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  <pubDate>Fri, 29 Aug 2008 19:31:34 +0000</pubDate>
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   <title>News : Plane Crashes, Explodes Near Houses in Las Vegas</title>
   <link>http://www.nvcops.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=30273&amp;PID=52211#52211</link>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="http://www.nvcops.com/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=1407" rel="nofollow">Fire_Bot</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> Plane Crashes, Explodes Near Houses in Las Vegas<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> August 29 2008 at 3:23pm<br /><br /><h1>Plane Crashes, Explodes Near Houses in Las Vegas</h1>
<h2>The pilot was killed instantly</h2>
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	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Posted</strong>: 08-29-2008</div>
	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Updated</strong>: 08-29-2008 10:53:04 AM</div>
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       <strong>PETER MATTHEWS</strong><br />
    
<em>Firehouse.Com News</em><br />

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<p>Several people on the ground scrambled to safety after a small plane crashed and exploded between two houses in Las Vegas on Thursday. The only occupant of the plane, the pilot, was killed instantly.</p><p>"People started calling us on 9-1-1, saying that they could see flames from the plane about three miles from the airport" said Tim Szymanski, Fire - Public Information Officer for Las Vegas Fire & Rescue. "Just over a mile away, witnesses said the plane was very low and it was leaving a trail of thick black smoke."</p><p>The plane, a twin engine Piper Navajo, struck some wires "and catapulted down." The three power lines, each carrying 7,200 volts, caused the plane to cart wheel over a car in front of the homes and hit the ground between them. </p><p>Both homes were occupied when the crash occurred at approximately 2:30 p.m.</p><p>In the home at 2828 N. Jones Blvd. "a father and his teenage daughter were discussing the utility bill when the power went out. Then, they heard a boom and ran outside to see an intense fire raging." Szymanski said. adding that they fled up the street on foot.</p><p>Next door at 2832, they also heard a loud "thud" and found the side yard fully engulfed. The three adults and two children evacuated. One woman was transported for smoke inhalation. </p><p>None of the occupants knew what had happened and were unaware that the plane dropped in their yards.</p><p>As fire crews were responding, a construction crew opened the front turret on its water tender to contain the fire.</p><p>"We used several 1 3/4-inch handlines, with pre-piped foam" to knock the fire down," Szymanski said. A fire department tanker carrying 300 gallons of foam was initially dispatched and supplied the units on scene."</p><p>Szymanski said it was a very intense fire, and that crews reported seeing it from all across Las Vegas Valley. </p><p>The fire, which went to three alarms, was knocked in 20 minutes. </p><p>"There was so little left of the plane. All that we found was the two engines and nothing else was left because of the intense flames."</p><p>The home at 2382 suffered moderate damage to the exterior, but Szymanski expects those occupants to return home shortly. The other home was destroyed by the fire.</p><p>Crews searched the rubble for several hours. At approximately 6 p.m., they found the pilot's remains in the plane.</p><p>Responding emergency crews faced traffic problems as they neared the scene. "The wires that the plane took down knocked out the traffic signals. It took a little extra time to navigate the units to the scene."</p><p>This was the second crash involving a plane that was leaving North Las Vegas Airport in a week. </p><p>Last Friday, an experimental plane was in the air for less then a mile when it barreled down into a house. The pilot and two residents of the home were killed and the home was consumed by fire.</p>



   

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   <pubDate>Fri, 29 Aug 2008 15:23:48 +0000</pubDate>
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   <title>News : National Fire Academy Starts College Internship Pr</title>
   <link>http://www.nvcops.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=30272&amp;PID=52210#52210</link>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="http://www.nvcops.com/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=1407" rel="nofollow">Fire_Bot</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> National Fire Academy Starts College Internship Pr<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> August 29 2008 at 3:23pm<br /><br /><h1>National Fire Academy Starts College Internship Program</h1>
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	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Posted</strong>: 08-29-2008</div>
	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Updated</strong>: 08-29-2008 11:25:40 AM</div>
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       <strong><a href=http://www.usfa.dhs.gov target=new>United States Fire Administration</a></strong><br />
    
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<p><strong><a href=http://www.usfa.dhs.gov/downloads/pdf/nfa/USFA_internship_program.pdf target=new>National Fire Academy Internship Program</a></strong></p>National Fire Academy Starts College Internship Program<p>The United States Fire Administration's National Fire Academy announces a new college internship program for men and women interested in a career in the fire and emergency services.</p><p>Students accepted into the intern program receive the opportunity to work at the U. S. Fire Administration in Emmitsburg, Maryland to assist in the development and maintenance of course and curriculum materials, conduct basic research and summarize information from office files and other sources, and perform basic editing and review of the training materials to assure they reflect current practices.</p><p>Students conduct supervised research and receive experience in disciplines such as, but not limited to, Arson and Fire Investigation, Management Science, Training Program Management, Hazardous Materials, Planning and Information Management, Emergency Medical Services and Safety, Public Fire Education, Fire Prevention Management, Fire Protection Systems and Equipment, and Incident Management.</p><p>Students accepted into the program receive:</p><p><ul><li>Campus housing in a private room. The housing arrangement promotes social interactions with fire and emergency services professionals from around the United States and provides a wonderful opportunity to forge long-lasting friendships and potential career contacts.<li>Opportunity to attend up to two National Fire Academy courses.</ul></p><p>Students are expected to work full-time with Training Specialists, Instructional Systems Specialists, and other USFA Staff; participate in weekly meetings with staff; and participate in emergent projects as needed. The National Fire Academy is part of the Department of Homeland Security, Federal Emergency Management Agency, United States Fire Administration. The campus is located in rural Maryland, about 10 miles south of historic Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, and about 60 miles from Baltimore and Washington, D.C.</p><p><strong>Eligibility</strong></p><p>Applicants must:<ul><li>be enrolled as a student at a regionally accredited institution in the U.S.<li>be sophomores or juniors who have successfully completed introductory courses in a field related to fire and emergency services<li>maintain a 3.0 GPA in the discipline<li>demonstrate an interest in training and education and a career in the fire and emergency services or allied disciplines</ul></p><p>Submit a complete application consisting of:</p><p><ul><li>Resume<li>Cover letter<li>Three (3) letters of reference from college or university faculty<li>College transcripts<li>Personal statement of interest</uL></p><p><strong>Status</strong></p><p>Volunteer service is limited to services performed by a student, with the permission of the institution at which the student is enrolled, as part of an agency program established for the purpose of providing educational experience for the student.</p><p>A student participating under an agency volunteer program is not considered to be a Federal employee for any purposes other than injury compensation or laws related to the Tort Claims Act. Service is not creditable for leave accrual or any other employee benefits.</p><p><strong>Instructions</strong></p><p>Interested students should contact their college or university internship coordinator, who in turn should contact:</p><p>Kelly Snyder, Program AnalystUnited States Fire Administration16825 S. Seton AvenueEmmitsburg, Maryland 21727Telephone: 301.447.1395Fax: 301.447.1052E-mail: Kelly.Snyder@dhs.gov</p><p>The Department of Homeland Security, Federal Emergency Management Agency, U.S. Fire Administration is an equal opportunity employer.</p>



