Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Residents Anxious To Return Home After Highrise Fire

Demetre Papadopolous and his dog Pluto were out for a walk when the fire started.

Demetre Papadopolous and his dog Pluto were out for a walk when the fire started.

DAVID COOPER/TORONTO STAR
Debra Black Staff reporter

Sharon Dougherty only had time to grab her housecoat to cover the nightgown she was wearing, hop on her scooter and leave her first-floor apartment.

The 66-year-old, who suffers from diabetes and high-blood pressure, was one of hundreds residents left homeless after their 30-storey apartment building at 200 Wellesley St. E. was evacuated Friday night after a major fire.

Fire officials speaking to reporters Saturday estimated that 1,700 people were affected by the blaze, but revised that figure on Sunday back to 1,200 as they had originally said Friday.

After a restless night at a nearby community centre, Dougherty waited anxiously Saturday hoping she could get back into her apartment.

But as the day progressed it became clear it would be a while before she would be let back into her home. She had hoped at the very least to be able to go back in to pick up her charger for her scooter, some clothing and valuables.

“It just makes you confused,” she said as she waited, fretful about how she would charge her scooter. “But you just roll with the punches — whatever comes. You take one step at a time.”

It seems unlikely any of the residents, many of whom are immigrants or physically or mentally challenged, will have access to their suites over the weekend.

Ontario Fire Marshal’s Office investigators are trying to determine the cause of the fire as well as the extent of water, electrical and structural damage done to the building.

The investigation is in “its preliminary stages,” said Scott Evenden of the Ontario Fire Marshal’s Office. It may be many months before fire officials determine the cause of the blaze.

The building did not have sprinklers on every floor, Toronto Fire Service Commander Bob O’Hallarn said Friday. But because it is an older building it is not required by code to have them.

The fire is “probably as ferocious an apartment fire as I’ve ever seen,” said O’Hallarn.

“We really don’t know when residents can go back,” he said. “We have to assess structural, electrical and water damage. We must have a proper fire-alarm system.”

Residents of the building milled around the Wellesley St. Community Centre on Saturday, which is just across from the apartment building.

Many of them had spent a sleepless night there on cots, worrying about what was going to happen. Their gaze often drifted upwards to the charred and blackened balcony of the apartment where the fire began on the 24th floor. Nearby, on an adjacent balcony, a Canadian flag flapped in the wind.

“It’s terrible. I couldn’t sleep. I was all shook up,” said Gail Lacroix, 57.

Lacroix, sat on a scooter outside the community centre on Saturday with her little dog, wondering where she would stay until she could return to her home.

She suffers from lung disease and asthma and needs oxygen. “If I lay down, I can’t breathe,” she explained.

Demetre Papadopolous sat forlornly leaning against the wall of the community centre, his dog Pluto covered in a Red Cross blanket by his side. He had been out walking with his dog when the fire started. He said he slept on the floor of a nearby building on Friday night.

Doughtery, with a blanket covering her lap, is worried about the possible damage to her apartment. Although she lives on the first floor, water from fighting the fire had flooded through the vents and destroyed her floors.

“I’ll phone my sister,” she said, hoping she could stay there for a few days.

A team from Toronto Community Housing and the Red Cross worked most of Saturday to help residents, getting medicine, food and accommodation for those who were in need.

Some residents, however, opted to stay with relatives or friends rather than spend any time in a shelter. One resident, who asked not to be identified, stayed at the Royal York hotel Friday night because she had apartment insurance, she said. “I’m a basket case,” she said. “I didn’t get a chance to get my VISA or my meds … I don’t know what I’m going to do after Monday.”

Located in the heart of St. James Town, one of Canada’s most densely populated areas; the building with 711 units is one of the largest public housing units in the country.

The fire is believed to have started in unit 2424 where Stephen Vassilev lived. He left his apartment Friday morning only to return to find the building in flames. His one-bedroom unit was full of law books and legal papers, pertaining to a legal dispute in Elliot Lake.

“I believe it was arson” meant to destroy the documents, said the 59-year-old man on Friday night. “It’s arson for sure so that my story could not be told.”

Toronto fire officials and officials from the fire marshal’s office confirmed that the apartment where the fire started was full of “debris.” They ruled out any possibility of the fire starting on the balcony.

