business was fully stocked for the upcoming New Year’s celebrations when the alarm came in at 10 am.  The store wasn’t open yet and there was nobody in the shop when the fire started.

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WISH-TV

The Fort Wayne FD responded with about 45 firefighters and elected to stay outside and protect exposures as a constant stream of small explosions took place with the occasional occurence of a sky rocket sailing out of the building (see video below).

Fort Wayne Fire Chief Pete Kelly told reporters that the fireworks are the reason it took three hours to get the fire under control.  “It was one of those where we couldn’t really get inside,” he said.

WANE-TV has good coverage of the afternoon display in suburban Waynedale:

No injuries were reported and Chief Kelly said that it could take several days to determine the cause of the fire.

The Fort Wayne News-Sentinel has the STORY.

What to do With the Empties

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FARGO, NORTH DAKOTA, IS KNOWN FOR ITS “differentness.”  Whether it’s true or not, we don’t know.  But the impression is there, perhaps from incidents like this novel burglar alarm activation.

It started early Tuesday morning when a neighbor in an apartment building called police at 1:24 a.m.  to report two elderly, naked men attacking each other.

When the PD arrived though, they found that one of the men was clothed and hiding in a closet of somebody else’s apartment.  Further investigation revealed that the man had entered the apartment and had been attacked by the resident who had been sleeping.  A police department spokesman tells the Fargo Forum:

“The renter of the apartment had set up a stepstool with empty beer cans on it and set that in front of the door so that if anybody were to open the door it would knock all the beer cans off and that would wake him up, which it did, so I guess it worked,” Sgt. Ahlfeldt said.  “He called it his burglar alarm. He said that he doesn’t really lock his doors, so he just does that instead.”

Both men suffered cuts and bruises, but didn’t require any medical treatment.  It turns out that the intruder, Daniel Gable, 61, lives in the apartment directly below and while under the fog of intoxication, he thought he was on his own floor when he entered the apartment.

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Daniel Gable

Gable spent the rest of the night in jail being held on suspicion of burglary.

FF Invents Personal Rescue Tool

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CAPTAIN CHRIS GILLINGHAM OF THE MEADVILLE (Pennsylvania) Fire Department was looking for an all-purpose rescue tool that a firefighter could carry with his personal gear that would replace having to carry 4 or 5 others into a building. 

Five years ago Capt. Gillingham started thinking of how best to design a hand tool that would meet the criteria of replacing some others and be functional enough that firefighters would want to carry one.  Taking a pair of Channellock brand linesman’s pliers, then cutting off the handles and welding specially designed handles shaped as FF tools onto the cutters, he applied for a patent and received a provisional U. S. patent in January 2008.

The world-renowned Channellock tool foundry is based in Meadville, so Chris approached them with his idea which they accepted enthusiastically.  After working out manufacturing details and some refinements, the #88-Rescue Tool came on the market in April 2008. 

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Already seeing the need for an alternate cutting tool, they began designing the alternate head that has a heavy-duty cutting head instead of the pliers-type and the new model was introduced just a couple of months ago, the #89.

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In an interview with Gillingham, the Meadville Tribune explains:

Each model, weighing about 26 ounces, combines a pry wedge to open doors and windows, a spanner wrench to tighten and loosen hose couplings, a gas valve shut-off tool and a steel punch to shatter glass.

The difference is the #88 model has a pliers/cutter head to twist and pull or cut wires while the new #89 model has a strong cutting head to slice through even the thick battery cables on hybrid vehicles or the metals like those used in drop ceiling frames.

Read the full interview in the Tribune HERE.

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Capt. Gillingham displays the two different
cutting heads in the photo from the Meadville Tribune.

The MSRP for the tools are around $55, but if you brouse through the online shopping sites, you will find them being sold for $45 to $59.  Channellock says that the tool has been a great success for them, selling 40,000 of them in the less-than-two years since introduction.

Chris tells the Tribune that he’s working on two other new tool products with Channellock designs. Plus, he’s working with another undisclosed company on an improved firefighters’ helmet.  “I’m not done yet,” he said.

Read Channellock’s catalogue page to learn more HERE.

