California Fire News - Updates in your mail box
California Fire News - Updates in your mail box |
LAFD Blog article: You Got a Radio Scanner... Now What Posted: 28 Jan 2009 06:54 PM PST You Got a Radio Scanner... Now What?Scanning monitor radios, often referred to as "Police Scanners" or "Scanner Radios" were popular gifts this holiday season. Received with warmth and a sense of awe on Christmas morning, many have sat quietly since, awaiting the often intimidating process of being programmed. Submitted by Brian Humphrey, Spokesman Source: Los Angeles Fire Department Blog | |||||||||||||||||
LAFD - Structure fire - Police stop firefighters - 1 fatality Posted: 28 Jan 2009 07:25 PM PST *Fatal Structure Fire* Update: Stop the presses! - Wash, Rinse, Repeat - New Spin! - Editor: First reports were Police blocked firefighters from interior attack due to unarmed upset male? Now the new version: Bedroom fire with man alive inside was too dangerous to fight! Aggressive interior attack not possible says chief... Firefighters tried to control fire with outside defensive streams while a person was inside? Did the police FUBAR this thing! Can police stop a firefighter from legally doing his job? Editor willing to bet LAFD could of contained fire to bedroom within fifteen minutes and kept victim alive with an aggressive interior attack if cops had not been there. The latest story according to Battalion Chief Greg Reynar the Fire was fought defensively from the outside "because the blaze quickly spread to the home's attic, creating dangerous firefighting conditions inside, Los Angeles Fire Department Battalion Chief Greg Reynar told Newsreel." While half my guys were wrestling with the cops.... Hours later Firefighters discovered the deceased human in the bedroom, Ruiz said. His name was not immediately released. Duh... The fire caused significant damage to the home, and some damage to a home next door. Due to the bedroom fire being to dangerous to aggressively attack... Location: 10987 W. Luddington St.; MAP 503-A7; FS 77; Initial Sizeup: Garage fully involved w/ SFD exposure. No rpts of inj @ this time.; Comms: Ch:8,17 LAFD ALERT UPDATE: Jan 27, 9:23 pm *Structure Fire* 18907 W. Knapp St.; MAP 500-H7; FS 70; Fire showing in 1 room of 1 story SFD. NFD.; Ch:8,12 @ -d'Lisa Davies### LAFD ALERT UPDATE: Jan 27 2009 9:49 pm *UPDATE: 18907 W. Knapp St.* 33 Firefighters knocked down fire in 34 minutes. 1 fatality. NFD. - d'Lisa Davies### LAFD Alerts link
Source: MyfoxLA - Link Man enraged at wife sets home on fire, kills self Posted: 01/28/2009 06:24:10 AM PST Updated: 01/28/2009 06:26:26 AM PST NORTHRIDGE - A 64-year-old man who had been fighting with his wife apparently set their Northridge home ablaze, killing himself and causing damage to the house and an adjacent residence, authorities said today. Police responded to a call of a family dispute about 9 p.m. Tuesday at 18907 W. Knapp St., where a woman told police that her husband was threatening to harm her, Capt. Steven Ruiz of the Los Angeles Police Department told a Newsreel camera crew. After police arrived at the scene, the woman exited the home safely while her husband remained inside, police said. Moments later flames broke out inside the residence, prompting officers to enter the home, here they discovered a fire inside one of the bedrooms, Ruiz said. Arriving fire crews fought the fire defensively -- from the exterior -- because the blaze quickly spread to the home's attic, creating dangerous firefighting conditions inside, Los Angeles Fire Department Battalion Chief Greg Reynar told Newsreel. The fire was knocked down by 33 firefighters in roughly 35 minutes, said LAFD spokeswoman d'Lisa Davies. Firefighters discovered the deceased man in the bedroom, Ruiz said. His name was not immediately released. 911 calls to the LAPD indicated that the fire had been set by a suicidal man, LAPD Officer Karen Smith said late Tuesday, adding that this information was not immediately confirmed. The fire caused significant damage to the home, and some damage to a home next door, | |||||||||||||||||
Earthquake 3.4 M - South of San Diego, Baja California, Mexico Posted: 28 Jan 2009 06:21 PM PST
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Aircraft down with fire: Santa Monica Airport - Crash kills two Posted: 28 Jan 2009 06:17 PM PST | |||||||||||||||||
Budget : Governor warns of layoffs if Unions don't play along Posted: 28 Jan 2009 06:08 PM PST Schwarzenegger warns of layoffs if unions reject furloughs By Kevin Yamamura kyamamura@sacbee.com Published: Wednesday, Jan. 28, 2009 Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger warned Wednesday that if public employee unions don't accept twice-monthly furloughs, he will lay off state workers to reduce salary costs by more than a billion dollars. The Republican governor signed an executive order last month requiring 238,000 state workers to take two unpaid days off each month starting in February. His order also mandated that the state send warning letters to state workers with the least seniority notifying them that their jobs were threatened. Labor unions are fighting the governor's furlough order in Sacramento Superior Court, where a judge is expected to rule this week whether Schwarzenegger's plan is constitutional. The governor said that if he loses the case, he will pursue layoffs instead. "To me, labor has the choice, and I made this very clear: They can help us make the decision in how we can save the ($1.3 billion)," Schwarzenegger said at the Sacramento Press Club. "So our recommendation was furloughs, where everyone takes a haircut rather than laying people off. That's the last thing I want to do, is lay people off. So it's their decision." "The fact of the matter is in the end I have the authority, if they don't go along with the furlough, to lay people off so we have a savings of ($1.3 billion)," he added. Source: Sacbee - Link | |||||||||||||||||
