Houston Chronicle Sunday

Houston firefighte­rs are stretched scarily thin.

Caught in another surge, Houston firefighte­rs are stretched scarily thin

- LISA GRAY Coping Chronicles

Back when the world was normal, Fire Station 11 got busy on Friday and Saturday nights, around the time that the Washington Avenue clubs emptied their drunks onto the streets. That’s when you got the car accidents, says firefighte­r Jason Griggs, and the alcohol-poisoned kids. Sometimes the kids’ friends stuck with them all the way, riding along in the ambulance. Other times the paramedics found the kids alone, abandoned in their vomit.

Otherwise, life at the station was relatively laid-back. The firefighte­rs all ate together, and nobody thought anything of it. Heights-area parents would stop by so their their kids could admire the fire engines.

It was rare to work back-toback 24-hour shifts. Hurricane Harvey, of course, was legendary: Griggs remembers working four days straight. Four days was unheard-of, a badge of honor, the stuff of legends. What kind of disaster lasts four days?

Then came COVID-19: a slomo disaster, complete with crests and troughs.

Sleep wearing a mask

At first, after Harris County shut down in late March, things were quiet at Houston’s fire stations: People weren’t out and about, the bars were closed and

COVID-19 patients were still relatively rare. Fire chief Sam Peña says that overall, the department was getting around 800 calls a week then.

When the pandemic heated up, firefighte­rs were at the front of the frontlines. By June, the department was receiving 1,100 weekly calls. The majority of the new calls were from people in respirator­y distress. Hospital emergency rooms began to overflow — so much so that ambulances were frequently forced to wait for more than an hour outside a hospital. Those waits tied up both firefighte­rs and ambulances.

Peña particular­ly worried about the firefighte­rs. He’d started the year understaff­ed — a budget squeeze had forced him to shut down the academy classes for a year — and now, on top of the pandemic demand, firefighte­rs began to catch COVID themselves, or had to quarantine because they’d been exposed. Three died of the disease.

Houston’s surge peaked in July, and after that, though the respirator­y-distress calls didn’t pour in as often as before, they never went entirely away. The firefighte­rs settled in to new routines. The days when little kids would stop by were a distant

memory.

Now they’re supposed to wear masks almost constantly during their 24-hour shifts. At Fire Station 11, Griggs said, some firefighte­rs even sleep wearing one.

The vehicles and equipment require extra decontamin­ation. Firefighte­rs’ temperatur­es are

checked twice a day, and even inside the station, they have to maintain social distancing. Instead of eating together, now they eat in shifts.

That kind of rigor isn’t reflected in the outside world. Once again, Station 11 is busy on Friday and Saturday nights. Since

Labor Day, Griggs says, Washington Avenue nightlife has been running “full throttle, with not a mask in sight.”

‘Forget 2020’

This week, Houston’s COVID hospitaliz­ations once again crossed an alarming threshold.

Texas Medical Center Hospitals exceeded their base ICU capacity, and hospital executives said they were in a “race against time,” trying to keep COVID-19 at bay until new vaccines could make a dent in Houston’s rates.

Peña keeps a nervous eye on Houston’s climbing COVID stats, worried about how high they’ll go and what that’ll mean to his department. That growing number of COVID calls, he notes, comes during the winter flu season — a busy period for ambulance crews even in a normal year.

And at the same time, he said, the number of firefighte­rs sidelined by quarantine or a COVID infection is climbing fast: Around 170 now, up from around 100 three weeks ago. At that level, Peña said, “it’s tough to keep every unit in service.”

That means that crews are stretched thin, and overtime is more the rule than the exception. Griggs is single, so he tries to take extra shifts, so his colleagues with families can go home to their kids. Three 24hour shifts in a row is common for him, he says, and four isn’t unusual — a Harvey level of overtime, now hardly worth noticing.

The fire chief sounded resigned. “I’m hoping for a better 2021,” Peña said. “Forget 2020.”

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 ?? Photos by Yi-Chin Lee / Staff photograph­er ?? Many firefighte­rs such as Station 11’s Steve Logan, top left, engineer operator Odell Murray, above, and Station 9’s Cody Heck, top right, have faced grueling shifts, and overtime is more the rule than the exception.
Photos by Yi-Chin Lee / Staff photograph­er Many firefighte­rs such as Station 11’s Steve Logan, top left, engineer operator Odell Murray, above, and Station 9’s Cody Heck, top right, have faced grueling shifts, and overtime is more the rule than the exception.
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 ?? Yi-Chin Lee / Staff photograph­er ?? Houston Fire Station 9 Firefighte­rs Cody Heck, from left, Ray Garza and Capt. James Rowe care for a worker injured in a constructi­on accident on Friday.
Yi-Chin Lee / Staff photograph­er Houston Fire Station 9 Firefighte­rs Cody Heck, from left, Ray Garza and Capt. James Rowe care for a worker injured in a constructi­on accident on Friday.

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