This Channellock promotional video demonstrates the #88 model:

Saving Money Instead of Lives

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KIFI-TV image

KIFI-TV image

FOR YEARS THE BLACKFOOT, IDAHO, FIRE – RESCUE DEPARTMENT provided the emergency ambulance service for the neighboring areas of Bingham County. The county in turn reimbursed the city for the cost of the service.   But earlier this month the County Commissioners notified the city that beginning in January, they would no longer pay the city for the EMS coverage.

The Blackfoot Firefighters Local union has gone public with what they believe will be the ramifications of this decision:

  • A diminished quality of service in the county’s jurisdiction.
  • Increased health insurance premiums as a result.
  • Layoffs of city paramedics as lesser-qualified private EMT’s are substituted.

The county commisioners have admitted that their decision was strictly a cost-cutting measure.

KIFI-TV has a good video report on the situation:

Carpet Warehouse Fire in Minnesota

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A 27-YR.-OLD FAMILY BUSINESS IN SAVAGE, MINNESOTA, was practically destroyed Tuesday when a fire raced through the Thoroughbred Carpet Co. warehouse.  The established flooring company is largely operated by family members and long-time associates, most of whom have worked for the firm for many years.

carpet a shakopeevalleynews

An employee discovered the fire in one of the warehouse buildings that contained both carpeting and wood flooring products shortly after noon on Tuesday.  The sub-freezing temperatures demanded an increased response from several area fire departments and 150 firefighters were called on to work the blaze.  The fire spread from the warehouse to another building in the complex, but much of the office area with the paper records was spared.  The owners were already promising to rebuild as the fire was still being fought.

KMSP-TV Ch. 9 Minneapolis has this video report from the scene:

KSTP-TV has additional details for the story and more video HERE.

Morning Lineup – December 30

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One of the first things that I see this morning is the news about a firefighter in Wisconsin being killed when something inside a burning trash dumpster exploded most violently last evening.  It’s something that we have all known was bound to happen somewhere, sometime.  We have always preached that you never take anything for granted, such as “It’s only a dumpster fire,” but still there are times when you cannot defend against this kind of occurrence.

In this case, it may well have been a case of extremely unfortunate timing that was determined by fate.  The fire was discovered by a police patrol car who called in the alarm at just the wrong moment to set a chain of events in motion that ended up with a crew of firefighters at the scene just as the explosion occurred.  WLUK-TV Ch. 11 in Green Bay has this review that includes a press conference with the Calumet County Sheriff:

Dave Stater was working the news desk when the news broke and he has the best overall early coverage of the incident.  His story posted on STATter911 is the best place to start your reading and viewing of the incident, so CLICK HERE to begin.

Back when I was a young firefighter, a group of us traveled to the Univ. of Maryland’s Fire Service Training Institute to take a some weekend courses and I still have a handout that we received in one of them.  It was an inventory of the contents of half a dozen dumpsters that the FST’s instructors had chosen at random one day to rummage through and see what was laying in wait for the unwary fireman.  It was titled appropriately, “Just a Dumpster Fire.”  I’ll rummage around my box of old papers today and see if I can find it.  If I do, I’ll share it with you.  But I’ll bet that you could do the same thing with some trash containers in your own first due.

We’d better get our equipment checked out now.  This time of year we’re sure to be busy, so let’s make sure we’re ready.  I’m going to get a fresh pot started before we meet back in the day room.

Firefighter Imposter Held on Sex Charges

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A SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY, CALIFORNIA, MAN WAS brought before a Superior Court judge in Victorville Monday where police testified that Robert William Tell, 39, sexually molested minors while he was posing as a firefighter.  The judge ruled that there is sufficient evidence to hold him and scheduled an arraignment date for January 6 where he can enter a plea.

The San Bernardino Sun REPORTS:

Detectives served a search warrant in October at Tell’s home in the 24000 block of Roxbury Road, in Apple Valley, after two girls told deputies about the alleged molestation, according to the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department. Firefighting equipment and other evidence was seized at the home.

Tell reportedly wore a firefighting uniform, drove a red Ford Explorer and recruited children in his neighborhood for the explorer program. He also reportedly distributed business cards for a phony fire agency.

The defendant is charged with aggravated sexual assault of a minor, continuous sexual abuse of a child, lewd or lascivious acts with a child, and assault with a deadly weapon, court records state.

Pawtucket Update: Now 5 Alarms

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THE VACANT MILL FIRE IN PAWTUCKET, RHODE ISLAND, (see the earlier Firegeezer report HERE) went to a 5th alarm this afternoon.  Temperatures were in the teens all day with strong winds gusting to 45 mph.

