Escaping a ‘life-threatening’ situation

Situations do not always go as planned. “When things go badly, we have to be very, very good,” said Spring Fire B-shift District Chief Chris vonWiesenthal. “When you’re a firefighter and must self-rescue from a second floor or higher, you have to do so in a survivable way.”

A soldier in desert camouflage gear holds a Claymore mine marked "Front Toward Enemy" while sitting on sandy, rocky terrain.To make that self-rescue possible, all Spring firefighters are equipped with a special “bailout” system. This system is only used when there is no other safe alternative to escape the burning structure. A black car with a deployed airbag has crashed head-on into a large red emergency vehicle at night on a highway, with visible front-end damage to the car.To make that self-rescue possible, all Spring firefighters are equipped with a special “bailout” system. This system is only used when there is no other safe alternative to escape the burning structure. A circular hole in a wooden surface is surrounded by a metal grid; industrial equipment and a person in high-visibility clothing are visible through the opening.The rope is threaded through a descending device that is also attached to a harness worn under all Spring firefighters’ Personal Protective Equipment (PPE). That descending device allows a firefighter to self-lower at a controlled descent rate very similar to rappelling. A firefighter in full gear stands next to a black helmet stored inside a metal mesh locker.Recently, B-shift crews from Spring Ladder 75 and Engines 74 & 77 trained (utilizing a red fall-protection rope) in high heat conditions for several hours until they could not get it wrong. Firefighters in full gear spray water onto a burning vehicle during a daytime emergency response.“We hope to never have to use it; but we’d rather have it and not need it, than need it and not have it,” said Chief vonWiesenthal. “Even the best bailout system does a firefighter no good if they don’t have the necessary training to use it quickly and efficiently.” A firefighter in full gear kneels on the pavement, working with equipment and a blue hose during daylight.“There is no compromise when your life hangs on a line,” concluded vonWiesenthal.

Photos courtesy of Captains Wade Lawrence, Shannon Stryk and Noel Webber.

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