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Mayor Bloomberg and FDNY
present NYSHFCA Medal

From left to
right: Jonathon Gold-NYSHFCA, David
Gold-NYSHFCA, Mayor Michael Bloomberg,
Fire
Commissioner Nicholas Scoppetta, Medal
recipient Lt James F. Congema,
Chief of Dept
Salvatore J Cassano.
FIRE DEPARTMENT, CITY OF NEW YORK • MEDAL
DAY 2008
Awarded to: LIEUTENANT JAMES F. CONGEMA
Battalion 19 (assigned), Ladder Company 41
(detailed)
FIRE CALL:
March 23, 2007, 0138 hours, Box 75-3205,
1717 Unionport Road, Bronx
Appointed to the FDNY on February 8, 1998.
Previously assigned to Engine 231 and Ladder
120. Member of the Columbia Association and
the Emerald and Holy Name Societies. Holds a
BBA degree in accounting from Hofstra
University. Cited for bravery on two
previous occasions. Resides in Smithtown,
Long Island, with his wife, Deanne, and
their children, Emily, Ashley and newborn
son, Andrew James.
On the fire floor, the success of operations
is, to a great extent, determined by the
ability of the company Officer to lead and
motivate his/her Firefighters. A good
Officer leads by example and does not lead
from behind. It was just such an Officer who
led Ladder 41 in the early morning
hours on March 23, 2007. At 0138 hours,
Ladder 41 responded first-due to Box 3205, a
reported fire in a two-story multiple
dwelling. Immediately on arrival, a 10-75
was transmitted for a fire on the first
floor. Per FDNY’s standard operating
procedures, an additional engine and truck
were called because of the window bars on
all the first-floor windows. Lieutenant
James Congema and his forcible entry
team--FF Robert Watts with the extinguisher
and FF Ronilo Fuentes with the
irons--proceeded down the smoke-filled
hallway to the fire apartment. Lieutenant
Congema ordered his forcible entry team to
force the locked door. Entering the
apartment, the Officer was confronted....FULL
STORY
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Fire Lieutenant Receives
Scholarship Awarded by NYSHFCA

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2008
The FDNY could have been called “the
Smartest” on December 3 as the New York
State Honorary Fire Chiefs Association (NYSHFCA)
presented a newly endowed scholarship to
Fire Lieutenant John Leimeister of Battalion
17. “Lt. Leimeister demonstrates the
discipline and commitment we want to see in
all our firefighters,” said Fire
Commissioner Nicholas Scoppetta during the
ceremony at FDNY Headquarters. “He wants to
see how he can do more to support the FDNY
and make it stronger.”
Lt. Leimeister, a 9-year veteran of the
FDNY, is pursuing an associate’s degree in
Fire Services and a bachelor’s degree in
Emergency Management. He was chosen to
receive a $2,500 award after a rigorous
selection process, which included an essay
detailing how the degrees would be used to
contribute to the Department.
“We don’t just fight fires anymore -
today the job requires a more well rounded
firefighter,” Chief of Department Salvatore
Cassano said. “We applaud all our members
who are working to better themselves.”
Established in 1950, the New York State
Honorary Fire Chiefs Association is a
non-profit organization that supports
firefighters and their families in New York
City and throughout the state. The group
awards several scholarships to children of
firefighters annually and sponsors the New
York State Honorary Fire Chiefs Medal and
the Shelly Rothman Medal, which are awarded
each year on FDNY Medal Day.
During the ceremony, officials from the
Association announced that in 2008, they
will be awarding two scholarships to FDNY
members like the one given to Lt. Leimeister.
“What better way to reward firefighters
who are advancing their career,” NYSHFCA
President Don Epstein said.
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James Gordon Bennett
Medal
NYS Honorary Fire Chiefs Association
Medal
Firefighter
Victor J. Rosa Jr., Ladder Company
138
December 15, 2004, 0244 hours, Box
22-7889, 37-52 89th Street, Queens
Appointed to the FDNY
on October 19, 1997. Previously
assigned to Engines 83 and 293.
Uncle, FF George Frey, is retired
from Engine 311. Recipient of a
pre-hospital CFR-D save; and a Class
II rating for this incident. Resides
in Massapequa Park, Long Island,
with his wife, Melina, and their
sons, Victor and Dean.
