Politics & Government

Update: Miscommunication Caused Paramedics to Arrive Late to Sahalee Blaze in August

Fire officials said there was miscommunication from 911 dispatchers about whether there was a person who needed help.

AsΒ a curtain of flames climbed towards the Sammamish sky onΒ Aug. 24 andΒ consumedΒ a SahaleeΒ rambler in the process, neighbors reached for their phones andΒ called for help.

An Eastside Fire & Rescue engine raced to the scene, arrivingΒ within nine minutes after calls were placed. But someΒ residentsΒ wonderedΒ why aΒ boxy redΒ ambulance with paramedics was not as fast. Dale Simpson,Β anΒ elderly resident, with burns to his head.

It turns out,Β an ambulanceΒ withΒ a fire crew that can provide advance life supportΒ made its wayΒ to the Sahalee neighborhood only after the incident commanderΒ learned of Simpson, reviews showΒ and fire officials said.

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Initially, emergency crews did not realizeΒ thatΒ a personΒ needed medical attention because, for some reason, that informationΒ was never relayed clearly enoughΒ by 911 dispatchers, Eastside Fire & Rescue Deputy Chief Wes Collins told the Sammamish City Council on Sept. 13.

CollinsΒ saidΒ thatΒ callers hadΒ toldΒ dispatchers of some type of information that he deemed "valuable." But not until a neighbor approached Glenn Huffman,Β the Eastside Fire & Rescue battalion chief at the scene, withΒ a report of a hurt personΒ didΒ a request for aΒ medic unit go out over the radio, Collins said.

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"That failure of communication meant that we didn’t provide as good of service as we could have to a citizen,"Β he told the City Council.

"We like to provide excellent service, (to)Β this citizen and those who were waiting with him who suffered that trauma of a delayed response to this victim that they had in their midst. It’s unacceptable to us. It's an unacceptable response."

The , Eastside Fire & Rescue, the NORCOM dispatch center in BellevueΒ and the SahaleeΒ Maintenance Association, which represents homeowners, are looking into this incident, which scrambled about 40 firefighters. OfficialsΒ are poring over time logs as well as recounting what occurred.

Simpson was rushed to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle in serious condition. As of last week, he remained in the hospital.Β 

"We're going to do all we can to make sure those kinds of situations don’t happen again," Collins said, referring to the delayed medic unit arrival andΒ adding that the fire response time met the agency's standards.

Huffman, heΒ said,Β showed upΒ on the scene seven minutes after the first engine.Β TheΒ fire ambulance with paramedicsΒ racedΒ from Issaquah Highlands-based Station 73Β and arrivedΒ about 15 minutes after Huffman called.

On the same day that Collins talked to the City Council, theΒ Sahalee Maintenance Association metΒ with Eastside Fire & Rescue Chief Lee Soptich and Huffman, said Doug Smith, a board member and head ofΒ the group's disaster preparedness task force.

Smith learned that the first units showed up within nine minutes of theΒ emergency calls reaching 911 operators. It was unknown Sunday whether Huffman arrived within those nine minutes. At the City Council meeting, Collins did not have that time readily available.

In an email, Smith expressed concern on many fronts - about Simpson's condition, about the fact that SimpsonΒ and his wife lost their house, about whether a similar incident could happen to aΒ city residentΒ and about whether emergency teams "are doing the best that they can."

"I am confident that review of this incident by EFR and the city of Sammamish will help improve responses to future incidents,"Β he wrote inΒ his email.

On that hot evening in the 2000 block of 208th Place Northeast, some residents voiced frustration about a lack ofΒ a fasterΒ medic unit on the scene.Β The fire was reported at about 6 p.m.

But about an hour later, residentsΒ stood near theΒ smoldering tan houseΒ and talked openly about how they felt paramedics did not arrive until aboutΒ 45 minutes after calls for help. Some expressed concerns to Sammamish Patch. Later, on the street, others took their questions directly to Huffman.

At the scene, Eastside firefighters, who are emergency medical technicians,Β applied basicΒ life supportΒ assistanceΒ to Simpson, Collins said.

