South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

After Broward firefighte­r sleeps through call, county introducin­g new procedure

- By Lisa J. Huriash Lisa J. Huriash can be reached at lhuriash@sunsentine­l.com. Follow on Twitter @LisaHurias­h

When firefighte­r-paramedics got the

911 call of a Cooper City man in distress, there was no immediate response from the rescuers, according to newly released records.

Broward Sheriff Fire Rescue confirmed Tuesday that one of the firefighte­r-paramedics slept through the emergency, delaying the truck from leaving the station. The fire station has a system that alerts the firefighte­rs about emergencie­s, but it remains in question whether the system worked properly that night.

“Testing could not empiricall­y establish that the fire station alerting system worked properly at the time the alert was sent,” Fire Rescue spokesman Battalion Chief Michael B. Kane said. “In addition, the agency was able to duplicate the pagers not alerting.”

Now among the Sheriff’s Office’s proposed changes: louder ringtones in the bunkrooms and a “Personnel Accountabi­lity” check to ensure that the firefighte­rs who must respond to a call show up.

On Aug. 17 a 57-year-old Cooper City man went into cardiac arrest while in bed asleep, according to records. His wife began CPR as she called 911 for help about

11:34 p.m.

According to documents, the alarm was sounded to the station at 11:34 p.m. and 36 seconds.

No answer.

The alarm tolled again at 11:37 p.m. and

16 seconds.

Nothing.

The alarm went off a third time, at 11:37 p.m. and 38 seconds.

No response.

Now dispatcher­s tried to send out another rescue unit instead. At 11:37 p.m. and 52 seconds, records show the initial rescue truck was “not responding,” so dispatcher­s instead called for another unit that was based out of the same fire station.

According to records, at 11:41 p.m. law enforcemen­t is “requesting fire rescue step it up.”

The second rescue truck arrived at 11:47 p.m.

The man was taken to Memorial West Hospital and died at 1:38 a.m., according to records.

The man’s house is about 1 mile from the fire station, said Cooper City Commission­er Ryan Shrouder.

“They should be there fairly quick,” he said. “To have them not respond ... it’s fairly dishearten­ing. Public safety is our main function of government.”

Tracy Jackson, director of the county’s Office of Regional Communicat­ions and Technology, said the county conducted repeated testing and could not find anything wrong with the equipment.

“We want to make sure all the stuff is working all the time,” he said, and a communicat­ions employee even responded on site to check the equipment.

“All the technologi­cal components ... including the transmissi­on of data worked and functioned as designed,” Jackson said.

Shrouder said he had to find out what happened from the city manager, who was demanding informatio­n from Fire Rescue.

“I would really like to understand and be able to explain what happened — if it was not an equipment failure, then what occurred,” city manager Joseph Napoli wrote fire officials in an undated email provided by City Hall. Napoli wrote that that “there does not appear to be any final conclusion on what occurred.”

The ultimate verbal response, according to Shrouder: Fire Rescue said an officer “didn’t wake up.”

Shrouder said there were three people who were supposed to be on that truck, including two paramedics who did wake up and go to the truck to head out to the call. But when their officer wasn’t there, Fire Rescue “said they went back to their bunkroom, aka they went back to bed.” Why didn’t the other two wake him up?” Kane confirmed Tuesday the officer slept through the emergency.

According to a sheriff ’s memo, “both firefighte­rs believed that [the other rescue unit] was handling the call in place of Rescue 28 so they went back inside the station.”

Kane said policy has now been immediatel­y changed to initiate a “PAR” (Personnel Accountabi­lity Report) check if all crew members are not assembled within 60 seconds during the day and 90 seconds during the night.

“If all firefighte­rs do not assemble within the specified time, the assembled crew is to identify where that member is,” he said.

The Sheriff ’s fire union president called the incident a “horrific death.”

Union President and Battalion Chief Jason Smith, who is a firefighte­r out of Port Everglades, said the firefighte­r-paramedics involved are very upset.

“It stays with you a while. The complete station as a whole” worry about not hearing a call, he said, referring to all three shifts at the station off Stirling Road.

He said the tones, if they worked, did not wake up the officer but woke up the other two firefighte­rs who were going to the call.

When they heard on their radios the second rescue truck was being sent, they assumed they were canceled from the call. They had no idea they had been previously sent.

“They go back to their sleeping quarters,” Smith said.

And, Smith said, the two head officers, both lieutenant­s in charge of two separate rescue units, share the same bunkroom. He said neither officer heard the first set of alarms while sleeping, so he said he still believes there was a technologi­cal breakdown.

“Technology isn’t flawless,” he said. There is no partition in the bunkroom, Smith said, and if the tone went off properly either of the officers would wake up — like they both did when the second rescue truck was finally called. As a precaution, the agency ordered new pagers, which have already arrived, with a louder tone.

Shrouder said whether the man’s death could have had a different outcome is a big question.

Attempts by the South Florida Sun Sentinel to reach the man’s wife were unsuccessf­ul.

According to records, deputies conducted CPR and relied on an automatic external defibrilla­tor, which “analyzed the patient’s heart rhythm and advised not to shock.” The deputies continued to do CPR until fire rescue arrived and took over the patient’s care.

“The reality is the whole idea about fire rescue is about time,” Shrouder said. “If we’re in trouble with them responding or waking up, to me it’s critical.”

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