A rescue is a rare
occurrence. How uncommon, then, is
it to rescue three victims,
especially while operating in dire
conditions? Indeed, FDNY members
were confronted with 17 critically
and seriously injured victims at
Queens Box 22-7889 and FF Victor J.
Rosa had a direct hand in rescuing
three of them.
On December 15,
2004, a cold fall night, at 0244
hours, calls started to come in
reporting a fire at 35-43 88th
Street in Jackson Heights. The
assigned companies initially went to
that address, but it was incorrect.
The fire actually was in a six-story
multiple dwelling at 37-52 89th
Street. The fire was started by an
unattended candle and exacerbated
when the occupants left the
apartment door open while exiting.
The fire started in apartment 2F on
the second floor, involved the
apartment and extended out into the
public hallway.
Ladder
Co. 138, the “Corona Tigers,”
arrived as the second-due truck,
with FF Rosa assigned the outside
vent position for the tour. As the
OVM, FF Rosa knew he had to get to
his position quickly. This was a
difficult task. Impeded by a garage
in the adjacent yard, he placed a
24-foot portable ladder just to the
left of the third-floor window of
apartment 3G on the exposure #4 side
of the building. A woman was visible
at this window and she was calling
for help.
Apartment 3G was
adjacent to apartment 3F, which was
directly above the fire apartment.
As FF Rosa climbed into apartment
3G, he told the woman to wait by the
window because another Firefighter,
FF Steve Muller, Ladder 138’s
chauffeur, was climbing up and would
help her down. FF Rosa proceeded to
exit the apartment, which was
relatively clear, and entered the
third-floor hallway, which had
completely different conditions.
Entering the
hallway, FF Rosa immediately was
forced down onto the floor by the
very high heat and heavy smoke. The
fire on the floor below, the second
floor, had extended beyond the
chocked-open smoke/fire door in the
middle of the public hallway. With
the fire this far into the hallway,
it was also extending up the stairs
immediately adjacent to FF Rosa’s
position.
As FF Rosa was
searching in this severely exposed
position, he discovered Lena
Martinez, an unconscious and badly
burned woman. FF Rosa transmitted a
10-45 and dragged Ms. Martinez into
the safety of apartment 3G. Once she
was in the apartment, FF Rosa then
entered the hostile conditions in
the hallway for a second time to
continue his search.
While searching,
FF Rosa found a second unconscious
and badly burned female, 36-year-old
Flora Pineda. The Firefighter again
transmitted a 10-45 signal and
dragged the victim into apartment
3G. Once the victim was safely in
the apartment, FF Rosa entered the
hallway for a third time to continue
his search in the hot, smoky and
dark environment.
At this time, FF
Rosa was still working alone and a
hand-line was not yet in position to
put water on the extending fire. As
FF Rosa resumed his search, with the
fire advancing up the stairs only a
few feet from him, he came across
the unconscious body of
four-year-old Alexandra Sandovar. FF
Rosa picked up the young child and
crawled down the hallway past the
first stairwell--which was filled
with fire--hoping to find a second
stairwell. He found the second
stairwell in this building with wing
stairs and removed the girl to the
street. She then was transported to
the Cornell Burn Center.
The two victims FF
Rosa previously had dragged into
apartment 3G were removed by other
Firefighters. FF Muller removed one
victim via a portable ladder and a
member of Squad Co. 288 removed the
other victim through the interior.
For his courageous
and determined actions in entering
the hallway three times and
discovering and removing three
victims--two of whom survived their
ordeal--FF Victor J. Rosa is
officially recognized for his heroic
efforts today. He is awarded the
James Gordon Bennett Medal and the
New York State Honorary Fire Chiefs
Association Medal.—NG
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New York State
Honorary Fire Chiefs Association
Medal
New York City
Medal Day 2003
Battalion
Chief James Marketti
Battalion 31 (assigned)
Battalion 48 (detailed)
February 14, 2002,
0717 hours
Box 22-3742
455 East 26th Street, Brooklyn
Appointed to the FDNY
on September 2, 1978. Previously
assigned to Ladders 176, 30 and 108
and Engine 285. Cited for bravery
three times previously. Resides in
Queens with his wife, Anne, and
their sons, James, Daniel and
Matthew.
