IAFF spotlight understaffing following Fall River fire

July 15, 2025
IAFF spotlight understaffing following Fall River fire

The International Association of Fire Fighters (IAFF) has commented on a fire in an assisted living facility in Fall River, Massachusetts, which left nine people fatally injured and 30 others hospitalized.

The IAFF has shared its belief that the outcome would have been different had there had been more firefighters on the first trucks to arrive.

General President, IAFF, Edward Kelly’s statement

General President Edward Kelly shared: “Last night was not only a tragedy for Fall River, but it was also a travesty for the people in that building.”

The fire at Gabriel House left many of its 70 residents trapped inside. Some were seen hanging from windows, screaming for help, according to news reports. Five firefighters were also taken to the hospital with minor injuries. 

President, Fall River MA Local 1314, Michael O’Reagan’s statement

Fall River, MA Local 1314 President Michael O’Reagan was among the many members who responded from home while off duty.

O’Reagan added: “What I saw when I came here last night was something short of miraculous. I can’t say enough good things about what my firefighters did and how they reacted and the lives that they saved.

“We did the best we could with what we had and what we had was not enough and for so many years in the city of Fall River, public safety has been a line item and lives are a budgetary concern. Last night was an example of this.”  

Captain, Fall River MA Local 1314, Frank O’Reagan’s statement

Michael’s brother, Local 1314 Capt. Frank O’Reagan, also responded off-duty and praised the tireless efforts of firefighters at the scene. He said many of the people in the building were disabled and needed help getting out.

Frank O’Reagan commented: “When I got here, firefighters on scene had already done an unbelievable amount of work making rescues out of windows and down stairways. They were really beat up.”

The consequences of understaffing

Only two of Fall River’s 10 fire companies are staffed at the national standard of four firefighters per truck. The remaining eight operate with just three, a shortage that Kelly says costs lives.

Kelly continued: “Had they been staffed properly, there would’ve been eight more firefighters making rescues and lives would have been saved.

“There were only 32 firefighters on scene at first. With full staffing, there would have been 40 and personally, I believe five more people could’ve lived.”

He pointed to neighboring New Bedford as an example, where all nine fire companies run with four fire fighters per truck. 

Kelly shared: “New Bedford has fewer companies, but more firefighters at a fire like this.

“Fall River firefighters, some off-duty without gear, saved dozens of lives, but it wasn’t enough. This city deserves better.” 

Reduced efficiency with fewer numbers

A National Institute of Standards and Technology study shows three-person companies are 25% less efficient than those with four when performing the same tasks.

Kelly added: “That’s a reduction in time and a reduction in rescuing people, and that’s what we saw last night.

“Time matters and as people are exposed to smoke, they lose consciousness, carbon monoxide takes over their bodies and unfortunately, they die.”

“That’s why we need adequate staffing on the apparatus responding to these fires because every second counts,” he added.

Staffing issues

Michael O’Reagan attributed the city’s staffing issues to decades of cuts and questioned the cost of human life.

He said: “It’s been a slow, gradual process of cutting back on staffing to balance the budget. We find it completely unacceptable. I would ask the mayor: To what cost?”  

Now, union leaders are calling on Fall River Mayor Paul Coogan to prioritize safer staffing standards to prevent future loss of life. 

Kelly concluded: “The mayor could decide tonight to staff this city properly. He can order the chief to put four firefighters on every apparatus in this city and it would be done.” 

According to news reports, this is the deadliest fire in Massachusetts since 1984.

Fall River fire could have been prevented, say IAFF: Summary

The IAFF has commented on a fire in an assisted living facility in Fall River, Massachusetts, saying that the staffing issues could have prevented some of the losses.

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