   

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   <title>News : The World Firefighter Games Toughest Firefighter </title>
   <link>http://www.nvcops.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=30271&amp;PID=52209#52209</link>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="http://www.nvcops.com/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=1407" rel="nofollow">Fire_Bot</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> The World Firefighter Games Toughest Firefighter <br /><strong>Posted:</strong> August 29 2008 at 3:23pm<br /><br /><h1>The World Firefighter Games' Toughest Firefighter Alive in Wales</h1>
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	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Posted</strong>: 08-28-2008</div>
	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Updated</strong>: 08-29-2008 11:33:02 AM</div>
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       <strong>MICHELLE FIDDLER</strong><br />
    
<em>Liverpool Daily Echo</em><br />

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											<p><img style="float:right; margin-right:5px;" src="http://images.cygnusinteractive.com/buttons/logo_lexis.gif" /></p>  <p> BLOOD, sweat and tears were all in a day's work as firefighters took on their biggest challenge to date. </p> <p> The World Firefighter Games' Toughest Firefighter Alive (TFA) competition started yesterday at St George's Plateau, in Liverpool city centre. </p>    <p> The contest is considered to be the ultimate test of a firefighter's strength, agility and stamina. </p> <p> Around 300male and female firefighters will compete in pairs over four days in a gruelling timed course, which will include hose-dragging and ladder-pitching. </p> <p> The event also features a run up the stairs of the 150- metre St John's Beacon while wearing breathing apparatus. </p> <p> There are 30 competitors from the UK and 12 from Merseyside in the competition. </p> <p> The winner at the previous World Firefighter Games was Fabricio Nascimento, from Brazil, who ran the course in an amazing 8min 32sec. </p> <p> Together with seven fellow competitors from Brazil, he will return to defend his title in Liverpool on Sunday. </p> <p> The 2004 winner, Linus Prame, from Sweden, will also be competing on Sunday. </p> <p> Event director Guy Keen said: "We are very excited about staging the Toughest Firefighter Alive in the heart of the city and invite people to come along and watch." </p> <p> The TFA contest continues from 9am to 5pm today, tomorrow and Sunday. </p> <p> On Saturday, the TFA course will be scaled down for the Toughest Young Firefighter Alive competition, which will be based on the senior event but featuring young people aged 15 to 17. </p> <p> On the evening of the last TFA competition day for the seniors, St George's Hall will host the TFA Awards night. </p> <p> The ticket-only party will feature live music and TFA winners will be announced and presented with their trophies. </p> <p> Keep up to date on all that is happening at the World Firefighter Games at <a target="_new" href="http://www.firefightergames.merseyblogs.co.uk">www.firefightergames.merseyblogs.co.uk</a>. </p> <p> To view stories, medal tables, video and galleries see<a target="_new" href="http://www.liverpoolecho.co.uk">www.liverpoolecho.co.uk</a> </p> <p> For details of Games events and tickets go to <a target="_new" href="http://www.wfg08.com">www.wfg08.com</a> <a target="_new" href="mailto:michellefiddler@liverpoolecho.co.uk">michellefiddler@liverpoolecho.co.uk</a> </p><p><HR /><div style="font:9px;"><p align="center"><a href="http://www.lexis-nexis.com/lncc/about/copyrt.html" target="_new">Copyright 2008 LexisNexis, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.</a><br /><a href="http://www.lexis-nexis.com/terms/general" target="_new">Terms and Conditions</a> | <a href="http://www.lexis-nexis.com/terms/privacy" target="_new">Privacy Policy</a></p></div></p>										



   

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   <pubDate>Fri, 29 Aug 2008 15:23:48 +0000</pubDate>
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   <title>News : IL Firefighters Quit Dept. in Protest of Chief</title>
   <link>http://www.nvcops.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=30270&amp;PID=52208#52208</link>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="http://www.nvcops.com/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=1407" rel="nofollow">Fire_Bot</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> IL Firefighters Quit Dept. in Protest of Chief<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> August 29 2008 at 3:23pm<br /><br /><h1>Illinois Firefighters Quit Department in Protest of Chief</h1>
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	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Posted</strong>: 08-28-2008</div>
	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Updated</strong>: 08-29-2008 11:45:17 AM</div>
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       <strong>KEVIN BARLOW</strong><br />
    
<em>The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois)</em><br />

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											<p><img style="float:right; margin-right:5px;" src="http://images.cygnusinteractive.com/buttons/logo_lexis.gif" /></p>  <p>CLINTON - As a volunteer firefighter for the city of Clinton, Aaron Kammeyer isn't used to getting applause for serving the department.  </p> <p>He has been thanked many times during the hundreds of calls over his 4 1/2 years on the squad, but Wednesday night was the first - and likely last - time he received an ovation as a firefighter. </p>    <p>He received it for quitting the department. </p> <p>A group of about two dozen Clinton residents gathered Wednesday night at the fire station to protest the controversial installation of Shawn Milton as the city's new fire chief, and they applauded as Kammeyer dropped off his equipment and letter of resignation. </p> <p>"It's not easy to quit," Kammeyer said. "This is part of your life. The decision was made last week to bring in Shawn, but we really need someone in there who can bring us back together." </p> <p>Fellow firefighters Ken Holt and Daryn Black also quit Wednesday. </p> <p>Prior to the resignations of Kammeyer, Black and Holt, the squad was down to 24 members. Fully staffed, the department would have 42 members. </p> <p>Clinton Mayor Ed Wollet said he has been in contact with area fire departments and has been assured help will be available if needed.  </p> <p>Shawn Milton, son of Public Health and Safety Commissioner Jerry Milton, was approved as chief in a 3-2 City Council vote last week. The chief's appointment is on an interim, part-time basis that will come up for renewal May 1. </p> <p><strong>Ceremony a surprise</strong> </p> <p>Shawn Milton said the swearing-in ceremony on Tuesday came as a surprise even to him, and firefighters said they learned of it from news reports. </p> <p>"We were expecting him to be sworn in at the next City Council meeting on Tuesday," Holt said. "I don't know why it had to be such a secret." </p> <p>The chief took office a day after a two-hour City Council meeting in which several firefighters aired their concerns about the father nominating the son for a position the father would oversee. </p> <p>Jerry Milton said the decision was made to swear in the chief early so the department would have a chief in case there were any fire calls.  </p> <p>Shawn Milton replaced Jeff Pearl, who died in November. At that time, Shawn Milton was appointed assistant chief along with his brother-in-law, Brian Armstrong, who resigned from the squad immediately after the vote last week. </p> <p>"Even if we were to try and give him a chance, the swearing-in situation was a sign that things are probably going to get a lot worse," Kammeyer said. "The fact (is) that it was kept a secret from the department, and if they are going to start that, then I don't think things will change at all." </p> <p><HR /><div style="font:9px;"><p align="center"><a href="http://www.lexis-nexis.com/lncc/about/copyrt.html" target="_new">Copyright 2008 LexisNexis, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.</a><br /><a href="http://www.lexis-nexis.com/terms/general" target="_new">Terms and Conditions</a> | <a href="http://www.lexis-nexis.com/terms/privacy" target="_new">Privacy Policy</a></p></div></p>										



