JEFF SHIELDS and MICHAEL BROCKER
The Philadelphia Inquirer
Firefighters union leaders Monday challenged the city's timeline in the fire death of a 12-year-old boy Saturday night, and continued to assail old and new city policies that they say slowed the department's response.
Local 22 of the International Association of Fire Fighters released data from the city's National Fire Incident Response System connected to the call that came in at 6:51 p.m. Saturday.
It showed that the first responder to the fire at 137 S. 55th St. took three minutes, 42 seconds, to get there. Fire officials on Sunday had simply said the response time was "three minutes," which the union criticized as a serious understatement when seconds count.
First on the scene was a battalion chief in an SUV, who had no ability to fight the fire. Fire Commissioner Lloyd M. Ayers said the first fire company on the scene, Engine 68, arrived immediately after the chief and went to work.
Union officials, however, said members on Engine 68 said they did not arrive until at least 60 seconds after the chief, which would push the response time close to five minutes.
City data do not indicate when the first engine or ladder companies arrived. Whether such a discrepancy in time and the city's policy of "rolling brownouts" played a role in the death of the 12-year-old autistic boy is being bitterly disputed.
Ayers identified the boy as Frank Marasco. His body had not been released to his family Monday evening, as the medical examiner was still completing an autopsy. Family members could not be reached for comment Monday night.
The four-man crew of firefighters on Engine 57 normally would have responded first to a fire at that location because its station is 21/2 blocks away.
But that crew was not available when the call came in at 6:51 p.m. It was gone from 6 to 10 p.m. retrieving an ambulance and an engine at the city maintenance shop at Front Street and Hunting Park Avenue, 91/2 miles away. City policy requires a full company to travel from its station to pick up repaired apparatus.
"It's an idiotic policy, and it makes no sense," said Michael Bresnan, recording secretary for Local 22. Bresnan said light-duty officers or other personnel should be sent to retrieve equipment while the company remains in service with a backup truck.
Ayers said engine companies are sent to pick up their trucks because they have to reattach hoses and test their equipment. Fire companies also are sometimes sent to pick up repaired ambulances, to allow medic units, which receive more calls, to stay in service.
From 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday, Engine 57, at 5559 Chestnut St., was browned out as part of the city's system of rolling closures that began Aug. 2, aimed at saving $3.8 million.
Had the company been working during the day, firefighters could have been able to pick up the engine and ambulance and been in place to respond to the fire in the evening. But that still would have left a gap in coverage during the afternoon.
The effect of the brownout was to shift the time that the company was out of action, though union officials - including the national president - still blamed the brownout for the fire death.
"The members of Philadelphia Local 22 are willing to risk their lives to protect life and property in their community, but this plan compromises their ability to perform safe and effective fire and rescue services," union general president Harold A. Schaitberger wrote Monday in a letter to Mayor Nutter.
Schaitberger wrote that the 12-year-old "might still be alive if your city had not shut down the closest fire company that day."
Ayers and Everett Gillison, the city's deputy mayor for public safety, said Monday that the city's system had worked as it should, and that the department responded to the fire with an engine and two ladder companies within five minutes, in accordance with national standards. Gillison called the union's use of the boy's death to highlight their argument "abhorrent."
Gillison said the boy apparently was frightened and would not come out. "That's what caused the young man to lose his life. It had nothing to do with the way we fought the fire," Gillison said.
Union leaders said the system now lacks the backup necessary to cover for companies unavailable for any number of reasons, after closing seven companies permanently last year and three at any one time under the rolling system.
"Unfortunately, this death in West Philadelphia is just the beginning, because there's no redundancy left in the fire grid anymore, no resources to take up the slack," Local 22 president Bill Gault said in an e-mail.
Related
Boy Dies In Philadelphia Fire; Closest Engine Company Closed
Copyright 2010 Philadelphia Newspapers, LLC
All Rights Reserved
August 10, 2010