A more extensive video has been posted:

Wellinvolved.net has this 40-image slide show:

Find more photos like this on Wellinvolved.net Photo Community

You Don’t Need “Cammies” to Go Hunting

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AND THE ORANGE HAT IS OPTIONAL TOO,  if you stay in your back yard.

Joel Borden of Clarksville, Tennessee, saw a wounded deer in his backyard Saturday.  Knowing that wounded animals need to be put down, Joel ran out into the back yard and killed the deer.  Seizing the moment, he didn’t stop to get dressed first ….. nor to get his rifle.

“I killed it with a stick,” Borden said. “My friends are making a big deal of it because I didn’t have anything on but boxers and a pair of sandals.”

Borden hit the deer in the head until it lost consciousness, breaking off an antler in the process. To put the animal out of its misery, Borden cut its throat then called authorities.

The Tennessean carried Joel’s full STORY HERE.

borden leaf-chronicle

Borden got dressed before he posed with the mighty
deer-killer stick for the Leaf-Chronicle photographer.

Around the Fire Web

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*  VaFireNews has a photo story of this morning’s MVA in Richmond (Va.) with a fire engine and a compact car that left 3 injured HERE.

*  STATter911 has a strange story of a downtown fire in Nebraska.  People in town smelled smoke for three hours before they started picking up their phones and calling each other instead of the fire department.  They only lost half a city block.  Dave’s got the story with video and a pretty neat photo HERE

*  Fire Daily is mulling over what he thinks are his best articles from 2009 HERE.

*  FireRescue1 is doing a comprehensive Year in Review too HERE.

*  Not really a blog, but a fellow with the friendly-sounding name of Ted is starting up a website where firefighters can list (for free!) their own “handyman” type of services in a directory format.  If you do some moonlighting, you might want to check it out HERE.

*  The Happy Medic has been looking into LEGAL tax deductions for the coming tax filing season HERE.

4 Alarms Working in Rhode Island

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PAWTUCKET, RHODE ISLAND, FIRE DEPARTMENT UNITS are on the scene of what is now a 4-alarm fire in a small mill-type building.

pawtucket a bingmap

Bing Maps image provided by NLC Fire Photos

The alarm was received at 11 am today (Tuesday) and firefighters found heavy smoke and fire conditions on arrival.  It is believed that the building, which has For Sale signs on it, was vacant.

WPRI-TV has some early video filed already:

Wrong-way Driver Causes Fiery, Fatal Crash on I-80

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A CAR TRAVELING THE WRONG WAY ON THE EASTBOUND LANES of I-80 in California’s Sierra Nevada Mountains collided head-on with another car that was driving correctly.  The violent head-on crash killed both drivers on impact and caused the “wrong-way” car to burst into flames immediately.

placer a news10net

News10.net

The driver at fault in the crash was 20-yr.-old male and the driver of the other car was an 18-yr.-old woman whose passenger survived the crash.  The wreck had the freeway shut down for over two hours Tuesday morning following the 3:30 am Pacific crash.

KCRA-TV Ch. 3 Sacramento has a video report from the crash scene:

Fatal Ambulance Crash in Pennsylvania

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A COALDALE, PENNSYLVANIA, WOMAN DIED MONDAY after her minivan T-boned an ambulance at a controlled intersection.

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Morning Call / Neff photo

The 62-yr.-old driver died on the scene after driving into the side of the ambulance which was not on an emergency call.  The traffic signal had just been installed 12 days previously, replacing a 4-way flashing signal that had been operating at the crossing for more than 20 years before.  Police believe that an umfamiliarity with the new signal may have been a factor in the wreck, but it has not yet been determined which vehicle was traveling on the green signal.  WNEP-TV has video coverage from the crash scene:

 

WNEP-TV has the details in their story  HERE.

Auto Shop Fire Burns Two Mechanics

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A FIRE IN AN AUTO REPAIR SHOP IN VANCOUVER, British Columbia, Monday afternoon gutted the business and sent four workers to the hospital.  Two of them were admitted in serious condition with burns.

The burn victims were working in the wheel alignment shop located in the rear of the Big O Tires store when they started working on a fuel pump.  The vapors from the gas ignited setting one of the men on fire, and his co-worker tried to beat the fire out with his hands.  Both of them suffered serious injuries from their burns.  A third employee suffered lacerations after falling while fleeing and a fourth was transported with less-severe injuries.

