1/23/2023 Brooklyn 2nd Alarm Box 0335

Joined
Oct 17, 2013
Messages
5,974
Address: 265 Penn Street - between Harrison and Marcy Avenue

Fire on the 2nd floor of a 4 story 25x40 MD.

Box loaded up due to calls and reports of people trapped.

0640 - Bn. 35 - 10-75 the box. We have a pretty good smoke condition.

H&L-104 FAST

0642 - Bn. 35 - Extra Engine and Truck (E-230, L-102). All Hands.

0649 - Bn. 35 - 2nd Alarm.

0658 - Bn. 31 - We have fire on the 2nd floor of a 4 story MD. 2 L/S/O. Searches in progress.

0659 - Div. 11 - We have (3) 10-45 no codes.

0700 - Div. 11 - We have a total of (4) 10-45 no codes.

0705 - Div. 11 - 3 L/S, 2 L/O. Primaries are negative. Trucks are opening up. We have a total of (8) 10-45 no codes.

0713 - FC - We have a total of (11) 10-45's, (1) is code 2, 10 are no code's at this time.

0715 - FC - Primaries and secondaries are negative throughout. PWH - Duration 37 minutes.

0736 - FC - We have (16) 10-45 code 4's and (1) 10-45 code 2. Total of (17) 10-45's.

0744 - FC - Under Control - Duration 1 hour 6 minutes.

Maybe:
E-216, 211, 237, 221, 230 s/c
L-108, 119, 104F, 102 s/c
B-35, 31
S-1
R-2
D-11
RAC-4

2nd Alarm Maybe:
E-210, 217, 235
L-146
B-57 FF, 37 RUL, 28 Safety
SB, RB, FC, Tac 1, RAC Mgr.
E-207 w/ Sat. 6
Car 2H
Car 10
Car 23D

Relocators:
E-225 act. E-217
TL-120 act. TL-119
L-113 act. L-102
H&L-101 act. H&L-104
TL-114 act. TL-146
 
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“At approximately 6:38 a.m. this morning, we got a call for a fire at 265 Penn Street. Units responded in three to three and a half minutes and found heavy fire on the first floor extending to the second floor. We had over 100 Firefighters respond to this fire and it became a 2nd alarm. Firefighters removed 17 victims from this fire building while the fire was still active, one of those victims being critical. The units had to stretch multiple hose lines to put the fire out. This was a very arduous process. Many people were taken out of the building via the interior and others were taken out via portable ladders and tower ladders,” said FDNY Deputy Assistant Chief John Sarrocco from the scene of this morning’s 2-qalarm fire at 265 Penn Street in Brooklyn.

FDNY Deputy Assistant Chief Fred Villani said, “We were met with a large number of patients early on and almost all at the same time. Once they were rescued by the Firefighters, EMS personnel on the scene had to make rapid decisions on the severity of injuries. One of the patients was critical and was immediately transported to the hospital by Hatzalah volunteers. We were lucky in that we are about half a block away from one of Hatzalah’s quarters, so we had plenty of help at the outset. FDNY EMTs and Paramedics as well as Hatzalah volunteers triaged the rest of the patients. In total we had 16 stable non-critical patients, and one critical patient."


Car-10 (Bronx Borough Commander DAC John Sarocco)

Car- 5E ( EMS Chief Of Planning DAC Frederick Villani)
 
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“At approximately 6:38 a.m. this morning, we got a call for a fire at 265 Penn Street. Units responded in three to three and a half minutes and found heavy fire on the first floor extending to the second floor. We had over 100 Firefighters respond to this fire and it became a 2nd alarm. Firefighters removed 17 victims from this fire building while the fire was still active, one of those victims being critical. The units had to stretch multiple hose lines to put the fire out. This was a very arduous process. Many people were taken out of the building via the interior and others were taken out via portable ladders and tower ladders,” said FDNY Deputy Assistant Chief John Sarrocco from the scene of this morning’s 2-qalarm fire at 265 Penn Street in Brooklyn.

FDNY Deputy Assistant Chief Fred Villani said, “We were met with a large number of patients early on and almost all at the same time. Once they were rescued by the Firefighters, EMS personnel on the scene had to make rapid decisions on the severity of injuries. One of the patients was critical and was immediately transported to the hospital by Hatzalah volunteers. We were lucky in that we are about half a block away from one of Hatzalah’s quarters, so we had plenty of help at the outset. FDNY EMTs and Paramedics as well as Hatzalah volunteers triaged the rest of the patients. In total we had 16 stable non-critical patients, and one critical patient."


Car-10 (Bronx Borough Commander DAC John Sarocco)

Car-4H ( Chief Of Planning DAC Frederick Villani)

Frederick Villani is not Car-4H 4H is for Fire He is EMS so it would be a 5 series car. I can tell you its not 5H
Unless it has changed since my last list
 
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