   

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   <title>News : Worker Killed in Explosion at West VA Plant</title>
   <link>http://www.nvcops.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=30269&amp;PID=52207#52207</link>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="http://www.nvcops.com/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=1407" rel="nofollow">Fire_Bot</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> Worker Killed in Explosion at West VA Plant<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> August 29 2008 at 3:23pm<br /><br /><h1>Worker Killed in Explosion at West Virginia Plant</h1>
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	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Posted</strong>: 08-29-2008</div>
	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Updated</strong>: 08-29-2008 12:15:59 PM</div>
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       <strong>By TOM BREEN</strong><br />
    
<em>Associated Press Writer</em><br />

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											<p>     INSTITUTE, West Virginia     -- </p><p>A chemical plant explosion rocked an area west of Charleston, hurling a fireball hundreds of feet (meters) into the air, killing one worker and injuring a second.</p><p>The explosion at the Bayer CropScience plant, which could be felt miles (kilometers) away, happened about 10:25 p.m. Thursday. State Department of Environmental Protection spokeswoman Kathy Cosco said the primary chemical involved, methyl isobutyl ketone, is highly flammable but not especially toxic.</p><p>Air monitoring found no sign of chemical exposure, either on or off the site about 10 miles (16 kilometers) west of Charleston, Bayer said.</p><p>The plant also produces methyl isocyanate, which killed at least 15,000 people in a leak in Bhopal, India, in 1984. Kanawha County Emergency Management Director Dale Petry said that chemical is stored in steel-wrapped underground containers located far from the blast site.</p><p>"They have a lot of chemicals at the plant and they do take great steps to protect them," said Joe Thornton, spokesman for the state Department of Military Affairs and Public Safety. "I think everything that can be done to protect those chemicals is being done, and I think the public at large is safe."</p><p>The explosion occurred in a section of the plant where waste products are treated before disposal, Bayer spokesman Mike Wey said. The unit had been closed for maintenance and was restarted earlier in the week, he said.</p><p>A worker who had been counted as missing was killed in the explosion, Petry said Friday.</p><p>Wey said the injured worker suffered burns and was transferred to a Pittsburgh hospital. A company emergency responder was treated at the plant infirmary for heat stress, Wey said.</p><p>Six other workers who normally work at the unit were not injured, Wey said.</p><p>Emergency crews extinguished the fire at about 2 a.m. Friday, Bayer said.</p><p>"Our thoughts and prayers are with the families of these employees during this very difficult time," Bayer said in a statement issued Friday morning.</p><p>"This is a very sad day for the Institute site family," the statement added.</p><p>Bayer said the cause of the explosion has not been determined. The unit was shut down and will not be restarted until the company determines that it can be safely operated.</p><p>Inspectors from the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration were at the site Friday morning, Bayer spokesman Nick Crosby said Friday.</p><p>Methyl isobutyl ketone and another solvent in the unit, hexane, are used to produce the insecticide Larvin, which is made only at the Institute plant. The accident is expected to create a shortage of Larvin, which has seen growing demand from the global agricultural economy, Crosby said.</p><p>Residents miles (kilometers) away from the facility reported hearing the explosion.</p><p>West Virginia State University Police Department patrolman Robert Flinn said he felt the blast as he was sitting in his cruiser on the school's campus near the plant.</p><p>"Our back was turned, and it was like somebody shined a giant spotlight on us," he said.</p><p>Warne Ferguson lives less than a mile (1.6 kilometers) from the plant and the explosion shook his house.</p><p>"It scared my wife to death," said 81-year-old Ferguson. "I thought my house was falling down on top of me. That's how hard the vibration was."</p><p>Crosby said the company received several reports of broken windows from nearby residents.</p><p>Bayer CropScience is headquartered in Monheim, Germany.</p><p><hr /><p><img style="float:left; margin-right:5px;" src="http://images.cygnusinteractive.com/buttons/logo_ap.gif" /><div style="font:9px;">Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.</div></p></p>										



   

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   <title>News : Pittsburghs First Female Deputy Chief Demoted Fol</title>
   <link>http://www.nvcops.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=30268&amp;PID=52206#52206</link>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="http://www.nvcops.com/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=1407" rel="nofollow">Fire_Bot</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> Pittsburghs First Female Deputy Chief Demoted Fol<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> August 29 2008 at 3:23pm<br /><br /><h1>Pittsburgh's First Female Deputy Chief Demoted Following Court Order</h1>
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	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Posted</strong>: 08-29-2008</div>
	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Updated</strong>: 08-29-2008 12:19:17 PM</div>
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       <strong>CHRIS TOGNERI</strong><br />
    
<em>The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review</em><br />

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											 <p xml:lang="en-US">     Pittsburgh's first female deputy fire chief has been replaced by a man who four years ago was passed over for the job.</p> <p>     Colleen Walz, 46, of Brookline called the move "desperately wrong." She said Fire Chief Darryl Jones brought her into his office Downtown on Monday afternoon and told her that she had been reassigned.</p> <p>     Walz will retain her rank of deputy chief for salary and seniority purposes, but her duties will be those of a battalion chief in Oakland, according to Walz and an office memo issued by Jones.</p> <p>     "He said, 'You are no longer deputy chief,' and he reassigned me," Walz said Thursday. "He said it was by court order."</p> <p>     The order stemmed from a 2006 lawsuit against the city in which Battalion Chief Michael Mullen said he was unfairly passed over for a promotion to deputy chief in favor of Walz.</p> <p>     Mullen sued the city and won. On Monday, Allegheny County Common Pleas Judge Timothy P. O'Reilly ordered the city to install Mullen as deputy chief immediately.</p> <p>     According to court records, Mullen was passed over for promotion because of "numerous issues surrounding his attitude and conduct."</p> <p>     Other firefighters and paramedics accused him of physical and verbal abuse, records show, and Walz once accused him of intimidation, creating a hostile work environment and other charges, leading to a city investigation in 2002.</p> <p>     Mullen was cleared of the charges. Walz sued him in Allegheny County Common Pleas Court, and they settled for $60,000.</p> <p>     Walz, who started in 1987 as a firefighter at stations in the Hill District and Brookline, described the reassignment as a de facto demotion "through no fault of my own."</p> <p>     "I think it is interesting that right in the middle of a huge promotion to try to attract women and minorities to the fire department, this is how the only woman (ranked deputy chief) is being treated," she said. "This is absolutely insulting."</p> <p>     Mullen declined to comment. Reached at home, he said the case took "a long, long time, with a lot of painful memories," adding that he wanted to focus on the future.</p> <p>     His attorney, James DePasquale, said Mullen and the city still are haggling over back pay. When Mullen won the case in March, the city paid him $25,000 in back pay. DePasquale said his client deserves an additional $40,000. O'Reilly will rule on the back pay at a future hearing.</p> <p>     Chief Jones said only that the decision had "absolutely nothing to do with the performance of Deputy Walz. I can't stress that enough."</p> <p>     Ed Mann, Pennsylvania state fire commissioner, said he was surprised by the news.</p> <p>     "In my dealings with Colleen and watching her teach classes at the Pennsylvania State Fire Academy, her demeanor and approach to things has always been professional," Mann said. "In the things that she's done for us, she's been more than qualified."</p> <p>     Last year Walz co-chaired the International Association of Fire Chiefs' task force to analyze and enhance investigations into firefighter deaths.</p> <p>     "It certainly shocked us when we found out," said Deputy Chief Billy Goldfeder, chairman of the International Association of Fire Chiefs' safety health and survival section. "We don't know the circumstances, but any time someone is reduced in rank, it certainly raises eyebrows."</p> <p>     Walz said she is "investigating her options."</p><p>McClatchy-Tribune News Service</p>										



