Box690 Fire Department Canteen Association

All posts tagged Box690 Fire Department Canteen Association

May 13 2014, Kitchener P1, P3, R1, Haz Mat 1, A2, and Car 23 were dispatched to 321 Courtland Ave E for an ammonia leak in the office tower. P1 arrived on-scene and reported evacuation of the building and a light odor of  ammonia in the air. Command requested police and had P3 block the road at Borden, and A2 blocked the road at Kent.

Command conferred with the plant manager and safety coordinator who reported they had just turned on the office air conditioning system at 11:25 and they smelled ammonia in the office minutes later. The in-house emergency team was paged and two members went to roof in Level 1 Haz Mat suits. They determined the system had a leak at one of the valves and the system needed to be shut down.

P2 was added to the call at this time. Firefighters set up for full haz mat operations and command ordered the manufacturing side of the building evacuated. Five hundred employees were evacuated and staged on Kent Ave. Two firefighters entered the building with two plant personnel (full Level 1 suits) to assess the area and to do a primary search of the office building. Crews confirmed the office was evacuated and there was still a leak in the system.

The system is charged from a central boiler house at the rear of the plant. There is approximately 80,000 lbs of ammonia in the system. After consultation between command and plant staff, crews reentered the building and successfully closed a valve near the AC unit. This was a very warm humid day which necessitated rotating crews. Once the leak was stopped, the next plan was to clean up the ammonia and air out the office. The office tower had 400 ppm of ammonia, and the seventh floor was considerably higher where the unit was located. This scenario played out throughout the afternoon. KFD cleared the scene at 18:00.

As an aside to the call, I work in the office. I evacuated the building as soon as I knew the leak was getting stronger, a few minutes before the building was evacuated at 11:40. I went to the parking lot and turned on my FD radio. The parking lot was down wind of the office and I could still smell ammonia. I left the area and waited to see if the plant needed KFD for assistance. Our emergency team is very well trained in dealing with ammonia leaks. The plant has five floors (over a million square feet) and minor ammonia leaks are fixed quickly in-house without having to call KFD for help. Once KFD was called I headed upwind, back to the plant to drop off a cooler with Gatorade and water that I carry in my van. I then headed to the station to pick up our truck as I knew this was going to be a long afternoon. Six hours on-scene, we served 171 drinks, 20 burgers, 20 wraps, 47 snack items, and lots of freezies.

All photos

Gary Dinkel

Box 690

fire trucks along the road

Gary Dinkel, Box 690 photo

tent for shelter at haz mat scene

Staging set up in court yard beside main entrance to building. Back up team ready to go in if needed. Gary Dinkel, Box 690 photo

firefighters decon in Level A suits

Kitchener firefighters are in the blue suits. Gary Dinkel, Box 690 photo

tent for shelter at haz mat scene

Gary Dinkel, Box 690 photo

 

June 17 15:22 Kitchener P1, P7, R1, A2, and Car 23 were dispatched for an alarm ringing and smoke in the building at 50 Charles St S. The building is a block-long, three floor, former cord manufacturing business that has been converted into small business and warehouse space. Firefighters had been to several fires in the building when it was still manufacturing twine and cord.

P1 arrived on-scene with light smoke showing. P3 was added to the call and instructed to pick up a hydrant on the Ottawa St side of the building. A supply line was pulled from P1 to a hydrant at Borden and Charles.  A2 was instructed to set up their ladder. P1 entered the building reporting light smoke on the second floor. The crew from P7 was ordered to check the roof and work their way down checking each floor. P1 firefighters searched through the building and found a fire in the ceiling. P2 was added to the call as the fourth pumper at this time.  A line was pulled from P1 and crews extinguished the fire quickly. Firefighters reported the fire had burned through the ceiling into the third floor, and that there could be extension to that floor. Crews checked the third floor and reported no extension, but moderate smoke conditions. Cause of the fire appeared to be an electrical short.

I happened to be at our hall when the call came in and responded with the truck once there was confirmation of a fire I served 52 drinks and 12 snacks.

All photos

Gary Dinkel

Box 690

fire trucks at Canada fire scene

Gary Dinkel, Box 690 photo

Pierce and KME fire trucks at Canada fire scene

Gary Dinkel, Box 690 photo

fire trucks at Canada fire scene

Gary Dinkel, Box 690 photo

Kitchener Fire Dispatch toned out a full response from Maryhill and Conestogo plus the St Jacobs tanker for a confirmed house fire at 1364 Durant Road at 12:02 pm March 3, 2014. The Maryhill pumper reported smoke showing approximately two miles from the scene. Breslau’s pumper tanker was then added to the call as the fourth.

