Baltimore Firefighters Fume As Busted Rigs Put 911 Response At Risk

Baltimore’s firefighters union is sounding the alarm, warning that a string of broken fire suppression rigs – from ladder trucks to medic units – has created dangerous coverage gaps across the city just as crews are slammed with heavy call volume. Union leaders say the sidelined vehicles could slow response times and put both residents and first responders in harm’s way.

The union’s public warning landed on local TV on Monday, with officials urging City Hall to step in quickly, as reported by CBS Baltimore.

Union: Medics And Trucks Sidelined

Union leaders say multiple EMS units and some ladder companies have been parked for repairs, leaving crews to work out of SUVs that cannot transport patients – a stopgap the union argues is nowhere near good enough. The union is pressing for emergency cash to fix existing rigs or buy used ones while parts orders crawl forward. The department has acknowledged delays in getting parts but insists it is “responding to calls in a timely fashion,” as reported by WMAR-2 News.

Where This Fits In The City’s Safety Picture

Union officials and public-safety advocates say the maintenance mess is part of a deeper, long-running strain on Baltimore’s fire and EMS system. An internal incident review of a 2023 house fire that killed two firefighters flagged outdated training and equipment failures, a finding detailed by CBS Baltimore that union leaders say highlights just how urgently the fleet needs investment.

Not Just Engines: Fireboat Problems Reveal Wider Strain

The crunch is not limited to what is rolling on city streets. One of Baltimore’s fireboats has been out of service since January after a generator failure, and a stalled $2 million pier renovation has made both repairs and shore power for the fleet more complicated, according to union officials cited by The Baltimore Banner.

City Council Demands Answers

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