
the staff of the Ridgewood blog
Continue reading Ridgewood Fire: The plow is on the pickup truck!
the staff of the Ridgewood blog
Continue reading Ridgewood Fire: The plow is on the pickup truck!
photos courtesy of Ramsey NJ Fire Department
the staff of the Ridgewood blog
Ramsey NJ, in the early hours of the morning of December 16th, around 12:15 AM, the Ramsey NJ Fire Department swiftly responded to a fire alarm at an apartment complex within the borough.
Continue reading Ramsey Fire Department Responds to Overnight Apartment Fire
the staff of the Ridgewood blog
Teaneck NJ, Monday was a busy day for Teaneck Fire Department 3rd platoon. In a Facebook post the department recounted : “The day included two fires, medical calls, wires down, activated alarms, carbon monoxide and gas leaks, among other service calls. As always we thank our mutual aid partners for always being ready to assist in a moments notice.”
Continue reading Spotlight on First Responders: Teaneck Fire Department
the staff of the Ridgewood blog
Cresskill NJ, some good advice from the Cresskill Fire Department, is Your House Number Visible and Displayed Correctly????
Think of this scenario, there’s an emergency at your house. You dial 911 and speak to the dispatcher. However, it seems like it’s taking a long time for help to arrive.
Meanwhile, Fire and police have arrived on your street but they’re having problems finding your house.The house doesn’t have any easily identifiable numbers on it and the mailbox is blocked by trees
Continue reading House Number Visible and Displayed Correctly????file photo by Boyd Loving
by New Jersey Fire Sprinkler Advisory Board (NJFSAB)
Ridgewood NJ, Fatal fires in high-rise buildings continue to demonstrate the dangers associated with failing to install fire sprinkler systems. These buildings present unique challenges to fire departments and pose a serious danger to their occupants if fire sprinkler systems are not in place.
Continue reading New Jersey high-rises aren’t as fire safe as you think
file photo by Boyd Loving
SEPTEMBER 18, 2015, 11:34 PM LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 2015, 11:36 PM
BY LINH TAT
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD
For months after a five-alarm fire ripped through a massive apartment complex in Edgewater and left a pile of debris in its wake, residents, firefighters and lawmakers called for changes to state regulations that dictate building standards and requirements, in hopes of improving fire safety.
Many provided input to the New Jersey Department of Community Affairs, which happened to be in the midst of updating the state Uniform Construction Code, a process that takes place every three years.
On Monday, the newly revised code will take effect. But absent are the changes that so many had been pushing for after the Avalon at Edgewater fire.
Stephen Sweeney on school safety: ‘Sprinklers should be in all our schools’
EDISON – Most New Jersey schools were built before the law required that they have sprinkler systems to put out fires.
And there’s no law on the books that requires local districts to retrofit their campuses.
On a tour of temporary classrooms housing studentsof a school that burned down earlier this year, Senate President Stephen Sweeney said today that that needs to change. Sweeney said he was open to legislation to address the matter.
“Sprinklers should be in our schools, in all of them,” Sweeney said today at James Monroe Elementary School’s temporary location on the Middlesex County College campus. “You can retrofit schools to put sprinklers in them.”
The New Jersey Schools Development Authority hasn’t done a good enough job keeping up with modern technology, Sweeney said. And with Gov. Chris Christie proposing a longer school year, there are a number of upgrades that schools need, including air conditioning on sweltering summer days, Sweeney said.
But the most important thing is safety, Sweeney said, standing in a school corridor as a class of youngsters passed. (Amaral/Star-Ledger)
file photo Boyd Loving
Reader says The Ridgewood Fire Department provides the most cost effective Fire Service by having a career staff backed up by a volunteer staff.
Having an part paid and part volunteer (called combination Department) the Ridgewood Fire Department is hardly a luxury. There are 3 communities in Bergen County, including Ridgewood, that have a combination department. The Ridgewood Fire Department provides the most cost effective Fire Service by having a career staff backed up by a volunteer staff.
Because the Ridgewood Fire Dept. has career Fire Inspectors the Village has always had a very low incidence of fires, usually less than 3% of the total incident calls between 2010-2012.
For the 35% of the calls that involve life saving rescues or emergency medical calls, where time is the difference between life and death, the career staff has an average response time of 2 to 4 minutes. A volunteer only staff would take 3 to 4 minutes just to respond to the Fire Station and then take another 4 to 5 minutes to reach the person in need of immediate care. A total of 8 minutes or more is not acceptable in fire or medical situations.
The operating cost is not only reasonable for the Fire Dept. but for most residents the cost for Fire Service is a deductible item on their Income Tax Return (property taxes) at the same rate that their tax rate is for their Federal 1040, which reduces the cost of the service by up to 35%, while at the same time the Fire Dept career and volunteer staffing provides an ISO rating of 2 which is responsible for the low fire insurance rates residents and commercial property owners enjoy.
Someone said “But the operating budget ignores the long-term cost for new equipment & buildings…..” This is just one example of how uninformed this person is, the cost for buildings, training, Firefighter protective gear, injury insurance, fuel, Apparatus and uniforms, to name just a few things, are all part of any department career or volunteer.
The same person talks about a very generous defined benefit pension & healthcare benefits for life for police and firefighters. The same could be said about the employees of the BOE, yet this individual has yet to examine the 90 Million dollar BOE budget the same way they focus on the 5 Million Fire Dept. Budget which makes me wonder……