2/1/24 Brooklyn 10-75 Box 1442

Joined
Jan 20, 2014
Messages
17,017
Fire Location: 852 4th Ave

Fire on the 2nd floor of a mixed occupancy

B-40 we have (2) 10-45s No Codes. Put a rush on the bus

E-228,201,279,239
L-114,131,122(Fast)
B-40,48
R-2
Sq-1
D-11
Rac-5
 
Last edited:
Joined
Mar 9, 2023
Messages
2,487
Phone Alarm Reporting Fire In A Private Dwelling.

BK/E228-TL114: Reported To Be On The 2nd Floor.

B40: 10-75 The Box, Fire On The 2nd Floor 3-Story Mixed Occupancy. Using All Hands On Arrival.

BK/B40: L122 Is Designated Your FAST Truck & Medical Branch Resources Are Responding.

B40: 3-Story 20x60 Class 3 Mixed Occupancy. 2 L/S, 1 L/O. Searches Are In Progress, DWH. (Duration 6 Min)

Exposures:
1: Street
2: Similar
3: Rearyard
4: 4-Story Mixed Occupancy

B40: (2) 10-45's No Code, Put A Rush On The Bus. Water On The Fire. (Duration 9 Min)

B40: All Visible Fire Has Been Knocked Down, Primary Searches Are Still In Progress. (2) Additional 10-45's No Code Taken Out The Rear. (Duration 11 Min)

B40: Primary Searches On The 2nd & 3rd Floor Are Complete & Negative, PWH. (Duration 13 Min)

D11: Primary Searches Throughout Are Complete & Negative, (2) 10-45's Are Code 4 & The Other (2) Are Still Being Evaluated. (Duration 20 Min)

D11: Secondary Searches Throughout Are Complete & Negative, Under Control. (Duration 24 Min)

D11: The Other (2) 10-45's Are Also Code 4. (Duration 28 Min)

Relocations:
TL119 act. TL131
E281 act. E279
E243 act. E201
E205 act. E239

E-228,201,220,239
L-114,131,122(Fast)
B-40,48
R-2
Sq-1
D-11
Rac-5
228, 201, 279, 239
 
Joined
Sep 8, 2013
Messages
735
I've always wondered if, when an ambulance happens upon a fire first, the ambulance crew says "Put a rush on fire", and if so, does fire get there any quicker?
 
Joined
Jun 15, 2012
Messages
3,838
Years Ago, when EMS was still under NYC Health & Hospitals -
PD & FD were Requesting 'Rush' so Often. ( occasionally resulting in Ambulance MVA).
NYC H&H EMS Stopped Transmitting 'Requested Rush' & instead Required PD/FD to provide Pt. Condition
Update which was then Transmitted to Responding EMS Unit, but the Term "Rush" was dropped from
EMS Vocabulary.

In This Fire, 'Rush' was Requested for *CODE 4 - 'Non-Serious / Ambulatory' Pt.s
 
Last edited:
Joined
Feb 27, 2015
Messages
1,480
Years Ago, when EMS was still under NYC Health & Hospitals -
PD & FD were Requesting 'Rush' so Often. ( occasionally resulting in Ambulance MVA).
NYC H&H EMS Stopped Transmitting 'Requested Rush' & instead Required PD/FD to provide Pt. Condition
Update which was then Transmitted to Responding EMS Unit, but the Term "Rush" was dropped from
EMS Vocabulary.

In This Fire, 'Rush' was Requested for *CODE 4 - 'Non-Serious / Ambulatory' Pt.s
EMS still sees when PD requests a rush
 
Joined
Jun 15, 2012
Messages
3,838
EMS still sees when PD requests a rush
Ah, yes. I was Posting about Pre-MDT Days.

When MDT's were First being deployed to H&H EMS Rigs they were called 'MODAT's.
(Mobil Data Terminal).
By the time FDNY assumed EMS, the Term MDT was used.
 
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