Deputy District Chief Brian McKermitt said firefighters may be concerned about contracting the virus, but they’re still ready to serve.
By Mitch Dudek Apr 8, 2020, 12:07pm CDT
Chicago Fire Department brass on Wednesday — one day after the death of a firefighter from the coronavirus — spoke about the anxiety of dealing with a foe, which unlike fire, you can’t just douse with water.
Battalion Chief James O’Donnell said he became wrought with anxiety this week as he watched firefighters quickly get dressed in protective gear to answer a call.
“I was scared for them. There’s nothing I can do. I can’t say ‘Put a hose here. Put a ladder there.’ They’re walking into this environment that’s invisible,” O’Donnell said of the microscopic virus. “It’s a horrible feeling, the unknown, it’s the unknown that’s scary.”
Deputy District Chief Brian McKermitt said firefighters may be concerned about contracting the virus, but they’re still ready to serve.
“Our job is still to serve and protect and help the people of the city of Chicago. And these guys are doing it admirably, but of course it’s still something that we think about every day,” he said.Chicago firefighter Mario Araujo’s coworkers on Truck 25 at Engine 102 in Rogers Park watch as their battalion chief and deputy district chief speak to reporters about Araujo’s death. Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Sun-Times
Firefighter Mario Araujo, 49, died Tuesday. He spent his 19-year career at a firehouse in Rogers Park. His co-workers gathered outside the firehouse Wednesday to talk about Araujo.
He was healthy and seemingly has no underlying conditions, they said.
“He was just a great guy. For all of us here, this is a big loss. We’re like a big family, so we’re not taking it well. We’re trying to get through it,” McKermitt said, adding Araujo was single.
Araujo was the first member of the fire department to die of the virus.
Another firefighter who worked with Araujo on the same shift has tested positive for the virus, McKermitt said, adding the co-worker is at home and doesn’t have serious symptoms.
At least 46 members of the Fire Department have tested positive for COVID-19 so far. Last week, a 50-year-old undercover officer became the first member of the Chicago Police Department to die of the coronavirus.
Firefighters are wearing face masks, social distancing and sanitizing equipment, but some circumstances call for unavoidably close quarters, O’Donnell said.
Being together inside an ambulance or fire truck are examples. Conversation in such confined spaces is being kept to a minimum to avoid the chance of sending droplets of spit into the air, O’Donnell said.Chicago Fire Department firefighters at Engine 102 in Rogers Park prepare to respond to a call, Wednesday morning, April 8, 2020. Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Sun-TimesDeputy District Chief Brian McKermitt talks Wednesday about firefighter Mario Araujo, the department’s first employee to die from the coronavirus. Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Sun-Times
They need to put 2 or 3 men on all fire trucks.
ReplyDeleteLess people in fire house.
Great idea if they never have to go to a fire.
DeleteEvery other month a fire, cant wake up another firehouse 4 blocks away to help?
DeleteGuys stop being cheap. Go buy your own gloves, masks. And face shield's.
ReplyDeleteIt's your life.
Don't count on city or state, they have more serious problems.
Where do we find these items exactly?
DeleteSomething callec the internet
DeleteOLFD not crying or scared.
ReplyDeleteJoke Lawn FD
Delete$235,000 a year to watch tv
DeleteIf your on edge, find another job.
ReplyDeleteAll those days of sitting and watching tv at firehouse are over for a month.
Time to put on big boy pants.
It wasn’t carina, it was obesity.
ReplyDeleteIf McKermitt was my son I woulda named him Kermit. Kermit McKermitt woulda ruled the world.
ReplyDeleteKermit McKermit is a groovy Irish American name. 🤗
DeleteIt’s expensive to make chili.
ReplyDeleteProbably had some underlying health conditions, corona might be a contributing factor but probably not the sole cause of death. Seems these days every death is blamed on coronavirus, rarely do we hear of obesity, COPD, athma, hypertension or heart disease being the primary cause of death.
ReplyDeleteHose pullers deserve triple time?
ReplyDeleteDid these 46 members who tested positive get infected on duty or while at their second job or perhaps at home.
ReplyDeleteFirefighters diligently rescue people and pets, along with battling fires. 😑
ReplyDelete