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Update – Detroit accepts 28-year-old tower ladder donated by citizen.

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Do you recall the story above where Detroit TV reporter Charlie LeDuff shows off a 1983 tower ladder that a man who was formerly married to an heir of Henry Ford wants to donate to the city? Well, Joe Rippolone got his wish. The City Council has agreed to accept the rig and it is expected to be turned over Thursday.

Despite the age of the truck, Detroit Fire Commissioner Donald Austin has said it is a donation worth accepting after Austin and the department's chief mechanic checked it out. From WWJ-TV:

“Mr. Rippolone was kind enough to give us a ride around four or five blocks. We raised the aerial ladder which is 105 feet in length,” said Austin.

“It has 23,000 original miles … $50,000 or Mr. Rippolone’s money went into rebuilding the hydraulics, the suspension …  it is a very strong apparatus and it will help serve the citizen well,” Austin said.

WJBK-TV's LeDuff said in a September 22 column titled Detroit Government: What's It Going to Take to Wake You Up? that the donation was offered a week before a young girl died in a house fire where the first two engines were out of service because of mechanical problems. A mini-pumper with a non-working pump responded to that fire and firefighters were delayed because of a lack of water and a ladder. Here's more from LeDuff's column:

There is no piece of equipment in the Detroit fleet that has less mileage than Rippolone’s truck.

In fact, there are 12 ambulances, six ladder trucks, three fire engines and two squad trucks sitting in disrepair at the fire repair garage.

So impressed was the fire commissioner, he put in paperwork the very next day to Mayor Dave Bing’s office to accept the truck. Bing’s office waited a week before it sent its approval to the city clerk — two days after the toddler died, mind you.

Now, with the former rig of New York's Getzville Fire Department finding a new home, it remains to be seen if it's up to the rigors of Detroit.

TV Station: Union says Detroit apparatus problems cause delays in rescuing child from house fire.

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Detroit's union president, Dan McNamara, told WJBK-TV that the first unit on the scene of a house fire with a little girl trapped Tuesday morning was a small pumper known as a TAC and that it's pump was disabled. McNamara says this caused delays in rescuing the child. Commissioner Donald Austin was unavailable to talk to a reporter from the TV station but McNamara says a shortage of front line vehicles with no reserve fleet is forcing the department to use TACs and pickup trucks "and whatever the department can scrape together so that we can continue to get staffing to these fires". The story did not indicate what units were out of service that would have responded to the fire.

From The Detroit News:

A 3-year-old girl was pulled from a house fire on the city's east side Tuesday and rushed to a nearby hospital.

Fire officials said the girl was initially dead but officials with Children's Hospital of Michigan in Detroit said the injured girl was still alive as of 1:30 p.m. No other details of her condition were provided.

The girl was rescued with efforts from police officers, firefighters and neighbors following the 10:30 a.m. fire on the 5100 block of Cooper, Detroit Fire Department officials said.

From WJBK TV:

The first available truck was something called a TAC. It is not even supposed to handle dwelling fires of this size.  To make matters even worse, the TAC could not even pump water because sources say the top brass within the fire department made the decision to disable the pumps because not everyone had completed the training.

Firefighters had to wait for another company to bring a ladder truck before they could even attempt to put the fire out and rescue the little girl.

Detroit’s Engine 8 fails to clear overpass. Check out the picture.

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More details at STATter911.com

This was the scene at about 11:20 a.m. on Sunday off the 1200 block of West Jefferson in Detroit. Signs indicate clearance is 7’11″. There is a report of one minor injury.