The Maryhill pumper arrived on scene and reported a century-old building was fully involved. Two port-a-tanks were set up beside the pumper. Water was shuttled from a hydrant at the Breslau fire hall, approximately five miles from the scene.

The original front section of the home was built in 1888, and had a tin roof. The wind chill dropped the temperature to -10 F, making firefighting very difficult. Crews worked six hours to fully extinguish the fire. 

Box 690 served 100 hot drinks, eight dozen chili dogs, 40 cold drinks, and 200 snack items at the fire.

All photos

Gary Dinkel, Box 690

winter fire scene photo

This photo shows rear of building, back wall is totally burned out, car port roof has collapsed. Shot taken 45 minutes after arrival of Maryhill pumper. Gary Dinkel photo

firemen at winter fire scene in Canada

Gary Dinkel photo

fire engine drafts from portable tank at winter fire

Maryhill pumper drafting from port a tanks. Gary Dinkel photo

firemen battle winter house fire

Gary Dinkel photo

firemen with hose line at winter fire scene with wall of smoke

Gary Dinkel photo

firemen rest after battling winter house fire

Gary Dinkel photo

fire department water tanker shuttle water in the winter

Gary Dinkel photo

firemen with hose battle winter house fire

Gary Dinkel photo

house gutted by winter fire

Three hours after arrival. Gary Dinkel photo

fire department water tanker shuttle water in the winter

Gary Dinkel photo

house destroyed by fire in the winter

Gary Dinkel photo

chimney with ice after house fire

Closeup of marker showing the year 1888. Gary Dinkel photo

Kitchener dispatch received a 911 January 21 22:00 from 172 Veronica Ave reporting flames encroaching her house from next door. While trucks were en-route to the fire PC asked dispatch if they had any more calls. Dispatch replied they had only had one call. P4 reported smoke visible from half a mile from the call. An additional pumper was added as the RIT team. P4 arrived on scene reported a working fire, asked A4 to lay into them, and for P3 to also catch a second hydrant. P4 captain could not access the rear due to a six foot wooden fence.

R1 was assigned to get to the rear to complete the 360. Crews advanced a 1.5” line in the front door but backed out less than a minute later due to high heat. R1 found a resident of the house in a hot tub in the rear of the structure. The individual was treated for smoke inhalation and taken to hospital for further mental health evaluation. Firefighting was defensive until the bulk of fire could be knocked down. This was a very cold night, wind chill dropped the temperature to -22 F. Fire was knocked down in one hour, damage was pegged at $400,000. Siding was melted off 172 Veronica, but there was no extension into the house. Six of the seven Kitchener stations responded to the call rotating crews back to their stations to warm up.

The Box 690 Rehab Unit gave out lots of Hot Shot hand warmers on the night. It was so cold I took a few of the later photos through the window of the Rescue. I was handing out drinks from the rear of R1, had to keep them in the truck or they would be too cold for the guys. The back of our truck was only 56 F, couldn’t get anymore heat out of the truck. It actually felt warm in there and glasses would fog up on entry.

Gary Dinkel

 

Kitchener firemen battle house fire

Crews had just backed out of structure to go defensive.. Gary Dinkel photo

 

Kitchener firemen battle house fire

15 minutes into fire, crews have reentered house. Gary Dinkel photo

 

Kitchener firemen battle house fire

Fire vents through roof on E2 side of house. Gary Dinkel photo

 

Kitchener firemen battle house fire

Gary Dinkel photo

 

Kitchener firemen battle house fire

Gary Dinkel photo

 

New Hamburg Ontario fire department was paged out for a house fire on Waterloo St at 00:45 January 11. Volunteer firefighters responding to the hall reported the house was fully involved, with fire through the roof. New Hamburg requested Baden Fire as they pulled out of their hall.

New Hamburg responded with their pumper, quint, heavy rescue and tanker. Baden responded with two pumpers, and their heavy rescue, leaving their two tankers in the hall. New Hamburg and Baden pumpers both caught hydrants. The building was fully involved with heavy fire showing from every window and through the roof.

