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Wednesday, December 14, 2005

Two Fires at 502 22nd Street in 12 hours

Photo courtesy of Capt. Kent McIlhany
There was two fires at the same residence in a 12 hour period. The fire is still under investigation.

From the Roanoke Fire-EMS Department:

The Roanoke Fire-EMS Department responded to a structure fire on December 14, 2005 at 502 22nd St. This residence is located on the corner of 22nd St. and Essex St.

The call was received through the 9-1-1 Center at approximately 10:37 a.m. The response of three Engines, one Ladder truck, two Medic Units, one EMS Captain, two Battalion Chiefs, three Administrative Chiefs, one Education Information Specialist, the Fire Marshal, the Assistant Fire Marshal and one Investigative Unit for a total of 28 personnel responded to the scene.

When crews arrived they found a flames coming from the upstairs of the structure. Crews began an interior attack but were instructed to evacuate the building because it had been deemed unsafe. Firefighters then set up an exterior attack to extinguish the blaze. An Investigative Unit was called to the scene to determine the cause of the fire.

The origin, estimated cause of the fire and damage estimates are still under investigation.

This was a vacant home. No one was in the building when the fire started. There were no injuries to civilians or Fire-EMS personnel.

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Photo courtesy of Capt. Kent McIlhany
The Roanoke Fire-EMS Department responded to a fire on December 13, 2005 at 502 22nd St.

The call was received through the 9-1-1 Center at approximately 11:05 p.m. and was quickly under control. The response of two Engines, one Ladder truck, one Medic Unit, one EMS Captain, one Battalion Chief and one Investigative Unit for a total of 21 personnel responded to the fire.

When crews arrived they found a fire on the side of the residence. Crews quickly extinguished the fire and began to investigate.

The fire started at the window on the side of the house and was contained to the side of the structure. The estimated cause of the fire is under investigation and preliminary damage estimates are approximately $300.

This was a vacant home. No one was in the building when the fire started. There were no injuries to civilians or Fire-EMS personnel.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

28 and 21 people on scene? Sounds impressive! How many had turnout gear on? How many got dirty? How many were sight seeing and getting in the way? How many worked there tails off? I bet the answer to the last question is the smallest!

Anonymous said...

Why two different responses to the same adress?

FireFleitz said...

Well I could speculate as to why two fires at the same address. I will say this. I do not think that it was a rekindle. As far as the amount of firefighters on scene, I would say a good number of them were working hard. But I was not there. If anyone was and wants to comment, go ahead.

Anonymous said...

Rhett you missed the point. 1/3 of the people on the scenes these days are Chiefs and Admin. We don't need the added pressures of them looking over our shoulders. Everyone knows the firefighters work hard!

FireFleitz said...

I did not miss the point, I somewhat avoided it. First of all you could be one of said over the shoulder browsers. Second, I know the problems we have, and I am but a mere puzzle piece. Only problem is, right now I am still in the box. So many of us are in that spot. We will not be used until we embrace the system. I agree though, whatever happened to letting the guys do the job. The Firefighters of Roanoke are not marionettes. If we were trusted and respected, we would be the best.

I do respect and appreciate your comments.

Anonymous said...

You are the BEST! Trust yourselves and respect each other.

Things will get better