   

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   <title>News : Salisbury, N.C. Wont Fight State Fines</title>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="http://www.nvcops.com/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=1407" rel="nofollow">Fire_Bot</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> Salisbury, N.C. Wont Fight State Fines<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> August 29 2008 at 3:23pm<br /><br /><h1>Salisbury, N.C. Won't Fight State Fines</h1>
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					 <p xml:lang="en-US">     alisbury officials do not plan to contest fines levied by the state that alleged fire authorities made serious errors during a March blaze that killed two firefighters.</p> <p>     In a letter to North Carolina Department of Labor's Division of Occupational Health and Safety Compliance District Supervisor Paul Sullivan, Salisbury city manager David Treme said he didn't agree with the fines but felt it would be better for the city to move forward.</p> <p>     "While the city and the fire department may disagree with the conclusions reached by NCOSHA or whether many of the events of March 7 occurred exactly as recited in the citations, we have determined that it is in the best interest of the department, the city, its firefighters and its citizens to focus the efforts of the city and of the Department on continuing to enhance firefighter safety under all circumstances by improving our policies, procedures and practices so there can be little question about the application of our standards," Treme said in the letter.</p> <p>     The Department of Labor fined the city $6,563 Aug. 6 for five violations, categorized as serious, ranging from not adequately monitoring fire conditions at the March 7 fire at Salisbury Millwork to communication radios not working properly. The city was also fined for improperly fitted air masks. In earlier interviews, Sullivan said Justin Monroe, a 19-year-old Salisbury firefighter, may have left and re-entered the building without being monitored by fire officials.</p> <p>     Monroe and Victor Isler, also a Salisbury firefighter, died while fighting back flames in the manufacturing area of the plant. They were both on the same hose team.</p> <p>     Treme said fire officials had made plans for improvements to communication radios in the near future and had implemented new training standards to make sure all equipment was properly fitted.</p> <p>     In his letter announcing the fines, Sullivan said he, however, believed "firefighter safety was the top priority at the fire."</p> <p>     The Locke Township Fire Department, who also responded to the fire, was fined a total of $700 by the state Department of Labor for not having a written protection program for respirators and not medically clearing all of its paid firefighters to wear such equipment, the report states.</p> <p>     Several other inquiries into the fire, including one commissioned by the city, is expected to begin later this year, city officials said. Authorities said they are waiting on other inquiries to be completed before they can begin.</p><p>McClatchy-Tribune News Service</p>										



   