AnΒ aid truck, which looks similar to a medic ambulance but is staffed withΒ emergency medical technicians, had made its way from a station near Sunset Elementary in Bellevue. This particular aid truck wasΒ staffed byΒ volunteer firefighters, who typically leave their homes and head to the station before jumping into their rig.

Part of the issue, CollinsΒ added, is thatΒ the fire agencyΒ typically sends threeΒ engines, a ladder truck and a battalion chief to structure fires. A medic unit is summonedΒ ifΒ it isΒ known that there is an injured person.Β 

While the NORCOM dispatch center is investigating the incident, Collins told the City Council that emergency operatorsΒ were informed ofΒ a fire victim, or the possibility of one. He believes dispatchers made notations as informationΒ was arriving.Β 

"What we're doing is talking with the dispatch center and asking them to review why valuable information that they were receiving by phone calls wasn't being relayed to us," Collins said after he addressed the City Council.

On Monday, NORCOM spokeswoman Sheryl Mullen issued a statement, via email,Β to Sammamish Patch. She notedΒ that Eastside Fire & Rescue officials asked on Sept. 7Β what information the dispatcher received and what was verbally given to responding crews.

"Callers reported to NORCOM that a 'male may be inside' and responding units were advised 'unknown if parties are out.'Β It was acknowledged that while similar in message, it would have been more clear to provide the exact information given by the callers to the responding units," sheΒ said in her email.

"Fire units have access to the comments entered into calls through the use of mobile data computers in the rigs. However, it is expected that fire dispatchers will verbally provide short report information to responding units.Β NORCOM has since had the opportunity to share that feedback with the involved fire dispatcher in an effort to prevent future miscommunication."

AtΒ last week'sΒ meeting, City Manager Ben Yazici talked about needing more information about the case.Β ButΒ heΒ discussedΒ the information that he had learned asΒ of Sept. 13.Β 

"I think what we got is that the 911 dispatch is saying the caller is reporting the garage is on fire, fully involved, that there are two people living there. It is unknown if they are out," Yazici, who later talked privately with Collins,Β said.

While , located on 228th Avenue Northeast,Β has an aidΒ truck and is the closest to the Sahalee neighborhood,Β Collins said the agencyΒ uses a "jump staffing" approach to fightingΒ blazes and providingΒ emergency medicalΒ care.

This means thatΒ the station'sΒ three-personΒ crew boardedΒ the fire engine, given the information that was being received. That left the aidΒ truck inΒ the station.

An aid truck, Collins said, usually carries emergency medical technicans. A medic truck, though, has paramedics, who have more training and can provide advance life support.

The closestΒ paramedicΒ crew toΒ the Sahalee neighborhoodΒ is Redmond-basedΒ Medic 19, Collins said. But on that day at that time, thatΒ medic team wasΒ responding to another emergency.

The closest paramedic unit available wasΒ Medic 14, theΒ one basedΒ on the Issaquah Highlands. Medic units, Collins explained, are run through King County and thereΒ is a limited number of them.

AlsoΒ during the Aug. 24 fire, commuters were heading home and ambulances and emergency vehicles hadΒ to manueverΒ through rush-hour traffic on 228th Avenue Northeast, especially near .Β 

CollinsΒ added that Medic 19 can beat Medic 14 to that SahaleeΒ location by about three minutes.Β 

Overall, Smith, of the homeowners association, lauded the fire crewsΒ for stopping the blaze from jumping to neighboring homes. He pointedΒ out that the area has tall trees.Β 

"I think we would all like to have a magic wand to stop tragedies like this immediately but short of that, I'm glad we have trained professionals willing to risk their own lives to respond to our emergencies," he said in his email.

"We should all strive to do better, but also give credit where it's due."

Editor's note: This story has been revised since it was first posted to include information sent Monday by the NORCOM dispatch center. An earlier version of the story talked about a "lack of communication." But it appears there was a "miscommunication," based on information from NORCOM.Β Neighbors who helped Dale Simpson from the burning house will be .

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