Three firefighters who nearly perished while battling a wind-swept inferno on Staten Island last year are suing the city over a staffing policy they say left them shorthanded as the blaze raged out of control.
The injured firefighters insist they could have put out the house fire in the borough’s Annadale section sooner if a nearby engine company had not been temporarily closed.
But a long-standing FDNY policy of shutting down firehouses for medical checkups made a dangerous situation worse — and nearly cost them their lives, they claim.
“Something that should have been a simple all hands fire turned into a fourth alarm,” former FNDY Lt. Bill Doody, whose injuries forced him to retire, said at a news conference.
“I was trapped. I relied on my experience and my training to get me out but I just don’t want this to happen again. It could be another firefighter or civilian with less training who doesn’t stay as calm and it may not work out as well for them. I couldn’t live with myself if I didn’t do something to try and stop this.”
Nearly two dozen firefighters were injured in the afternoon fire that broke out on Feb. 17, 2023. Doody and Firefighter William Guidera, both of Ladder Company 84, and Firefighter Kwabena Brentuo, of Engine Company 168, came very close to dying in the blaze.
All three became trapped in the single-family home on Shotwell Ave. near Tryon Ave., according to official accounts and legal filings.
Ladder Company 167 was the closest firehouse to the home but all its personnel were at FDNY headquarters in Downtown Brooklyn getting their annual medical exams as mandated by agency policy, according to Andreas Koutsoudakis, a lawyer for the three men.
The lack of support due to the closest engine company being out of service left the responding firefighters shorthanded, Koutsoudakis claims, jeopardizing lives.
“The response time matters,” Koutsoudakis said. “If something happened with that fire truck that responds, now you’re looking at the next fire house. That’s the ripple effect that we’ve talked about but it starts with the one that’s two blocks away not being available. No matter how you slice it, if that firehouse was opened, that fire would have been addressed much sooner.”
An FDNY representative did not immediately respond to a request for comment Monday.
Firefighters dealt with one problem after another that day, starting with the wind that whipped the flames between two houses. One of the engine companies that had been dispatched to the scene got in a crash on their way to the blaze, causing further delays.
Meanwhile, Doody and the others were fighting for their lives.
“There were a few seconds when I was laying there thinking this may be the end,” Doody, 60, said. “I was working all these years, I’m not going to see a pension. Would have had a nice funeral though.”
Doody said he was forced to get on his belly to get below the black smoke that filled the upstairs as he crawled to a stairway. After leaping down the stairs and losing his helmet he found refuge under a couch.
The lieutenant’s feet were literally in the fire as Brentuo trained the single line in the house on the flames to keep him from being overwhelmed.
Koutsoudakis said that the rubber from Doody’s boots fused to his feet.
“I knew I could never be full duty again,” said Doody, who says he now struggles even climbing a ladder outside his home to string Christmas lights. “It takes a while for the skin to grow back. My legs were burned, my elbows were burned, my fingers were burned. I had burns on my face, my ears. I was planning on retiring soon, not as soon as I did.”