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Never Forget, Honor and Learn

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This marks the 6th anniversary of the Black Sunday fire in New York City. Two brothers, Lt. Curtis Meyran and Lt. John Bellew. Four other firefighters were severely injured after jumping out of the fourth floor of an apartment building, Firefighters Jeff Cool, Lt. Joe DiBernardo, Firefighter Eugene Stolowski and Firefighter Brendan Cawley to escape severe fire conditions.

The Story.

These men’s families and own lives have been forever changed and we need to honor their sacrifices and learn from the events that happen at that fire. This fire could happen to any of us. Train hard, honor the fallen and remember the lives and families left behind.

Stay safe and train hard.

Bailout Anchoring Techniques

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Here is another video from our friend Dale Pekel. In this video he shows some techniques to anchor for a bailout. You may not agree with all of these methods, but it is good information.

I recommend trying these and modifying them as you play around with them. There is nothing like practicing and trying new methods when it comes to firefighter operations and drills.

As always, stay safe and be careful.

Personal Harness H.O.T. Class from FDIC 2010

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This was the afternoon class that I took on Monday at FDIC 2010.  The class was led by Dan DiRenzo and his crew form Safety and Survival Training. They did a great job and the class kept moving; no standing around and waiting.

Lowering from a 5th story roof.

Lowering from a 5th story roof.

My evolution started on the roof which was five stories tall.

We used the harness to lower a firefighter to the ground.  In the lowering process, only the harnesses were used (other than the safety line) which showed the versatility of our harnesses.

The method for wrapping the hook on our harnesses is  simple, effective and should be easy to use in limited visibility atmospheres.  This method was also used for the bailout evolution.

We bailed out of a second story window using our harnesses.

We bailed out of a second story window using our harnesses.

The bailout evolution was by far the funnest part of the day.  There were three opportunities to bailout and I think everyone took advantage of that.

Although this was not a bailout class, this evolution showed how to perform it and what to carry to have the capability.  No specific brand was pushed, just the tools needed.

There were some vendors on site to allow you to use their harness and bailout system if needed.  Again, the bailout was used with no special hardware, just the anchor point and your harness. Yes, safety lines were used throughout.

More bailout pics.

More bailout pics.

The next evolution was the downed firefighter removal station.  This was a very informative and versatile evolution.

We were shown how to use our hooks and harness and that of the downed firefighter to remove a downed firefighter.

It allowed us to use webbing and two-man removal methods that made the rescuing of a downed firefighter a little easier.  It allows us to use our center of gravity and legs to drag a firefighter out without pulling his air pack off and without hurting ourselves in the process.

Using the harness to drag a downed firefighter.

Using the harness to drag a downed firefighter.

The toughest part of the drag evolution was the removal up a stairwell. This was physically demanding even with the methods learned.

I would recommend this class to anyone that has just recently obtained personal harnesses or for those that want to utilize them to their fullest.

Stay safe and I will have some more in the coming days from the RIT Combat Drills that just about did me in.

Take care and train hard.