Men Seriously Burned at Los Angeles Upholstery Firm

Thursday, April 20, 2006 |

On Thursday, April 20, 2006 at 8:31 AM, four Companies of Los Angeles Firefighters, two LAFD Rescue Ambulances, one Heavy Rescue, three Arson Units, one EMS Battalion Captain and one Battalion Chief Officer Command Team under the direction of Battalion Chief John Biggs responded to a Vehicle Fire with Civilian Burn Injuries at 512 West Rosecrans Avenue in the City's Harbor Gateway area near Gardena.

Firefighters responded quickly to initial reports of a bus fire with at least one person trapped. Arriving in an alley to the rear of a commercial upholstery firm, Firefighters learned that two workers had escaped a full-sized privately-owned charter bus that was well involved with fire.

The first arriving Paramedic staffed Engine Company prevented the fire from extending to the nearby buildings and an adjacent oil well as their crew were soon joined by others in promptly caring for the two seriously burned men.

The fire was confined to the bus and extinguished in less than ten minutes without Firefighter injury.

Burned prior to the Fire Department's arrival were a 42 year-old male with second- and third-degree burns to more than 60% of his body, including circumferential head, arm, and hand injuries as well as full back, calf and ankle burns. In critical condition, he was taken to the Torrance Memorial Medical Center, which hosts a specialized Burn Unit.

His 37 year-old colleague sustained second- and third-degree burns to more than 12% of his body, including his head, face, neck and arms. He was transported to the Harbor-UCLA Medical Center in serious condition.

According to witnesses, the men were dealing with adhesives during renovation of the bus, and may have intermittently used a hand-held propane torch and solvents.

The value of the bus, which was destroyed by the blaze, is still being tabulated. The incident remains under active investigation by Fire Department and Cal-OSHA officials.

Submitted by Brian Humphrey, Spokesman
Los Angeles Fire Department

10 comments:

BionicBuddha said...

Thanks for sharing the link and the public service provision...very useful and interesting!





www.bionicbuddha.com

Anna (Berkeley, CA) said...

My brother is a rookie firefighter so I'm very sensitive to stories about injured firefighters...

I know I speak on behalf of a lot of grateful citizens out there: THANK YOU FOR RISKING YOUR LIVES TO SAVE OURS AND HELP US IN OUR HOURS OF NEED!

Anonymous said...

wish you all the best

SF Photorama said...

Interesting...I don know how firemen do their thing as I was in a situation where I live and it involved 8 firemen. Have them to thank!

Paul said...

I lived in LA during the 1991 riots. You guys are heros!

How To Save People said...

Thank You for doing a hard and dangerous job that makes this world a better place and saves the lives of many people.

May God bless you!

priyank said...

awesome work guys.this shows the dedication you have for your work.keep it up

Anonymous said...

Long live the LA Fire Department and in the process long live the USA and as a result long live India!
-Parth from New Delhi

Maxwell said...

Hey there!
Very nice blog. I saw it on the Blogger.com home page. It definitely gives me some ideas on what I should add to mine. BTW, the Flickr and Flim Loop content adds a nice touch.
Um, who did your template? Can I get a copy? :-)

All the best.
Max (aka MaxTheITpro)

LAFD Media and Public Relations said...

Max,

Thanks for the kind words. The template is one of the Blogger default choices.

All the best,

Brian Humphrey
Firefighter/Specialist
Public Service Officer
Los Angeles Fire Department

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