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   <title>News : The Charleston Review Team; An Emotional Search fo</title>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="http://www.nvcops.com/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=1407" rel="nofollow">Fire_Bot</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> The Charleston Review Team; An Emotional Search fo<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> August 29 2008 at 3:23pm<br /><br /><h1>The Charleston Review Team; An Emotional Search for the Truth</h1>
<h2>Members respond to questions about themselves and the task</h2>
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	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Posted</strong>: 08-28-2008</div>
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<p>What does it do to you when your life is immersed in the study of death?</p><p> Nine firefighters died in Charleston, S.C. in June 2007 in the Sofa Super Store blaze. Six firefighters were appointed to examine the fire, analyze the incident and explain why such a tragedy happened. But that is too simple of a description of the task.</p><p>"I understood this mission in theory before we became involved in the Charleston project, but it became very real and personal as we worked our way through it." <strong>J. Gordon Routley.</strong> </p><p>J. Gordon Routley, project leader, Mike Chiramonte, Brian Crawford, Pete Piringer, Kevin Roche and Tim Sendelbach were chosen for this assignment over a year ago by the Charleston Mayor Joe Riley. For some it was not an easy decision to accept the task. And some of these men were advised not to get involved with a process that focuses on such an emotional issue in an environment where comrades could be held responsible for others' deaths.</p><p> The job is not yet done. The six are still to create with the department a strategic, five- to ten-year operational plan. But because of their time and effort so far, two lengthy reports have been completed;<a href=http://www.firehouse.com/mz/images/2007/11/charleston_phase_one_report.pdf>Phase One Report, Oct. 16, 2007,</a> an organizationalanalysis of the Charleston Fire Department. This review was conducted beforeundertaking the detailed analysis of the Sofa Super Store incident, so that the City andthe Fire Department could begin the process of implementing the first set ofrecommendations, while the incident analysis is being conducted.</p><p> And the <a href=http://firehouse.com/firereport_051508.pdf>Phase Two Report, issued May 15, 2008,</a>is a comprehensive analysis of the incident that examined a wide range of factors that could have contributed to the tragic loss of nine members of the Charleston Fire Department. The ultimate objective of this analysis was to identify the lessons that may be learned from this incident, with the goal of reducing the risk of future occurrences of a similar nature. </p><p>Those who had anything to do with the Charleston Fire Department prior to the tragic fire, saw in these reports, a scathing indictment of the leadership, operating procedures and culture of the department. The review team was blunt and to the point.</p><p>"It is very difficult to realize that nine firefighters, with whom we share a very strong and common bond, could lose their lives so tragically and under circumstances that could have and should have been avoided." <strong>J. Gordon Routley.</strong></p><p>For this investigation team, immersed this long in the lives and deaths of these firefighters and this incident, could it and should it leave deep impressions on their personal and professional lives? It has.</p><p> "In reality, I can't tell you fully how much my life has changed, as a result of this experience -- no one will ever know how heavy it has been." <strong>Michael Chiramonte.</strong></p><p> "As we studied the situation we learned many things human nature related to the tragic fire that occurred on June 18, 2007. We were exposed to much raw emotion, wonderment, denial, anger, sympathy and grief.  We weren't just professional consultants we were firefighters, fathers, brothers, sons all of whom had a deep respect and care for the memory of the Charleston 9 - Mike Benke, Billy Hutchinson, Louis Mulkey, Brad Baity, Mark Kelsey, Mike French, Melvin Champaign, Earl Drayton and Brandon Thompson." <strong>Pete Piringer.</strong></p><p> Consider that it was important to determine if and when the firefighters killed, or any firefighter gave out a distress call, a call for help or a mayday report anytime during the incident. That meant listening over and over to audio tapes of the radio traffic, for that single moment when they heard "In Jesus name, Amen", and perhaps 20 other pleas for help, or resignation to death. Seeking out those last words was an emotional trial.</p><p>"I appreciate more deeply how quickly things in our lives can change." <strong> Kevin Roche.</strong></p><p> Consider the interviews of those who survived and who were in some way involved in the circumstances leading to the firefighter deaths. There were those who couldn't connect to a working fire hydrant fast enough, those who sent firefighters into the blaze, those who for a brief moment touched and lost confused firefighters in the midst of heat and smoke, those who ordered horizontal ventilation, those who totally lacked situational awareness and those who couldn't see the big picture. Such interviews are not easy conversations.</p><p>"I viewed this project as a huge responsibility. I realized that there was essential information that could only be captured and documented if we did our work very thoroughly, conscientiously and impartially. The information was critical to understand what happened at the scene of the fire, so that the lessons could be learned and shared with all firefighters."  <strong>J. Gordon Routley.</strong> </p><p>Then there were the victims' families. The team presented the Phase Two report privately to the families before anyone else had a chance to see it. "There was nothing that could be done to bring the nine firefighters back, but we could honor them by determining and revealing the facts and using that information in a way that would save the lives of other firefighters. We also owed it to their families, loved ones and co-workers to explain what happened in terms they could understand, for their peace of mind."<strong> J. Gordon Routley.</strong></p><p>Since the Phase Two Report was released, the team has taken the message around the country.</p><p>"Since the release of the report I have had countless opportunities to discuss various aspects of the findings with coworkers, the media, neighbors and total strangers, including many firefighters I have met, about our encounters while in Charleston.  It is comforting to know that although this was a terrible tragedy that took a tremendous toll on a whole community, a state and the nation, there are people willing to open their minds trying to learn from this experience in hopes that a similar occurrence may never happen again." <strong>Pete Piringer.</strong></p><p>At some of the biggest fire service conferences, Firehouse World, Firehouse Expo, Fire Rescue International, usually with Routley as spokesman, the presentation has been given to thousands of mesmerized attendees, glued to their chairs as photos and videos, fire ground radio traffic, maps and diagrams have described the pieces of the puzzle now known as the Charleston Sofa Super Store Fire. </p><p>"There was a professional and personal responsibility to get it right and communicate the information effectively and we developed a personal connection to nine firefighters we had never met personally, but got to know very well  ---  and the same type of connection to their families and to all of the firefighters who were involved in the incident." <strong>J. Gordon Routley.</strong></p><p>Often those listening get choked up, and then are startled by the circumstances of the botched operation, and then amazed at the out of touch fire ground decision making. Always at the end of the presentation there is a standing ovation for the totality of the analysis by these six men.</p><p>"My participation in the Charleston report has shown me how important it is for all fire service members to keep looking around at the world outside of their own fire department and adopt/adapt/try new ideas that will help improve the safety of firefighters and the services that we provide to our customers.  My involvement has also strengthened my respect for incident commanders and for the responsibilities that they have to the firefighters working for them." <strong>Kevin Roche.</strong></p><p>"The fire that occurred on June 18, 2007 at the Sofa Super Store has had a significant effect on everyone with a vested interest in nine firefighters who died, including the Charleston fire department, the City of Charleston, the greater Charleston community and thousands of firefighters across the United States." <strong>Pete Piringer</strong></p><p>"I have always been an advocate of firefighter safety and fire prevention. This incident did, however, intensify my passion for these vital fire service topics. As I have been traveling the country and receiving e-mails from various fire departments, I realized that the Charleston Fire Department was not that unusual as to their approach to firefighter safety and fire prevention. Most departments do not see the clear relationship between these two topics." <strong>Michael Chiramonte.</strong></p><p>Anyone who has been exposed to the news accounts of the tragedy or has spent time studying the review team reports must experiences some emotional response. And that is certainly the case with the team members.</p><p>"My personal approach to life has been greatly changed. After seeing the effects that this tragedy has had on the families of the "Charleston Nine," I appreciate family much more than ever. It has intensified my passion for the unique brother and sisterhood that we have in the fire service. Being a member of the Charleston review team has given me four new friends that I deeply respect for their knowledge and professionalism, Gordon, Brian, Tim, Pete and Kevin, my fellow team members." <strong>Michael Chiramonte.</strong></p><p>"The whole experience was totally consuming - personally, professionally and emotionally. This experience has also helped me to rededicate my focus towards health and safety both personally and professionally."<strong> Pete Piringer.</strong>  </p><p>"We could feel the emotional impact on everyone involved, including ourselves. I have known for a long time that life is inevitably fatal, but this project really made me aware that lives can be lost very easily and through no fault of the victims themselves, if others fail to fulfill their responsibilities. We all have huge responsibilities to ensure that we are safe and others are safe ...  and we have to depend on each other....and there are no guarantees. This is real life and real death. Making others aware has become one of my important personal responsibilities." <strong>J. Gordon Routley.</strong></p><p>The team added a dedication within the Phase Two Report which sums up the underlying reason for taking on this task. "This report is dedicated to the nine Charleston firefighters that lost their lives onJune 18, 2007, to their families and friends, to the surviving members of theCharleston Fire Department, and to the Charleston community.May the lessons learned from a truthful and complete analysis of this incidentprevent future tragedies."</p><p><strong>The six members on the Post Incident Assessment and Review Team team were:</strong></p><p><strong> J. Gordon Routley</strong>, retired chief of the Shreveport Fire Department in Louisiana. Chief Routley led the review team. He holds a civil engineering undergraduate degree and a master's degree in public administration, and currently serves as technical adviser for the Montreal Fire Department. He has extensive experience with fatal fire investigations.</p><p> <strong> Kevin Roche</strong>, an assistant fire marshal and assistant to the fire chief in Phoenix (AZ). He is considered an expert on firefighting equipment and research. </p><p><strong>Tim Sendelbach</strong>, former chief of training for the city of Savannah (Ga.) Fire and Emergency Services. His role in the review was focused on training issues. He is past President of the International Society of Fire Services Instructors and currently serving as Editor-in-Chief for FireRescueMagazine and President of TES2 Training & Education Services in Savannah(GA).</p><p> <strong>Brian Crawford</strong>, is fire chief in Shreveport (La.) and a resident instructor at the National Fire Academy. Crawford, who holds a master's degree in industrial psychology, focused on the department's administration and operations. </p><p><strong>Mike Chiramonte</strong>, a former fire chief in Lynbrook, N.Y. His expertise is in fire prevention and fire codes. He is a certified New York State Building and Fire Inspector and instructor at the National Fire Academy, instructing in fire prevention, communications and leadership.</p><p><strong>Pete Piringer</strong>, public information officer for Montgomery County (MD) Fire and Rescue Service. He oversaw the review team's communications and public outreach efforts as well as advise the department on media relations and public information. </p>