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Vancouver Province photo

Vancouver F&R Deputy Chief Nick Delmonico told the Vancouver Sun that the employees were pouring gasoline, perhaps from the fuel tank, when other heard an explosion and then saw the fire.  When the fire units arrived on the scene the building was already heavily involved after spreading to the tire storage and into a 2nd-floor office and apartment area.

One shop employee said that a shop light broke and that was what caused the ignition.  Fire officials have not confirmed that yet.  There is also a report that a space heater was located nearby.  The entire shop was burned out.

Kelowna.com has the STORY.

End of the Happy Trail

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SATURDAY DECEMBER 12 MARKED THE END of one of the greatest periods in America’s cultural history.  That was the day that the Roy Rogers-Dale Evans Museum closed its doors for good after 42 years of operation.

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Roy Rogers, “The King of the Cowboys,” was born Leonard Slye in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1911.  The son of a shoe factory worker, his family lived on a small farm in Ohio where he received a horse as a birthday gift one year and learned his horsemanship skills that had a major impact on his fortune in life.  Leonard had to drop out of school and join his father in the shoe factory to help the family make ends meet until 1930 when the family packed up and moved to California in search of a better life.

While working as an itinerant field hand, the young Slye found that he could entertain others with his guitar playing and singing, so he joined a musical group, The Rocky Mountaineers, and began his career in show business.  In 1934 he formed his own group, The Sons of the Pioneers, and his singing career started to flourish.  The group’s success as musicians included two major song hits, Cool Water and Tumbling Tumbleweeds, and led them into roles in Western movies that were just becoming popular.

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Roy Rogers & Sons of the Pioneers in 1944

In 1938 another event happened that the most impact ever on his career.  The movies’ major cowboy star, Gene Autry had a contract dispute with his studio and walked off the job.  With a new film already lined up to start shooting, the studio grabbed Slye, changed his name to Roy Rogers and put him into the lead role that had been written for Autry.  And as the cliche goes, the rest is history.

For the next 30 years he made nearly 90 motion pictures, over 100 episodes of his own tv show, and literally thousands of public appearances at parades, rodeos, and promotional events with his wife Dale Evans.  He sold his “name” to over 400 licensed items and was second only to Walt Disney in name licensing success.  During all that time, Rogers was a collector and kept thousands of personal items and memorabilia relating to his entertainment career.  He even had the old 1923 Dodge that his family moved to California with.

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The 1923 Dodge

rr repubIn 1967 he opened a museum near his home in Apple Valley, California, where he could put his collection on display.  In 1976 he moved the collection to a larger facility in nearby Victorville where it remained until after Roy and Dale’s deaths.  Roy passed away in 1998 and his beloved wife Dale followed him in 2001.  The museum was operated by the Roger’s son, Roy Rogers, Jr., and their grandson Dustin “Dusty” Rogers and the next year they relocated the museum to a 23,000 sq. ft. building in Branson, Missouri, where it remained until its closure this month.

Roy Rogers had left an explicit request to his heirs that when the museum stopped making money, then they should sell everything off and then move on with their lives.  Now that the museum is closed, Dusty and Roy, Jr. plan to keep a certain number of special mementoes, such as the mounted skin of “Trigger the Wonder Horse” and sell the rest at a series of auctions next year in January, April and July.

Firegeezer will be keeping an eye on the sales and report back with the results and any newsworthy events.

For more information on these topics, we recommend:
Wikipedia entry for Roy Rogers’ biography HERE which also has several links to related websites.
Roy Rogers Museum WEBSITE.
Public letter from Dusty Rogers announcing future plans HERE.

Roy Rogers’ theme song, Happy Trails, was written by Dale Evans

Happy trails to you, until we meet again.
Happy trails to you, keep smilin’ until then.
Who cares about the clouds when we’re together?
Just sing a song and bring the sunny weather.
Happy trails to you, ’till we meet again.

Morning Lineup – December 29

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We’ll continue with this week’s series of occasional articles during the NHL’s mid-way point of their season.

This coming Friday, January 1, the National Hockey League will present its 3rd annual Winter Classic game, a match held outdoors in a sports arena.  The first outdoor game of the modern era was played on November 22, 2003, at Edmonton’s Commonwealth Stadium. The Heritage Classic, as it was billed, was between the Edmonton Oilers and the Montreal Canadiens and was the first regular season outdoor game in the history of the National Hockey League.