Ironically, many
fires that start during the early
hours do not become visible or
detected until people begin to go
about their normal routines. This
was the case on February 14th,
Valentine’s Day, 2002. The Brooklyn
dispatcher received the call for a
fire at 455 East 26th Street. This
neighborhood is known for its
tree-lined streets and old, stately
dwellings--known as “Queen Annes”--in
which a fire can spread quite
rapidly. Box 3742 was transmitted
immediately.
The first-arriving
units quickly gave a 10-75 signal
and were faced with a three-story
“Queen Anne” with heavy fire showing
on the second floor and a heavy
smoke condition throughout the rest
of the building. Engine 255, the
first-arriving Engine, immediately
stretched a 13/4-inch line up the
interior stairs. With fire in
control of the second floor, front
to rear, it did not take long before
the second-to-arrive Engine 248
quickly stretched a second line to
the second floor to protect Engine
255.
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Firefighter
operates at Brooklyn Box
22-3742. His and other FDNY
members’ efforts helped
Chief Marketti facilitate
the rescues.
photo by Lieutenant John
Leavy |
Chief James
Marketti, assigned as the
“all-hands” Chief, arrived and was
sent to the third floor to
coordinate the interior operation of
the units working inside. Reaching
the second floor, the Chief realized
this was not going to be a routine
operation. There was an extremely
heavy smoke and high heat condition
permeating the building. Radio
reports were being relayed to the
interior units that people still
were unaccounted for and missing.
Due to rapidly
deteriorating conditions and no
hose-line in place upstairs, Chief
Marketti began assisting in the
search as soon as he reached the
third floor. With his knowledge of
fires in these buildings and the
high heat and crackling noise, Chief
Marketti knew there was fire in the
walls and most definitely in the
third floor and ceiling above him.
Time was not on the side of the
victims or the FDNY members making
the search for life.
As Chief Marketti
crawled along the interior hall into
a front bedroom, he heard Ladder
157’s Chauffeur, FF Dennis Barnes,
give a 10-45 for an infant boy in
another bedroom. The Firefighter was
removing the infant to the Tower
Ladder’s bucket. Speeding up his
search, Chief Marketti “swept” the
bed and found it empty. He then
crawled around the bed where he
found the unconscious, 16-year-old
Jennieve Bartholomew, who was lying
face down on the floor.
After transmitting
the 10-45 and requesting assistance,
Chief Marketti began dragging the
motionless body toward the interior
hall. FF Matt McDonald of Ladder 157
crawled up to assist Chief Marketti
remove the victim. Once they reached
the interior stair, other FDNY
members assisted in removing the
victim out of the building, along
with other victims found by Ladder
147’s Lieutenant Tom Farragher and
FF Dan Powers.
Realizing there
might be more victims in that same
bedroom, Chief Marketti quickly
crawled back down the interior hall
and re-entered the front bedroom. By
now, the fire had extended and the
heat necessitated that the Chief
continue his search on his belly. He
found a five-year-old child, Edward
Charles, lying on the floor.
Once again, Chief
Marketti transmitted the 10-45
signal and pulled the child’s body
under his own to protect him from
the searing heat that was building
up in the room. He then made his way
back to the interior hall and stairs
where he handed the child down to
another FDNY member who removed him
from the building.
As Engine
255--whose aggressive and determined
attack facilitated any possible
rescues--made their way to the third
floor, Chief Marketti stayed with
the units and turned his attention
to controlling this fire, which now
had extended to the third floor and
attic and become a second-alarm
blaze.
Tragically, Ms.
Bartholomew succumbed to her
injuries, but due to the efforts of
Chief Marketti and all the other
FDNY members working at this fire, a
much greater tragedy was averted.
Chief Marketti’s
actions were in the highest
traditions of the Department. This
feat was accomplished under the most
adverse conditions of heat and
smoke, without the benefit of a
hand-line. As Deputy Chief and
Division 15 Commander Charles R.
Blaich stated in his report, “Chief
Marketti’s actions were deliberate
and well-executed. Additionally, his
leadership was instrumental in the
other rescues made by units.”
For his heroic
actions, Chief Marketti is awarded
the New York State Honorary Fire
Chiefs Association Medal.
—JV
New York
State Honorary Fire Chiefs
Association Medal
New
York City Medal Day 2000
Firefighter
Stephen P. Fenley
Ladder Company 78
August 2,
1999, 0306 hours, Box
22-229,
190 Bay Street, Staten
Island
Appointed to the FDNY on
July 11, 1981. Previously
assigned to Ladders 9, 80,
101 and 148 and Rescue 5.