On Friday night many residents had been put up in the Wellesley Community Centre, St. Michael’s Hospital, a University of Toronto exam centre and a Toronto Community Housing seniors’ building on Christie St. north of Dupont St., said housing spokesman Barry Koen-Butt.

“This is Toronto's Katrina,” said John Ploeg, a disabled resident who said Friday night he would not be able to sleep on the cots he was being offered.

Toronto Fire Chief William Stewart said Friday the blaze “was nothing like I’ve ever seen in my 39-years,” adding highrise fires are usually resolved in under an hour.

However, firefighters remained on scene Saturday evening, monitoring the building for flare ups and smouldering debris, said Capt. Adrian Ratushniak.

Fourteen people were hospitalized Friday night, including three children, one of them just a month old. Three of the injuries were described as very serious. Three firefighters were also taken to hospital and as many as 10 were treated for heat exhaustion.

By Saturday evening, seven residents — including a mother and daughter — were still at St. Michael’s Hospital, but they were all “doing well and in good spirits,” said housing spokesman Koen-Butt.

At least 120 firefighters and 27 fire trucks were on the scene, which at one point was deemed a seven-alarm blaze.

One Dead In Building Collapse, One Injured

Sept. 28, 2010, Montreal - Investigators are trying to determine what caused a building to collapse on Monday, killing one of six men who were renovating the three-storey structure at the time.

Fire service spokesman Remi Perry says the victim, a 54-year-old man, was found on the second floor of the residential unit overlooking Montreal's sprawling Lafontaine park.

He told reporters that the first crew arrived four minutes after receiving a 911 call.

Most of the six workers had already managed to flee the building. But there was a delay before rescuers could reach the victim.

"We had to make sure the building was secure before we entered,'' Perry said.

He says the third floor caved into the second floor and that's where the victim was found.

The province's workplace health and safety board has been called in to investigate.

A spokesman for the city's ambulance service says one of the five surviving workers suffered minor injuries and was treated for shock.

Parts of the Sherbrooke Street building are still scarred by the charred remnants of a fire that ravaged the structure last year.

"There was a fire last year, but we don't know if there's a relation between the renovations and the fire,'' Perry said.

Last September's fire was described at the time as suspicious.

The building, which was empty when the fire broke out, had also been undergoing renovations.

According to the first firefighters on the scene in 2009, the blaze probably started in a container which was placed in front of the building.

No one was injured in the fire, but neighbours living in adjoining buildings had to be evacuated.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

SUV Rips Side Off Of Ambulance In Maryland

SUSAN PHILLIPS, WUSA9 | Thursday, September 16, 2010

DISTRICT HEIGHTS, Md. (WUSA) - A violent collision between an SUV and a ambulance has killed three people and sent two paramedics to the hospital.

Mark Brady, spokesperson for Prince George's County Fire and Rescue, says the crash happened shortly after Midnight in the 5600 block of Marlboro Pike in District Heights. According to Brady, investigators believe ambulance 826 was traveling west on Marlboro Pike on it's way to an overdose call on Tanow Place when it came upon a GMC Suburban traveling eastbound in the westbound lanes at a high rate of speed.

The ambulance, with emergency lights and siren activated, swerved to avoid a head-on collision. That's when the SUV side-swiped the ambulance and hit a brick wall and utility pole before landing on its roof. Brady says the SUV came to rest approximately 120 feet from where it struck the ambulance.

The SUV was occupied by three men, who were all pronounced dead at the scene. The two Firefighter/Medics in the ambulance were taken to a local trauma center for evaluation where they were treated and released.

Brady says the entire right side of the patient compartment of the ambulance was ripped away in the crash.

Accident Reconstruction Team from the Prince George's County Police Department was on the scene for hours Thursday morning.

The roadway has reopened.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Fire Dept Refuses To Help Move 700-lb Person

Ill. fire department turns down request to help lift 700-pound woman. A Deputy Springfield Fire Chief said policy requires that requests to help lift, transfer or transport patients in non-emergencies be turned down

By Dean Olsen
The State Journal-Register

ROCKFORD, Ill. — A Rockford-area ambulance company owner is calling the Springfield Fire Department unprofessional and insensitive after the department refused to help the company's paramedics lift a 700-pound patient into her Springfield home after she was discharged from a northern Illinois hospital Friday.

