Let me begin by saying, “But for the grace of God, go I.”
I was a volunteer firefighter for years and a career fire dispatcher. From my experience, I can confidently state that what occurred in Baltimore could occur in any other fire department in the nation. How often I (we) lucked out when things weren’t going right that none of us were seriously injured or killed! May the brothers and sister Rest In Peace.
I think what amazes me the most is how fast this whole thing occurred. From the time of dispatch, to time units were responding, to time numerous units got on location, to time hose lines were stretched to time of collapse was approximately 7 to 8 minutes, 10 minutes tops! I understand this is a city department and stations are closer together and travel times are less, but still, this happened so fast. In my experience (non-city dispatching or firefighting) it may take a full 8 or 9 minutes before one unit with 3 personnel arrive on the scene! It may be 12 minutes before a dozen personnel are on the scene, which obviously slows down the speed of rescue and fire attack.
Firefighting has never been and never will be easy or an exact science. We do the best we can and we try to learn from our mistakes. Hug your family each and every time before you go to work, because life could change in seconds! Stay safe.