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Come to the site to find this old post at the top of the discussion forums. Well, after 4 years, a bump reply is due.
In August of 2006, I was a member of our RIT team for a MAYDAY, and unfortunately, a LODD. Our protocol is the third engine at a fire is the RIT team. At the time of this fire, the dept was transitioning to MDTs in the rigs and phasing out the paper printouts. (you knew you were going on a call if you heard the printer before you heard the tones)
The tones dropped for a structure fire and 2 engines were dispatched, not the 3. I was at the station with the Battalion Chief, and hence the only reason we knew there was a fire. The address was actually on the third in border between our engine and the next third due. There was a mixed crew that day so there was some confusion who was going. I went to get a radio to listen, no printout, but checked the MDT and the status said DISPATCHED........this was the only way we knew and we were a bit late getting out of the station.
We got on scene and protocol is to deploy RIT equipment closest to the entry. We no sonner just set down the equipment went a backdraft occurred and MAYDAY was called. As RIT we reported to the IC and were deployed. I would say the IC was "prepared" to handle the incident, but there were many lessons learned afterwards. We stayed on the same radio channel and eventually the rest of the crews switched to another channel, keeping the MAYDAY on the original channel.
Some hurdles were the main entry route was fire filled and making entry there was not an option. A service door was used and stairs to the basement were located through the garage. The two FFs calling the MAYDAY fell to the basement after a floor collapse.....one was able to get out....the other fell into a room with no windows and the only door was now blocked by fire and floor debris. Several attempts were made to extinguish the fire, but to no avail. Wall breach was attempted several times, only to keep hitting stone or concrete. There was a small stud wall space that wasn't located to be breached prior to crews being pulled due to sagging floor joists and deteriorating conditions.
John, I was as surprised as you were in seeing an older post revisited by the webmaster. 4 years have passed and we all have more experiences to share. Thank you for sharing your unfortunate incident, I am sure you and the other brothers made every attempt possible to save your brother. Many things can be learned from all pretty much all incidents. With RIT deployment being few and far between, the first thing that I thought about was the importance of sizing up the building so the RIT or RIC knows alternative or more direct routes to as many areas of the building possible instead of just focusing on the primary access point. Knowing where they are and pre-knowledge of whether they are locked before RIT deployment can be critical when time is sensitive. Thanks for sharing. Godbless
Well said, Bill.
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