"I was just stunned at that overall attitude," said Robert Esmond, owner of Mercy Ambulance Service in Loves Park. "To me, it's short-changing the citizens. There shouldn't be problems with agencies helping each other out."

Esmond said he never before was refused free assistance from a municipal fire department when his paramedics needed help lifting an obese patient into the patient's house.

Department policy
Deputy Springfield Fire Chief Greg Surbeck said department policy requires that requests to help lift, transfer or transport patients in non-emergencies be turned down. The policy dates from March 2009, he said.

Several firefighters had received workers' compensation because of back injuries suffered while lifting obese patients under those circumstances, he said.

In one sense, Surbeck said he empathized with Esmond, because the fire department and medical-transport organizations are dealing with the ramifications of a nationwide epidemic of obesity.

Esmond said he has transported discharged patients to their homes in Rockford, Chicago's suburbs and several downstate communities. Fire departments in those towns have been willing to spare several workers, at no charge, for the 15 or 20 minutes it takes to safely move an obese patient into his or her home, he said.

Surbeck said he would be surprised if Springfield's policy is unique, adding that it's unfair for the owner of a for-profit company to criticize a tax-supported fire department.

'Sweet deal'
"How is that the taxpayers' problem?" asked Surbeck, a paramedic and former ambulance service employee. "He's got a sweet deal going - he's got free labor."

Surbeck said the Springfield department focuses on emergency services and making firefighters and paramedics available for fires and health-related emergencies.

Esmond said Medicare and Medicaid, which often cover patients Mercy Ambulance transports, don't pay him enough to justify sending more vehicles to help the two paramedics in a single ambulance.

"We're sympathetic," Surbeck said. "We all have large friends and family members."

However, he said, "A private business accepts a certain amount of risk."

Esmond said Springfield's department should make an exception for out-of-town transport companies that have a hard time arranging for other assistance.

"It's not like it takes a lot of time or resources," he said.

Esmond said 15 minutes of several firefighters' time is all that would have been required.

But Surbeck said transferring a 700-pound patient probably would have required six of his firefighters to work with Esmond's two paramedics for an hour.

Local firm responds
After several attempts, Esmond was able to make arrangements with a Springfield-based ambulance company that was planning to meet Esmond's two paramedics Friday night and help move the patient.

Esmond said he hoped the Springfield company would help at no charge. Otherwise, he said the patient, who is covered by Medicaid and Medicare, might be stuck with a bill not covered by either program.

The 42-year-old patient didn't want her name published, according to her brother, Andy Johnson of Springfield. Johnson said his sister is moving into his mobile home after a three-week stay at Kindred Hospital-Sycamore.

She has chronic health problems and was recovering from an infection, he said.

Johnson's sister previously lived with another sister in Sherman, he said. After previous hospitalizations, Sherman firefighters always helped transport workers lift her into the house, Johnson said.

But he said he understood the reasons behind the Springfield Fire Department's policy.

Chico Fire Dept erforms Good Deed

A firefighter used a ladder to scramble up to the roof and retrieve the club

By Greg Welter
The Chico Enterprise-Record

CHICO, Calif. — When Lynn Cornie's driver slipped from his hands and wound up on a neighbor's roof as he practiced for a round of golf Monday, the last thing his wife wanted was for her husband to climb up and get it.

After Cornie left for his game, minus his driver, Dorothy Cornie and her neighbor, Sandra Green, conferred on the problem and decided to call the Chico Fire Department.

A crew from Station 4 arrived and a firefighter used a ladder to scramble up to the roof and retrieve the club, which appeared undamaged.

When she told her husband about it, Cornie said he was a little disgusted at first, but then accepted that he probably shouldn't be climbing onto a tile roof.

Lynn Cornie is almost 92. His wife is 90.

"He loves to play golf, but he mostly just practices," Dorothy Cornie said.

She recalled that the Chico Fire Department has helped them out before by changing batteries in smoke detectors mounted high on a vaulted ceiling.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Calgary Fire Dept Remembers Fallen Firefighters

On September 8, 2010, the Calgary Fire Department, The City of Calgary and event attendees honoured fallen firefighters at the annual memorial service held near Tribute Plaza at the Walls of Memory in front of City Hall. The formal service brought together the public, members of protective services and the families and loved ones of the 26 Calgary firefighters who have lost their lives.

