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Ill. fire district ends ambulance service standby for neighboring FD

Union leaders say Homer Township Fire Protection District鈥檚 decision could delay patient transports as call volume continues to rise

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The Orland Fire Protection District administrative building on Aug. 26, 2025.

Addison Wright/TNS

By Olivia Stevens
Daily Southtown

HOMER TOWNSHIP, Ill. 鈥 Months after one of the Orland Fire Protection District鈥檚 ambulances went offline, the Homer Township Fire Protection District communicated it would no longer allow its own ambulances to be held on standby within Orland鈥檚 stations.

Homer Township Fire Protection District Chief Dave Bricker sent a letter to Orland鈥檚 then-Chief Kevin Doyle in December, notifying him Homer Township鈥檚 ambulances would not change quarters to Orland when ambulances were available at other stations or vehicles with life-saving equipment were available.

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鈥淭his takes our fire and EMS response away from our area to cover your area,鈥 Bricker stated in the letter recently obtained by the Daily Southtown. Bricker added that the Orland district 鈥渉as what appears to be sufficient coverage, other than a transport unit that can be called in from outside.鈥

Orland Professional Firefighters Local 2754 union Vice President Dave Popp said he understands the Homer Township chief鈥檚 position, but removing the backup service from the neighboring fire district could result in delayed care for those who need to be taken to a hospital within the Orland district鈥檚 jurisdiction.

鈥淥ftentimes, strokes, heart attacks, different situations 鈥 those patients need to be transported immediately,鈥 Popp said. 鈥淭here is a built-in delay if they ( Homer Township ) are not going to come and sit in our station.鈥

But Bricker said he鈥檚 worried about Orland taking resources from his own fire district, an issue he discussed with Doyle multiple times before sending the letter.

Doyle was Homer Township鈥檚 fire chief before he joined Orland in October, and after four months with the Orland district.

鈥淗im and I had talked about it, when he was chief here, about stopping going over there for what we would consider no reason,鈥 Bricker said. 鈥淢y business is making sure my citizens are taken care of, and emptying one of my stations completely for my guys to go sit in a station where there鈥檚 five people sitting 鈥 that鈥檚 not what we鈥檙e here for.鈥

The Orland Fire Protection District鈥檚 board promoted John Purtill, the district鈥檚 former deputy chief, to the new chief during its meeting Tuesday. He will be sworn in at 6 p.m. June 9 at the Orland Park Civic Center, 14750 S Ravinia Ave.

Purtill said he was unavailable to talk on Friday, and Orland Fire Protection District board President Beth Damas Kasper did not respond to requests for comment.

The union has about increases in calls coupled with a decrease in service since the fire district鈥檚 board voted last summer to remove from service an ambulance that operated on 12-hours shifts from circulation. The number of incidents requiring the Orland Fire Protection District鈥檚 response jumped from 9,959 in 2016 to 12,811 in 2025, a nearly 30% increase.

The board attempted to bring back the ambulance a month later, but the Illinois Department of Public Health . Union President Dan Fagan said at the time the board could have brought back the ambulance for 24-hour daily service, but several members refused.

Popp said the only option to continue the same level of care for the 33 miles under the fire district鈥檚 jurisdiction, including Orland Park, Orland Hills and unincorporated Orland Township, is to increase staffing.

鈥淥ur calls keep going up every year, our transports go up 鈥 they don鈥檛 go down,鈥 Popp said. 鈥淲e are running the same model as we have been for the last 15 years.鈥

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