Member of the Emerald and
Holy Name Societies and the
Columbia Association. Cited
for bravery on five previous
occasions. Holds an AA
degree and also is a
Paramedic. Uncle, Irv
Bolger, is retired from the
job and two cousins, Gary
Bolger and Jack Thompson,
are on the job. Resides in
Staten Island, with his
wife, Michelle, and their
son, William, 10, and
daughter, Danielle, 6.
Another
month had begun in a long,
hot summer for the members
of Ladder 78 and Engine 155
on the North Shore of Staten
Island. Firefighter Stephen
Fenley was working an
average night tour on August
1, 1999. The Brothers had
several routine runs and a
good meal behind them by
midnight and the
neighborhood seemed to have
quieted down. However, there
was a hatred fomenting that
would turn to murder shortly
after three in the morning
on August 2nd. |
A flammable liquid was
spread throughout the
interior stairway of 190
Bay Street and the fire
was released on the
sleeping residents. At
0306 hours, the computer
at the Brighton Avenue
firehouse spit out a
phone alarm for a fire
at the address. As the
rigs were pulling out of
quarters, the dispatcher
assured them that from
the volume of calls they
were receiving, there
was a working fire in
progress and police were
at the scene.
The short distance from
quarters made it a fast
response for both
companies. As they
pulled up to the
three-story,
non-fireproof, multiple
dwelling, there was
heavy smoke spewing from
every window and a
raging inferno in the
interior stairway. The
other vehicles already
on the scene made it
difficult to place the
apparatus near the fire
building.
FF Steve Fenley had the
roof man position. As he
was helping the
chauffeur position the
aerial ladder to the
roof, a victim in great
distress appeared at the
third-floor window.
There were no fire
escapes on the building
and the flames in the
hallway blocked the
victim’s exit as well as
the entry of the inside
attack team. Someone had
to reach him.
Engine 155 was able to
charge a line and
advanced somewhat into
the hallway, but a new
problem soon became
evident. FF Fenley heard
his officer, Lieutenant
Matthew Cichminski,
report to Battalion 21
that the interior stairs
had been burned away
from the second to the
third floor. This meant
that an interior rescue
advanced from a degree
of difficult to
impossible.
As FF James Marshall
repositioned the ladder
to the front window, FF
Fenley informed his
officer that roof
operations would be
delayed for an exterior
rescue. The victim was
visible in the billowing
smoke only because his
clothing already had
caught fire. As the
firefighter climbed the
ladder toward the
victim, the victim
collapsed back into the
thick, acrid smoke
belching from the
window, an indication
that flashover was
imminent. With complete
disre gard
for his own safety, FF
Fenley dove headfirst
into the window and was
pushed to the floor by
the high heat condition
in the room.
Sixty-one-year-old Carl
Pandolfo had fallen away
from the window, making
it hard for FF Fenley to
locate him quickly. As
the firefighter tried to
pull Mr. Pandolfo toward
the window, the burnt
skin falling from his
body made it difficult
to get a secure grip.
Eventually, his removal
required that FF Fenley
throw him over his
shoulder and stand up in
order to get him out the
window.
FF Fenley didn’t
hesitate when his helmet
and safety hood were
dislodged as he headed
out the window. The
predicted flashover
occurred as the rescuer
placed Mr. Pandolfo on
the aerial ladder. FF
Fenley suffered burns to
the back of his head,
face and ears. Despite
his own burns and other
injuries, he covered the
badly burned man from
the flames licking out
the window as FF
Marshall repositioned
the ladder.
Once the chauffeur
positioned them away
from the fire that now
was consuming the entire
top floor, FF Fenley
descended the ladder as
Mr. Pandolfo clung to
the last vestiges of his
life. He was removed to
the burn center of
Staten Island University
North with second- and
third-degree burns on
100 percent of his body.
Despite FF Fenley’s
valiant efforts and
constant medical
attention, Mr. Pandolfo
succumbed to his
injuries the following
morning.
The explosion of flames
on the top floor
mandated the removal of
all firefighting forces
and an exterior
operation was used to
extinguish the inferno.
Once the two-alarm blaze
had been brought under
control, two more bodies
were discovered inside
and the murder toll was
increased to three.
For his bravery and
courage in putting his
own life at great
personal risk to try to
save another, the Fire
Department is proud to
honor FF Stephen P.
Fenley.--JT
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