“It is the memory of those that have lost their lives as a result of firefighting that continues to remind those in the service, as well as those we provide service to, about the dangers that firefighters face,” said Fire Chief Bruce Burrell. “We have learned so much from the past and continue to make strides in ensuring the safety of the men and women of the Calgary Fire Department who risk their lives to save others.”

Burrell and other City staff, including the mayor and several aldermen, paid their respects alongside family, friends and the larger protective services family during the solemn occasion.

An honour guard, a bagpipe parade and a wreath laying ceremony were part of the event. These lives were also celebrated through a singing of the national anthem, a ringing of a ceremonial bell and the reading of several prayers and speeches.

This event happens every year and every year new names are added because of the harmful and lasting effects of toxins which firefighters and other emergency personnel are exposed to throughout their careers.

Monday, September 13, 2010

Photo Provides Some Closure For 9/11 Fallen Firefighter's Family

Photo provides some peace for family of firefighter killed on 9/11The father of a fallen firefighter scoured photo archives of the National 9/11 Museum and the memorial's website

By Jesse Solomon
CNN

NEW YORK — Judson Box has never known exactly how his son, Gary, died on September 11, 2001. But an unexpected find nine years later has given him a glimpse into his son's final hours.

Gary, then 35, had been working as a firefighter in Brooklyn for roughly five years when the terrorists attacked. He did not speak to his father the day of the attack and his body was never recovered, leaving the circumstances of his death a mystery.

On September 11, 2009, Gary's sister, Christine, was visiting the Tribute Center when an employee asked her if she was looking for someone specifically. She mentioned her brother Gary, and the employee showed her to a picture of a firefighter in the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel that had a caption bearing Gary's name.

But it was not Gary. It was a photo of Brian Bilcher, another member of Gary's fire squad who also perished on 9/11.

The discovery compelled Gary's father to dig deeper, clinging to the possibility that there could be a similar picture of his son out there.

Box scoured photo archives of the National 9/11 Museum and the memorial's website, which allows users to upload photos from 9/11 directly to the site.

After searching one night for more than five hours, Box went to sleep, physically and emotionally exhausted. The next morning, his wife, Helen, called him into the living room as he was eating breakfast.

She showed him a photo of a firefighter running through the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel toward the Towers alongside cars stuck in traffic.

This time, it was Gary.

"I was out of out control, emotionally," Box said. "Thanking God, being so happy that I had something to see."

Eager for more answers, Box contacted the National 9/11 Museum and Memorial in an attempt to track down the photographer. Several months later, the museum gave him the e-mail address of Erik Troelson, a Danish businessman who was stranded in the tunnel on his way to a meeting when he snapped the picture of Gary.

Having entered the tunnel before the first plane hit, Troelson was unaware of the tragedy that was taking place outside.

"Suddenly, the girl in the car in front of us got out crying," he said. "Then we turned on the radio and heard the events as they unfolded."

Soon after, firetrucks started racing through the tunnel, but a car with blown-out tires jammed traffic, he said.

"Some of the bigger trucks got stuck, so the guys started walking briskly past us," Troelson said. "Gary Box was one of the guys."

Box and Troelson corresponded via e-mail for months, with Troelson doing his best to recall the day's timeline of events.

On Tuesday, the National 9/11 Museum and Memorial foundation arranged for a surprise rendezvous between the men at their annual fundraiser.

They shared an emotional moment onstage. Afterward, they spoke at length, with Box expressing his gratitude.

"I think I said about 300 times thank you and God bless you, that's all I could say," Box said. "I think I told him I love you, and I don't tell anybody that."

Nine years after September 11, Box said he still feels the pain of that day. He doesn't have the means to make large donations to the museum, but has sought to promote their cause through his story.

"We need that in this country because too many people forget," Box said of the museum.

"I wish everybody could get what I got."

Friday, September 10, 2010

Gas Line Explosion In San Bruno California Destroys 53 Homes, Injures Many

TREVOR HUNNICUTT
Associated Press Writer

Updated 11:55 a.m. EST

SAN BRUNO, Calif. - Fire crews sprayed water on smoldering homes Friday morning after a massive explosion apparently triggered by a broken gas line sent flames roaring through a neighborhood near San Francisco, killing six people and injuring dozens, officials said.



