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Bitter cold makes fires all the more dangerous

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(MCT) — The large and deadly blazes that Chicago firefighters have battled this week have posed an additional challenge, courtesy of the city’s coldest temperatures in nearly two years:

Ice — and lots of it.

Ice can undermine efforts to extinguish flames. It can seal hydrants, crack hoses, make stairs and ladders treacherous, and weigh down buildings and firefighters, said Deputy Fire Commissioner of Operations John McNicholas.

“Things that normally work well in regular, normal, warmer temperatures, when you start to encase them in ice, you can have (problems),” McNicholas said.

McNicholas and hundreds of Chicago firefighters responded to two large blazes this week in subfreezing temperatures, including one high-rise apartment fire that left two people dead.

The department prepares for such frigid firefighting months in advance. Every fall, the department inspects the city’s fire hydrants to ensure that they are working and that any water is removed. But if the hydrant is used by others later and improperly shut down, water can remain and freeze the hydrant shut, department officials said.

When that happens, firefighters sometimes thrust a road flare into the hydrant to melt any ice. The city also sends a truck that uses pressurized steam to thaw frozen hydrants or equipment, Chicago Fire Department spokesman Larry Langford said.

The Fire Department also uses additional engines to scout for working hydrants, Langford said.

Once the hoses are connected, however, firefighters must monitor the flow of the water to make sure the hoses and engine, which hold up to 500 gallons of water, don’t freeze.

“You have to keep the water flowing,” Langford said. “If you shut the hose down too long, the water will start to freeze. The hose will start to freeze on the ground and you’ve got an extremely difficult situation if you’ve got a couple of hundred feet of frozen hose lying on the street.”

In the fire that broke out Tuesday morning in a Chicago condominium building, ice wasn’t a big factor because the fire was mostly fought inside the building. Though the National Weather Service estimated the temperature hovered around zero, very little hose was exposed and the fire was contained within an hour, Langford said.

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