Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

MFD ‘exhausted’

Structure fire calls are up 25% in Milwaukee as another station closing has left the department “brittle.”

- Elliot Hughes

Milwaukee firefighters are fielding a nearly 25% increase in structure fire calls this winter compared to last winter, challengin­g a department already spread thin.

Not only has the season been busy, it’s been unusually destructiv­e. Four people were killed in residentia­l fires in a 17-day period beginning in late January. On top of that, during the first two months of the year, fires displaced almost 500 people from their homes in Milwaukee, according to the American Red Cross of Wisconsin.

Adding to the difficulty have been arctic temperatur­es and huge snowbanks, which narrowed streets and buried hydrants. The calls have let up some recently – as has the weather – but the winter stretch comes after a shorthande­d department navigated almost a year of COVID-19-related obstacles and several bouts of civil unrest.

“What you’re looking at is an engine that is running at high RPMs and it’s going need some tending at some point,” said Acting Fire Chief Aaron Lipski. “We are rocking, and our people are freaking exhausted. Right now I am extremely proud of the folks out in the field. They are working their tails off.”

From Dec. 1 to Feb. 23, the Milwaukee Fire Department responded to 127 structure fire calls, up from 103 during the same period a year ago.

Surprising­ly, the department received a 12% drop in overall calls for service compared to a year ago. But that doesn’t offer much of a reprieve when resource-intensive calls like structure fires are on the rise, Lipski said.

More smoke alarms needed

There’s no obvious trend behind the causes of the fires. Careless use of smoking materials, electrical issues and various accidents have been cited more than once, but none of them represent a significant share of the causes, Lipski said.

That leaves the pandemic as his best guess behind the rise this year.

Social distancing in a Wisconsin winter could mean more people are consuming more energy in their home, creating more chances for an electrical failure or a space heater mishap.

Officials have confirmed that three of the four fatal fires in January and February involved structures without smoke alarms, forcing the department to step up outreach efforts for fire safety.

Last week, a group of volunteers, fire officials and Ald. JoCasta Zamarripa went door-to-door in the Clarke Square neighborho­od on the near south side and installed about 40 smoke alarms in two hours.

Zamarripa’s near-south side district has been hit the hardest by the city’s rash of fires, having been the scene of fires that killed three people and displaced more than 100 others.

Two days after a fire killed Steve A. Hobson, 61, on Milwaukee’s northwest side, an apartment fire in Zamarripa’s district displaced 122 people and also killed Nathaniel Beal, 61.

That was followed about a week later by another fire that spread to three residences, displaced 15 people and killed Natividad Villanueva-Rodriguez, 55. Four days later, Martin Rodriguez-Flores, 57, was killed in another residentia­l fire. Both were also in Zamarripa’s district.

As of Feb. 24, the American Red Cross was still providing shelter, food or other resources to 84 of the 122 people displaced by the Jan. 28 fire that killed Beal.

A veterans group, called VetsNet, has also stepped in to assist 31 veterans affected by the fire.

“It’s been very devastatin­g,” said Zamarippa, who is planning additional canvassing in her district about smoke alarms. “I’m very grateful to the American Red Cross for housing over 100 near-south siders for a month, if not longer.”

Another station closes

The busy fire season comes right as the Fire Department was forced to close one of its south side fire stations near

Mitchell Internatio­nal Airport, at 4653 S. 13th Street, as a 2021 budget casualty. That’s expected to impact response times for the area, but Lipski said Station 17’s closure has not figured into the deadly fires happening about four miles north.

The department’s average response time for February – 3 minutes and 48 seconds – is about 20 seconds longer than it was in 2020. But for at least two of the fatal fires in Zamarripa’s district, fire crews were able to arrive on scene in well under three minutes, according to department data. Neverthele­ss, Station 17 is the seventh to shut down since 2018. That’s a 20% reduction in stations in just three years and comes after 15 years of constant cutting.

For Lipski, it’s hard to see where another budget casualty could come from.

“We have come through a period of time where we had fat to trim, quite frankly, and we did that,” Lipski said. “It’s become brittle, where a single emergency of extreme complexity, or just itself a massive draw on resources, creates a sizable void in the city for which there’s not any ability to absorb that.”

 ?? MARK HOFFMAN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? A pedestrian passes by the scene of a fire in the 1900 block of West Burnham Street in Milwaukee on Feb. 5. Firefighters spent about 40 minutes battling a heavy fire that spread to three structures.
MARK HOFFMAN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL A pedestrian passes by the scene of a fire in the 1900 block of West Burnham Street in Milwaukee on Feb. 5. Firefighters spent about 40 minutes battling a heavy fire that spread to three structures.

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