Fire crews are still working to douse the blaze and authorities have said there could be other casualties. The number of deaths was rising: San Francisco state Sen. Leland Yee told The Associated Press he was briefed at the scene Friday morning by the California Emergency Management Agency and at least six people have died.

California Lieutenant Governor Abel Maldonado said at a news conference he knew of at least four people killed and more than 50 injured. He said a natural gas line ruptured at 6:24 p.m. Thursday near the blast but they're not yet sure why. The explosion was heard for miles and shot a fireball more than 1,000 feet in the air and sent frightened residents fleeing for safety and rushing to get belongings out of burning homes. The blast left a giant crater and sent flames tearing across several suburban blocks in San Bruno.

After the initial blast, flames reached as high as 100 feet (30 meters) as the fire fueled itself on burning homes, leaving some in total ruins and reducing parked automobiles to burned out hulks. At least 38 homes were destroyed and dozens more seriously damaged, fire officials said early Friday.

The fire had spread to 10 acres (four hectares) and was 50 percent contained late Thursday, said Jay Allen, spokesman for the California Emergency Management Agency.

California Lieutenant Governor Abel Maldonado, acting governor while Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger was in Asia on a trade mission, declared a state of emergency in San Mateo County.

"It was like a bomb went off," Maldonado told CNN from the scene early Friday.

He said the cause of the conflagration was still unclear.

Pacific Gas and Electric Co. said Friday morning a damaged section of a 30-inch (76-centimeter) steel gas pipeline had been isolated and gas flow had been stopped. About 300 customers were without gas service and about 700 without electricity at 4 a.m. Friday.

The National Transportation Safety Board said Friday that it has sent a four-member team to San Bruno to investigate the blast.

Fire Capt. Charlie Barringer said the neighborhood was engulfed by the time firefighters arrived, even though the fire station was only a few blocks away. He said the blast took out the entire water system, forcing firefighters to pump water from more than two miles (three kilometers) away.

Victims suffering from serious burns began arriving at San Francisco Bay area hospitals shortly after the blast. An estimate of the number of injured wasn't immediately available.

Stephanie Mullen, Associated Press news editor for photos based in San Francisco, was attending children's soccer practice with her two children and husband at Crestmoor High School when she saw the blast at 6:14 p.m.

"First, it was a low deep roar and everybody looked up, and we all knew something big was happening," she said. "Then there was a huge explosion with a ball of fire that went up behind the high school several thousand feet into the sky.

___

Associated Press Writers Juliana Barbassa in San Bruno and Marcus Wohlsen, John S. Marshall and Jason Dearen in San Francisco contributed to this report.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Fatal Crash Southeast of Calgary

Fatal crash

This is the vehicle which was involved in a fatal crash east of Calgary.

Updated: Thu Sep. 09 2010 15:11:26

ctvcalgary.ca

One person is dead after a crash east of the city.

Just before 9 a.m. Thursday a minivan collided with a grain truck on Highway 24, south of Highway 22X.

RCMP say it appears the southbound minivan crossed the centre line and side-swiped the truck.

The driver of the minivan was killed.

The truck driver was not hurt.

The road was closed in both directions for several hours. It is now open in both directions.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Winds Push Powerlines, Start Approx. 85 Fires In Detroit

WDIV
Reprinted with Permission

DETROIT - Detroit fire officials said an estimated 85 fires broke out in the city late Tuesday afternoon.


The strong winds snapped power lines and fueled fires that burned buildings, homes, garages and nearly one entire city block to the ground.

On the east side, a vacant commercial building on Hendrie and Dubois streets caught fire just before 5 p.m.

Also on the east side, there were house fires reported on Quinn Street near 7 Mile and Van Dyke; McClellan Street and Barry; McClellan Street at Murray Street; Carpenter and Fenelon streets; Luce Avenue and Bloom Street; and Moenart Street.

Investigators told Local 4 some of the fires on the east side are believed to be arson. One person is being questioned by authorities.

On the west side, fires were reported on Curtis Street and Livernois Avenue, and on Plainview Avenue and Evergreen Road. Several occupied and vacant homes were destroyed.