   
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Fire Chief Rusty Thomas Resigns</a><br />	&#149;<a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?id=59496&sectionId=46">Two More Charleston Firefighter Families File Suits</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?id=59387&sectionId=56">Charleston Sofa Store Fire Report On Hold</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/Charleston-Fire-Department--Up-from-the-Ashes/56$58582">Charleston Fire Department: Up from the Ashes</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/South-Carolina-Chief-Rusty-Thomas--I-Will-Not-Leave-Here/56$58581">South Carolina Chief Rusty Thomas: 'I Will Not Leave Here'</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?id=58393&sectionId=46">Florida 'Brotherhood Ride' Honors Fallen South Carolina Firefighters</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=46&id=58124">Charleston Fire Discussed at Firehouse World</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/Safety-and-Survival-Seminar-Honors-Charleston-9/56$58235">Safety and Survival Seminar Honors 'Charleston 9'</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=56&id=57840">Charleston Fire Department Releases Progress Report</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=56&id=57473">Frustrated Charleston FFs Come Forward</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://dynamic.firehouse.com/broadcast/2007/12/07/through-the-smoke-the-charleston-firewhats-changed-part-1/">Through The Smoke:The Charleston Fire...What's Changed? - Part 1</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://dynamic.firehouse.com/broadcast/2007/12/07/through-the-smoke-the-charleston-firewhats-changed-part-1/">The Leader's Toolbox: "I'm Just a Volunteer" & Lessons Learned in Charleston</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://dynamic.firehouse.com/broadcast/2007/11/21/the-leaders-toolbox-im-just-a-volunteer-lessons-learned-in-charleston/">Through The Smoke: The Charleston Fire...What's Changed? - Part 1</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/News/Charleston-Fire-Department-Chooses-Uniform/46$57419">Charleston Fire Department Chooses Uniform</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?id=57345&sectionId=56">Charleston Fined $3,000 in Fatal Fire</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/Second-Set-of-Charleston-Recommendations-to-be-Released-Soon/56$56677">Second Set of Charleston Recommendations to be Released Soon</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/After-the-Ordeal--Firefighters-Talk-of-Charleston-Fire/56$56374">After the Ordeal, Firefighters Talk of Charleston Fire</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/In-The-Line-Of-Duty/Charleston-Mayor-Discusses-Fatal-Blaze/39$56428">Charleston Mayor Discusses Fatal Blaze</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/Charleston-Sofa-Store-Owner-Tells-His-Side/56$56256">Charleston Sofa Store Owner Tells His Side</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/Charleston-Command-Staff-to-Train-in-Maryland/56$56240">Charleston Command Staff to Train in Maryland</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=39&id=56041">Details Recounted in Charleston Tragedy</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/Charleston-Listens-to-Preliminary--Panel-Reccommendations/56$56013">Charleston Listens to Preliminary Panel Recommendations</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?id=55905&sectionId=39">Last Words of Charleston 9 Revealed</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/News/Review-Team-to-Look-at-Charleston-Tragedy/46$55903">Review Team to Look at Charleston Tragedy</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/Deadly-Charleston-Blaze-Started-in-Loading-Dock-Area/56$55325">Mental Health Task Force Established in Charleston</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/Charleston-Store-Covered-Dock-Without-Permits/56$55301">Charleston Store Covered Dock Without Permits</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/NIST-Collects-Info-from-Charleston-Blaze/56$55276">NIST Collects Info from Charleston Blaze</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/Local--Federal-Guidelines-Conflicted-in-Charleston--SC-Warehouse-Fire/56$55267">Local, Federal Guidelines Conflicted in Charleston, S.C. Warehouse Fire</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?id=55264&sectionId=46">Fallen South Carolina Fireman Comes Home for Indiana Burial</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?id=55263&sectionId=46">Charleston Firefighter Melvin Champaign Laid to Rest</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/Deadly-Charleston-Blaze-Started-in-Loading-Dock-Area/56$55230">Deadly Charleston Blaze Started in Loading Dock Area</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/Charleson-Firefighters-Lived--Died-Together/56$55250">Charleson Firefighters Lived, Died Together</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=56&id=55237">Local Fire Museum Seeking Ideas to Honor the Charleston Nine</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?id=55214&sectionId=56">911 Tapes: South Carolina Fire Began Behind Store</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/Susan-Nicol-Kyle-Blogs-Live-From-Memorial-Service/56$55216">Susan Nicol Kyle Blogs Live From Memorial Service</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/News/Fallen-Charleston--SC-Firefighters-Mourned/46$55219">Fallen Charleston, S.C. Firefighters Mourned</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/News/Thousands-of-Firefighters-Arrive-for-Charleston-Memorial-Service-/46$55211">Thousands of Firefighters Arrive for Charleston Memorial Service</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/Brother-Relates-Waiting-for-Charleston-Firefighter-to-Come-Out/56$55208">Brother Relates Waiting for Charleston Firefighter to Come Out</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/News/Charleston-Messege-Clear-During-Safety-Stand-Down-Week/46$55206">Charleston Message Clear During Safety Stand Down Week</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/One-on-One-with-Chief-Rusty-Thomas/56$55187">One on One with Chief Rusty Thomas</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?id=55196&sectionId=56">Deadly S.C. Fire Ambushed Firefighters</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?id=55195&sectionId=56">Charleston, S.C. Warehouse Destroyed by Fire Was Exempt from Strict Building Codes</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?id=55194&sectionId=56">Columbus Firefighters Learn from Previous Tragedy</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?id=55192&sectionId=56">Inquiry Expected into Charleston, S.C. Fire</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?id=55191&sectionId=56">Investigators Refuse to Reveal Details of Deadly S.C. Fire</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?id=55190&sectionId=56">Charleston Coroner Concludes Smoke Inhalation Cause of Death</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/South-Carolina-Warehouse-Worker-Talks-of-Rescue/56$55183">South Carolina Warehouse Worker Talks of Rescue</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/Charleston-Mourns--Firefighters-Wonder-Why/56$55184">Charleston Mourns, Firefighters Wonder Why</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/Poem--To-Those-Who-Remain/56$55185">Poem: To Those Who Remain...