a basic google search will give you over 30 hits with photos and video's. Happy hunting. Pretty impressive fire, hell of a crater where the roof collapsed.
Permalink Reply by Doug on March 31, 2008 at 12:22am
I don't get it though.... I have reviewed as many pictures and videos as I believe I possibly can at this point, and I don't see why this went to 9 alarms. 9 ALARMS! Is there something I'm missing? Or is it a "safety" factor that it went to so many alarms, because of the type of construction in that area of Ocean City, to prevent it from being a conflagration?
I'm sure someone local may reply ...but protecting the significant number of wood frame exposures probably had something to do with it ... not to mention the structure of what units, staffing, etc. including per alarm may vary from where you are. Or just visit the OCVFD web site and ask them ... http://www.ocvfc.com/gallery.cfm?id=105&pos=1
OCVFC's web site has a unit rundown...but hard to tell what is on scene vs. transfer ... definitely any big fire in OC requires a lot of mutual aid ... I think the city itself only has 6-8 engines in service and a few special services
from what I see on the run down it looks like there was 28 engines 11 trucks and 5 or 6 squads. that seem like a lot, and I am a maryland firefighter, but closer to DC. staffing for us is pretty short, but Im wondering about there staffing on the engines, because there doesn't seem like a lot is going on in the last video, just some master streams and blitz fires. But I not sure.
I'm guessing they had all the manpower they could muster on the scene due to the fact that everything in that area is very old and mostly all wooden structures. Probably wouldn't have taken much for them to lose a big chunk of the boardwalk to fire.