The success of the experiement led to the league’s scheduling another outdoor contest and billed it the Winter Classic, played on Jan. 1 in 2008 in the Orchard Park, New York, home of the Buffalo Bills football team.  The game was scheduled as an experiment to see how well it was received by the fans.  They ended up with an NHL-record crowd of 71,217 fans in attendance to watch the Buffalo Sabres play the Pittsburgh Penguins.

That success led to another outdoor game the following year when the Classic was played in Chicago’s Wrigley Field between the Chicago Black Hawks and the Detroit Red Wings.  Not only was that game a sell-out, but the tv ratings for the game were the highest television ratings of any hockey game in 33 years.  That was enough to make it an annual event for the foreseeable future.

This week’s game will be played in Boston’s Fenway Park where the Bruins will host the Philadelphia Flyers at 1pm Eastern time.  The players love to participate in the outdoor games and they look forward to the opportunities to play.  An interesting piece of trivia holds that goaltender Ty Conklin has participated in all three of the NHL’s regular-season outdoor games played so far. He appeared as anOiler in 2003, a Penguin in 2008 and a Red Wing in 2009. Interestingly, on each occasion he was not his team’s starting goaltender even a month prior to the outdoor games, however injuries had sidelined teammates Tommy Salo, Marc-Andre Fleury and Chris Osgood. Conklin was quoted as saying “I count myself very lucky. There’s not a guy in this league who wouldn’t like to play in these games.”

The outdoor rink was assembled earlier this month at Fenway and the NHL took a time-lapse video of the construction of the playing surface:

Hey, let’s get the equipment checked out now.  I’ve got to get some more coffee started.  See you back in the day room.

Updates, etc.

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UPDATES FOR SOME RECENT FIREGEEZER ARTICLES:

*  This afternoon (Monday),the firefighters of Morbihan region paid a tribute to the Ajudant Damien Hochet who died in a firetruck accident on December 23rd.  (see Firegeezer story HERE.)  Many people were at the services which took place in a gymnasium in Kerlivio.

morbihan a funeral

His two colleagues who were injured in the accident, Emmanuel Magnan and Anthony le Bot, were able to attend, also.

Source:  Ouest-France.

Do you recall the story about the Asian Carp migrating up the Illinois River that we posted on December 2?  We had that fascinating video HERE showing scores of the fish jumping out of the water as a boat passes by.  The focus of the story was on the fear that then encroaching species was about to get into the Great Lakes via the Chicago ship canal.

Last week the State of Michigan filed for an injunction in the U. S. Supreme Court against the Army Corps of Engineers  to force them to keep the locks closed that connect the two bodies of water.  Read the background in our first report HERE (and watch the funny video), then watch this video report from WFLD-TV Chicago on the legal challenge by Michigan:

*  Sunday morning the city of Northampton, Massachusetts, had a series of 11 arsons in a span of 73 minutes (Firegeezer video report HERE) that left two people dead in one house.  Today the NFD released the dispatch tapes of the radio activity and they have been transcribed onto a set of three YouTube recordings.  Our correspondent Richard C., who sent along the link, refers to them as “a dispatcher’s nightmare.”  CLICK HERE to listen to them and see if you agree.

EMS pay sucks

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Chris (CKEMTP), at Life Under The Lights, posted a challenge and invitation:

So let me invite you to the “Life Under the Lights Bar and Grille”. Coming soon to this little blog of mine is the beginning of my crusade to kick the current EMS pay rates and system thereof squarely in the behind. I’m frankly, mad as heck and I’m not going to take it anymore… well, at least as blogging is concerned as I still have to make a living, you know.

maleparamedicDon’t get dressed up, come as you are, and let’s have a spirited conversation about why EMS people make such crappy money for doing what we do. I’ve got enough ideas on this topic to carry me through a few evenings of my wooden “free drink” nickels and I’d love to share some brutally honest conversation with the EMS folks in my audience that I think can make a difference in the quality of life for those who save lives. We need to, we have to, and we deserve to.

CKEMTP has posted a couple of readings and will start posting HIS rants tomorrow. Enter CK’s “Life Under the Lights Bar and Grille HERE” and join in.

Mike “FossilMedic” Ward