All fire fighting was defensive. Two deluges were set up in front of the house as well as numerous 2.5” and 1.5” lines surrounded the building. All firefighters were kept away from the collapse zone. The roof pancaked into the building within 15 minutes of arrival. Crews protected a house on the E2 side, and had to deal with a trailer that caught fire in front of the house. The house was totally destroyed. The owners of the house were in Ottawa visiting friends. The Ontario Fire Marshall has been called in to investigate the fire. Photos were taken at approximately 2 am after setting up rehab for firefighters. 

All photos by

Gary Dinkel

Box 690

 

house fire photos from New Hamburg Ontario 1-11-14

Baden pumper set up down wind of fire, pump operator was on air. Shot taken when the smoke rose for a few minutes allowing me to get a quick shot out of the smoke. Gary Dinkel photo

house fire photos from New Hamburg Ontario 1-11-14

Front of building, very foggy rainy night.. Gary Dinkel photo

house fire photos from New Hamburg Ontario 1-11-14

New Hamburg pumper. Gary Dinkel photo

house fire photos from New Hamburg Ontario 1-11-14

Gary Dinkel photo

Kitchener Ontario firefighters worked for two hours to knock this fire down in a century old house. A2 was first on scene, they were two blocks away on fire watch from a fire on Monday morning. The house was fully involved on both floors on arrival.  Initial firefighting was defensive for the first hour. Multiple 1.5″ and 2.5” lines were pulled from A2 and P3, both trucks picked up hydrants. Damage will exceed $300,000.

Gary Dinkel

Box 690

house fire in Kitchener Ontario Canada

Photo by Gary Dinkel Box 690

house fire in Kitchener Ontario Canada

Photo by Gary Dinkel Box 690

house fire in Kitchener Ontario Canada

Photo by Gary Dinkel Box 690

house fire in Kitchener Ontario Canada

Photo by Gary Dinkel Box 690

house fire in Kitchener Ontario Canada

Photo by Gary Dinkel Box 690

Gary Dinkel, with the Box 690 Rehab Unit,  submitted this story and the photos from a fire in Woolwich Township, Gloucester County, NJ Waterloo County, Ontario Canada on March 15, 2013.

March 25 2013, 6:20 pm, Conestogo (full response), Maryhill (full response) and St Jacobs tanker were dispatched to a possible structure fire at 1626 Cox Creek Rd. Residents reported boiling maple syrup on a wood stove had started a small fire in the work shop. The work shop was attached to barn, which was attached to a driving shed, and second barn.

A captain from Conestogo arrived on scene in his personal vehicle and reported fire in the roof of the shop. By the time the first Conestogo and Maryhill units arrived, the work shop and first barn were well involved. A creek ran beside the property. Initially crews shuttled water up the 1,000-foot driveway to the farm.

barn fire in Woolwich Township NJ

The fire started in the shed in the foreground of ,this picture and spread to the other buildings and cars.
Gary Dinkel photo

As the fire extended through the driving shed, Conestogo District Chief Arnie Gingrich requested the balance of St Jacobs to the scene, and for crews to establish a relay pump from the creek. One thousand feet of 4” line was reverse laid from Conestogo’s pumper to the bottom of the laneway where Maryhill’s pumper was set up.

heavy fire from building in winter

Firefighters are waiting for water.Gary Dinkel photo

Initially, tankers shuttled water from the creek 500 feet up the road to Maryhill pumper’s port-a-tank until a 4” line could be set up from the creek. Numerous old vehicles stored around the barns caught fire. The second barn flashed over 20 minutes later. Two 2.5” and four 1.5” lines were pulled around the burning structures. The lines were used to knock down the vehicle fires, and then to work on the burning buildings.

Barn fire in Woolwich Township NJ

Gary Dinkel photo

Barn fire in Woolwich Township NJ

Gary Dinkel photo

The fire burned for hours before being brought under control. Conestogo released St Jacobs at 11:00PM and Maryhill just before midnight. A high hoe arrived on-scene around 10:15 and was used to pull the vehicles and structures apart to get to hot spots. Conestogo cleared the scene at 2:30 am. Initial damage was pegged at $300,000, but will likely be much more.

Three (Box 690) members remained on the scene with the truck for five hours. They served 139 hot and cold drinks, 48 hot dogs, 12 soups, and 316 snack items.