</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=56&id=55179">Memorial Service for The Fallen Charleston, S.C Firefighters</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/Nation-Learns-More-about-Charleston-Firefighters-/56$55171">Nation Learns More about Charleston Firefighters</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=56&id=55165">Charlotte Firefighters Remember 9 Killed In South Carolina</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=56&id=55164">Nebraska Firefighters Pay Tribute, Continue Stand Down Effort</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?id=55163&sectionId=56">President Bush Offers Statement on Charleston Tragedy</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/Complete-Profiles-of-Charlestons-Bravest/56$55162">Complete Profiles of Charleston's Bravest</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?id=55161&sectionId=56">Chief Describes Scenario of Charleston Blaze</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/Worcester-Fire-Offers-Support-After-SC-Tragedy/56$55160">Worcester Fire Offers Support After S.C. Tragedy</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/NC-Firefighters-Mourn-SC-Victims/56$55158">N.C. Firefighters Mourn S.C. Victims</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?id=55157&sectionId=56">Charleston Fire Chief Speaks of Tragedy</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/Nine-Charleston-Firefighters-Killed-in-Collapse-Identified/56$55156">Nine Charleston Firefighters Killed in Collapse Identified</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/Fire-Chiefs-President-Calls-for-a-Moment-of-Silence/56$55154">Fire Chiefs' President Calls for a Moment of Silence</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/Nine-Charleston-Firefighters-Perish-in-Blaze/56$55141">Nine Charleston Firefighters Perish in Blaze</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/Worst-US-Firefighting-Tragedies/56$55140">Worst U.S. Firefighting Tragedies</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/Reports-Say-9-Firefighters-Killed-in-South-Carolina-Sofa-Store-Blaze/56$55139">Reports Say 9 Firefighters Killed in South Carolina Sofa Store Blaze</a><br />	</div>	<br class="space8" /><div class="sectionred">Multimedia</div>	<div class="deck11">	&#149; Audio: <a href="http://dynamic.firehouse.com/broadcast/2008/06/17/through-the-smoke-charleston-the-routley-phase-ii-report-part-2/">Through The Smoke: Charleston &The Routley Phase II Report - Part 2</a><br />	&#149; Audio: <a href="http://dynamic.firehouse.com/broadcast/2008/05/20/through-the-smoke-charleston-the-routely-phase-ii-report-part-1/">Through The Smoke: Charleston &The Routley Phase II Report - Part 2</a><br />	&#149; Audio: <a href="http://dynamic.firehouse.com/broadcast/2007/12/07/through-the-smoke-the-charleston-firewhats-changed-part-1/">Through The Smoke: The Charleston Fire...What's Changed? - Part 1</a><br />	&#149; Audio: <a href="http://dynamic.firehouse.com/broadcast/2008/05/20/through-the-smoke-charleston-the-routely-phase-ii-report-part-1/">Through The Smoke: Charleston &  The Routley Phase II Report - Part 1</a><br />	&#149; Audio: <a href="http://dynamic.firehouse.com/broadcast/2007/12/07/through-the-smoke-the-charleston-firewhats-changed-part-1/">Through The Smoke: The Charleston Fire.What's Changed? - Part 1</a><br />	&#149; Audio: <a href="http://dynamic.firehouse.com/broadcast/2008/02/02/preview-of-the-the-charleston-fire-department-memorial-safety-survival-seminar/">Preview of the The Charleston Fire Department Memorial Safety & Survival Seminar</a></li>	&#149; Discuss: <a href="http://forums.firehouse.com/showthread.php?t=91653">Forums</a><br />	&#149; Audio: <a href="http://dynamic.firehouse.com/broadcast/2007/06/22/charleston-sc-fireground-transmissions-june-18-2007">Fireground Transmissions</a><br />			&#149; Photos: <a href="javascript:PopUp('http://www.firehouse.com/hotshots/slideshow/loddslideshow.php?directory=2007/06_9bravest',650,650)">Bravest Lost</a><br />		&#149; Photos: <a href="javascript:PopUp('http://www.firehouse.com/hotshots/slideshow/loddslideshow.php?directory=2007/06_sctragedy',650,650)">Incident Images</a><br />		&#149; Combs: <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/FireEMS-Cartoons/Special-Edition--Firehousecom-Editorial-Cartoon---Lets-Prepare-a-Heroes-Welcome/54$55159">A Heroes Welcome</a><br />		&#149; Video: <a href="http://www.firehouse.com/videonetwork/index.php?showid=115702">User Submitted</a><br />		&#149; Video: <a href="http://www.charleston.net/videos/2007/jun/19/55/">Dramatic Events</a><br />		&#149; Video: <a href="http://www.wcbd.com/midatlantic/cbd/news.apx.-content-articles-CBD-2007-06-19-0001.html">Raw Fireground Video</a><br />		&#149; Video: <a href="http://www.cnn.com/video/player/player.html?url=/video/us/2007/06/19/vo.sc.warehouse.fire.wciv">Tragic S.C. Fire</a><br />	</div>	<br class="space8" /><div class="sectionred">Reports</div>	<div class="deck11">	&#149; <a href="http://firehouse.com/firereport_051508.pdf">Charleston Phase Two Report, published on May. 15, 2008</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://www.firehouse.com/mz/images/2007/11/charleston_phase_one_report.pdf">Charleston Phase One Report, published on Oct. 17, 2007</a><br />	</div>	<br class="space8" /><div class="sectionred">Inside</div>	<div class="deck11">		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/Complete-Profiles-of-Charlestons-Bravest/56$55162">Complete Profiles of Charleston's Bravest</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Charleston-SC-Tragedy/City-of-Charleston-Fire-Department-Profile/56$55147">City of Charleston Fire Department Profile</a><br />	</div>	<br class="space8" /><div class="sectionred">Related Training Articles</div>	<div class="deck11">	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=16&id=59890">They Did as They Were Led</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=16&id=55924">Booster Lines, Bullies and Buffoons </a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=16&id=57286">Good Old Days: Are They the Problem</a><br /> 	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=16&id=57881">What Are the Issues?</a><br /> 	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=16&id=58084">Why Not Look Back for Your View of the Future</a><br />   	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=16&id=59485">Doing the Right Thing</a><br />  	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=16&id=59393">The Charleston Report: Delay or No Delay? </a><br /> 	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=46&id=55785">The Next Step: Charleston Facts - Part 2</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=10&id=59536">Firefighters Need to Know</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=14&id=55326">Company Level Training: Honoring the Charleston Nine by Training</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=14&id=54881">Strategy & Tactics for Large Enclosed Structures - Part 1</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=14&id=55307">Strategy & Tactics for Large Enclosed Structures - Part 2</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=14&id=56519">Strategy & Tactics for Large Enclosed Structures - Part 3</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=14&id=57052">Strategy & Tactics for Large Enclosed Structures - Part 4</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=14&id=46931">Enclosed Structure Disorientation</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=16&id=56773">Dancing With the Stars</a><br />	&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=9&id=55269">Do the Math, Sprinklers=Firefighter Safety</a><br />		&#149; <a href="/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=14&id=55205">Dunn's Dispatch</a><br />		&#149; <a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/web/online/Health-and-Fitness/Rescuing-The-Rescuer--Post-Traumatic-Stress-Disorder-/11$55203">Post Traumatic Stress Disorder</a><br />		&#149; <a href="/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=10&id=11170">Searching For A Firefighter</a><br /> 		&#149; <a href="/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=14&id=15557">Searching From a Window</a><br />		&#149; <a href="/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=13&id=54586">Search: What We're Doing Wrong</a><br />		&#149; <a href="/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=3&id=51965">TOTT: Search Camera</a><br />		&#149; <a href="/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=10&id=21300">The Ultimate Fireground Challenge</a><br /> 		&#149; <a href="/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=10&id=16057">Firefighter Rescue: A Responsibility Or Disease?</a><br />		&#149; <a href="/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=14&id=112">Firefighter Rescue & Survival</a><br />		&#149; <a href="/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=14&id=47845">Fire Behavior: Backdraft</a><br />	</div>	<br class="space8" /><b>Link to Charleston Tragedy Investigation Articles:</b><br><a href="http://cms.firehouse.com/news/specialreports/Charleston_SC_LODD_07b.jsp">Investigation into Charleston Tragedy - Firehouse.com Full Coverage</a><br /><!--						<img src="http://www.firehouse.com/homepage/images/icon_photo.gif" HSPACE="3" align="absmiddle" alt="See Photos" border="0" /><img src="http://www.firehouse.com/homepage/images/icon_video.gif" HSPACE="3" align="absmiddle" alt="See Video" border="0" />--><!--<li class="deck11"> <a href=""></a></li><li class="deck11"> <a href=""></a></li><li class="deck11"> <a href=""></a></li><li class="deck11"> <a href=""></a></li>--></ul></p></ul></p>