Wildfire News: MAFFS 2s coming online Posted: 28 Jan 2009 05:02 PM PST
The next time a wildfire breaks out in Southern California, local firefighters will have some new tools at their disposal. The U.S. Forest Service last week picked up two new Modular Airborne Fire Fighting Systems, known as MAFFS 2s, which will be used by the local Air National Guard. After a four-day training session this week in Port Hueneme, Air National Guard pilots will be able to drop vastly increased amounts of fire retardant more quickly and accurately from their cargo planes when firefighters call for assistance, officials said. In development since 2000, a prototype model of the new system was used in firefighting missions around California this summer. Forest Service officials picked up two of the final models Friday and used them during this week's training session with the Channel Islands Air National Guard, said Lynn Ballard, a spokesman for the Forest Service. Six more units are expected to be ready for the agencies' annual firefighting training in May. The MAFFS 2 units are essentially removable fire-retardant cartridges for the Air National Guard's newest C-130 cargo planes. Designed to roll into and out of the planes, the units include tanks that can hold up to 3,000 gallons of retardant and air compressors to spray it out of large nozzles on the planes' sides known as "pimples," Ballard said. Air National Guard crews are spending much of this week training with the new units so they are available as soon as possible, said Air Force Lt. Col. Bill Willson. "The state needs organic firefighting assets immediately. We couldn't really responsibly wait," Willson said. "We'll be ready on Friday." The training exercises, expected to run through Thursday, include about 120 people from agencies including the National Guard, Forest Service, California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, the Los Angeles and Kern County fire departments and Aero Union Corp., manufacturer of the firefighting units. Air National Guard pilots have extensive firefighting experience, Willson said. Since 1974, National Guard and Air Force Reserve pilots have flown 6,500 firefighting missions, dropping 167 million pounds of fire retardant around the western United States, officials said. The Channel Islands Air National Guard Station lost its old MAFFS in September 2006, when it switched to a new model of C-130 incompatible with the old system, Ballard said. The Air National Guard faced criticism in 2007 after its C-130s were among firefighting aircraft that remained grounded during the early hours of a disastrous series of wildfires in California. The new firefighting units have a number of advantages over their predecessors, officials said. For example, the built-in air compressors make the MAFFS 2 much more versatile, officials said. They allow the plane to refill at airports that don't have special compressors on the ground. The compressors can take up to 35 minutes to recharge, but that beats hours of commuting to and from a military base, Ballard said. The pimple feature allows a plane to spray a dense stream of retardant onto fires, which works better in heavy timber, Ballard said. The new system also allows pilots to control the amount of retardant they spray, instead of dropping it all at once, Willson said. "With the new airplane and the new system integrated into it, it makes flying the airplane safer, more efficient and quicker to combat forest fires," he said. Source: Ventura countystar.com - Link | |||||||||||||||||
Charges filed in LA Homeless arson murder Posted: 28 Jan 2009 09:54 AM PST Man charged with murder in homeless burning LOS ANGELES (AP) -- A former barber was charged Monday with burning a homeless man to death on a street corner near where the barber worked. Benjamin Martin, 30, was charged with murder, torture and two arson-related charges. He could be sentenced to death if the court finds true special circumstance allegations of murder by torture and lying in wait. Deputy District Attorney Renee Rose said prosecutors will not decide whether to seek the death penalty until the case moves closer to trial. Prosecutors said Martin used a road flare Oct. 9 to set John McGraham, 55, on fire after pouring gasoline on him from a red plastic gasoline can that he left behind. He was arrested last week. Police said eyewitnesses and DNA collected at the scene connect Martin to the crime. McGraham had lived on the street in the same neighborhood for years. His family said he suffered from depression and refused to leave the streets. Martin is scheduled to be arraigned Feb. 9. He remains jailed without bail. Source: OC register - Link | |||||||||||||||||
VCFD, USFS - Ventura County Controlled Burns Posted: 28 Jan 2009 09:48 AM PST Who: Ventura County Fire Department along with the U.S. Forest Service, will be conducting two different controlled vegetation burns. Location: Upper Ojai Valley/Sisar Road area and in Simi Valley near the Regan Library. When: Wednesday morning and last only for a matter of hours. Smoke: Each burn site will be closely monitored by fire personnel and the public should not be alarmed if smoke is seen in the burn areas. |
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