Detroit firefighters said they called in fire crews from several surrounding communities to help. “Our manpower was so sparse,” said Deputy Fire Chief Gregory Williams.

Local 4 crews spotted neighbors at one fire scene assisting fire crews in extinguishing the fires. “I had to do what I could do,” one Detroit resident said. “I’m not a fireman, but I can help them pull the hose and direct them to the problem.”

No injuries have been reported.

DTE Energy said late Tuesday evening that it had 26,000 customers without power.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Firefighters Recieve Award Of Valour

Hawaii responders get top IAFC honors for dramatic rescuesThe incident began with a pilot and student who made a crash landing, but obstacles developed along the way

By Jamie Thompson
FireRescue1 Senior Editor

CHICAGO — Four responders who conducted dramatic rescues in poor weather and tough terrain in Hawaii were acknowledged for their bravery at Fire-Rescue International.

Captain Charles J. Metivier, Rescue Operator Kalani Abreu and Rescue Specialists Roy Constantino and Francisco Garcia of Fire Rescue 3 of the County of Kaua'i Fire Department were given the 2010 International Benjamin Franklin Fire Service Award for Valor on Thursday.

"My crew may say it was all in a day's work, but I will tell you that very few people can do this day's work and live to tell about it," Kaua'i Fire Chief Robert Westerman said.

The incident began with a pilot and student being last reported at 5,000 feet trying to fly in their aircraft through a hole in the clouds to Hanapepe Valley, a heavily-wooded area with a thick forest canopy.

Crews from Rescue 3 flew above the dense rainforest for about 45 minutes before spotting debris along a ridge in a ravine.

Constantino and Garcia were short-hauled into a stream bed below the crash site, but the 80-degree slope and 30-knot winds forced them to be pulled up and lowered through the forest canopy above the crash site.

They first reached the student, placing him in a rescue seat and harness so he could be extricated to a temporary landing site.

However, as conditions worsened, the helicopter was unable to extricate the seriously injured pilot to safety, despite repeated attempts, forcing Constantino and Garcia to remain overnight with him in the ravine.

At the same time, another call came in. A hunter with a possible broken leg was stranded on another ridge about 20 miles away. However, conditions made even that rescue attempt impossible.

Near dawn, the helicopter returned to both scenes, eventually being able to transport both men to hospitals after several attempts in the face of heavy rain and strong winds.

The Award for Valor is the highest honor bestowed by the IAFC, and is cosponsored by the IAFC and the Motorola Solutions business of Motorola, Inc.

Reinforcing Public Trust In Firefighters

4 ways to reinforce public trust in firefighters
Acting U.S. Fire Administrator Chief Glenn Gaines' speech at FRI should serve as a reminder of the role we play in the community

By Chief Adam K. Thiel
FireRescue1 Editorial Advisor

Fifteen years ago, as a recruit firefighter in Fairfax County, Virginia, I was fortunate to hear Chief Gaines' welcome speech at an early point in my fire and emergency services career.

So it's probably not a surprise that I agree with his assessment of the current state of our relationship with the communities we serve.

Beyond handling the items listed in the Acting United States Fire Administrator's Fire-Rescue International address, there are a few simple things we can all do to reinforce public trust and confidence.

Be nice!
Retired Phoenix Fire Chief Alan Brunacini is very fond of this expression — and he's right. The average citizen doesn't understand the technical aspects of our job, but they definitely feel a certain way depending on how they're treated during all aspects of an emergency incident.

Being run off the road by a careening fire engine doesn't inspire confidence; neither does receiving a sour expression and muttered comments during a fire alarm response at 3 a.m.

Be good!
While they may not understand the details, anyone watching an emergency response can generally see if the involved fire-EMS personnel are calm, confident, and competent.

When you have it, take the time to explain what you did to homeowners, spectators, and fellow responders from other agencies.

Be a student!
Never stop learning. One of the great things about the fire and emergency services, career and volunteer, is the fact that we can never know everything about the multiple facets of the job.
Take charge of your own professional development and learn something new, or practice something old, every day.

Be a teacher!
Pass it on. We all have something to contribute to our brothers and sisters in service. Remember how you felt as a new probie (aka, candidate, newbie, rookie, or booter)?

Take someone under your wing and become a trusted coach and mentor. People will notice...