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   <pubDate>Fri, 29 Aug 2008 15:23:48 +0000</pubDate>
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   <title>National News : Man Found Guilty in Baltimoe Officers Slaying</title>
   <link>http://www.nvcops.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=30265&amp;PID=52203#52203</link>
   <description>
    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="http://www.nvcops.com/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=122" rel="nofollow">Cop_Bot</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> Man Found Guilty in Baltimoe Officers Slaying<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> August 29 2008 at 3:22pm<br /><br /><h1>Man Found Guilty in Baltimoe Officer's Slaying</h1>		<h2></h2>	<br class="space12" />	<div align="right">	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Posted</strong>: Friday, August 29, 2008</div>	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Updated</strong>: August 29th, 2008 02:11 PM EDT</div>	<br class="space5" />		</div>	<br class="space12" />	>					
							PT>                            					<div class="deck11"><strong>Story by <a target=_new href=http://www.wbaltv.com/>wbaltv.com</a></strong><br /><em></em></div>			<BR />			<div id="intelliTXT">													<p>  BALTIMORE   -- </p> <p> A Baltimore jury on Friday found a man guilty in the January 2007 slaying of an off-duty city police officer. </p><p> Brandon Grimes was found guilty of first-degree murder and the use of a handgun in a crime of violence in the slaying of Officer Troy Chesley Sr. </p><p> 11 News reporter David Collins said Grimes had no obvious reaction to the verdict. Grimes looked around the room, where people were sobbing in the moments before the verdict was read. </p><p> The jury deliberated for about three hours spanning Thursday afternoon and Friday morning. </p><p> The case had been postponed nine times before the trial started this week. </p><p> In closing arguments, the state pushed its point that Grimes killed Chesley with two bullets in a premeditated act, citing blood evidence, bullet casings found at the scene and the police issued bullet found inside Grimes' body.  <p> Prosecutors said Grimes was shot while he was in plain clothes and on his way home from work. </p><p> The defense told the jury that no witnesses saw Grimes pull the trigger, there was no DNA evidence -- no fingerprints or gunpowder residue found -- and said the prosecution was "twisting the situation." </p><p> Stay with WBALTV.com and WBAL-TV 11 News for updates. </p><p>Copyright 2008 by wbaltv.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.</p>												</div>	                		<BR />				<p></p>	<div cla<br><br><a href="http://www.officer.com/online/article.jsp?siteSection=1&id=42973" target="_blank">http://www.officer.com/online/article.jsp?siteSection=1&id=42973</a>]]>
   </description>
   <pubDate>Fri, 29 Aug 2008 15:22:50 +0000</pubDate>
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   <title>National News : PA Co. Gets More Police Cameras On Streets</title>
   <link>http://www.nvcops.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=30264&amp;PID=52202#52202</link>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="http://www.nvcops.com/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=122" rel="nofollow">Cop_Bot</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> PA Co. Gets More Police Cameras On Streets<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> August 29 2008 at 3:22pm<br /><br /><h1>Pennsylvania County Gets More Police Cameras On Streets</h1>		<h2></h2>	<br class="space12" />	<div align="right">	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Posted</strong>: Friday, August 29, 2008</div>	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Updated</strong>: August 29th, 2008 02:25 PM GMT-05:00</div>	<br class="space5" />		</div>	<br class="space12" />	>					
							PT>                            					<div class="deck11"><strong>Story by <a target=_new href=http://www.thepittsburghchannel.com/>thepittsburghchannel.com</a></strong><br /><em></em></div>			<BR />			<div id="intelliTXT">													<p>  PITTSBURGH   -- </p> <p> Police departments often say they'd like to put an officer on every corner -- and law enforcement in Allegheny County may have found the next best thing. </p><p> Government funding is being requested for 40 new wireless cameras to help the county expand its ThreatViewer Emergency Management Visualization System. </p><p> "We need to couple technology with the job we do, day in and day out, and this is going to afford us to do that," said Bob Full, the county's emergency services chief. </p><p> Currently, there are 64 surveillance cameras attached to buildings around Allegheny County to help fight crime. But the county doesn't have any cameras like the high-tech ones that were on display outside the downtown courthouse Friday. </p><p> Because they're wireless, the new cameras will allow police greater freedom to position them.  And while the current cameras are stuck in place, the new ones can be more easily moved and hidden from criminals. </p><p> "We want to keep them guessing, but we want them to also know that we are very much watching them in those very critical areas," said Full. </p><p> Perhaps most importantly, the new cameras have noses and ears as well as eyes. They can detect chemical changes in the air or identify the sound of gunfire, and alert 911 before anybody calls for help. </p><p> "The dispatcher can identify precisely where the gunshot has been fired and send a police car to the area," said U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa. </p><p> Police officers will be able to see video from the cameras inside their cars, so they'll know what kind of situation they're getting into before they arrive, Full said. </p><p> Funding for the cameras  is included in the 2009 Senate Justice Appropriations bill and must be approved by Congress, but Specter said it's basically a done deal. </p><p>Copyright 2008 by ThePittsburghChannel.  All rights reserved.  This material may not bepublished, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.</p>												</div>	                		<BR />				<p></p>	<div cla<br><br><a href="http://www.officer.com/online/article.jsp?siteSection=1&id=42974" target="_blank">http://www.officer.com/online/article.jsp?siteSection=1&id=42974</a>]]>
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   <pubDate>Fri, 29 Aug 2008 15:22:50 +0000</pubDate>
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