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One of the busiest in the nation, LAFD firehouse sees more ODs than fires

Firefighters assigned to Station 11 have responded to 599 overdoses compared to 36 structure fires through August of this year

Pitfire

Emergency medical technicians (EMTs) and paramedics with Los Angeles Fire Station 11 work to revive a man who overdosed at the corner of S. Alvarado and Wilshire Blvd. In MacArthur Park in Los Angeles on October 9, 2024. The EMT鈥檚 were able to revive the man with narcan, used in fentanyl overdoses, and was taken to the hospital by ambulance. Station 11 is constantly called on to handle drug overdoses and other non-fire emergencies.

Photography by Genaro Molina

By Steve Lopez
Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES 鈥 If you spend much time in the Westlake neighborhood of Los Angeles, you will notice, amid the clamor of buses and trucks and car horns and vendors hawking their goods, a nearly steady symphony of sirens.

They scream day and night in rapid response to an endless run of emergencies, many of them in and around MacArthur Park. But it鈥檚 not usually a fire that LAFD Station 11 is responding to. Through August of this year, there have been 599 drug overdose calls, compared with 36 runs for structure fires.

鈥淚鈥檝e had three in one day, same person,鈥 said firefighter/paramedic Madison Viray, who has worked at Station 11 for nine years.


鈥淎s healthcare professionals, it is not the purview of EMS providers to judge our patients. It is our job to care for them鈥

That鈥檚 just one measure of how bad the epidemic is in the low-income neighborhood where homelessness is rampant, drugs are sold and consumed in the open, in 2023, and of gang threats and thefts by addicts.

In the middle of it all is Station 11, located on 7th Street two blocks from the park, with its trucks rolling out around the clock in every direction. Hanging on a wall inside the station is a proclamation from Councilwoman Eunisses Hernandez and her colleagues honoring the crew for being ranked by Firehouse Magazine as the in the nation in 2022.

This year, Station 11 ranks just behind Station 9 in Skid Row (site of the city鈥檚 other major drug zone) for total runs, but it is on course to match last year鈥檚 total of 15,262 calls for fire and medical incidents (the majority of which do not involve overdoses).

While I was meeting with several members of the crew in Station 11 Wednesday afternoon, Viray and engineer Cody Eitner left abruptly to answer a call from an alley near 6th Street and Burlington Avenue. They returned a short time later to say they were too late to save the victim.

鈥淪omeone found him and called, but they鈥檇 been gone for too long and there was nothing we could do,鈥 Eitner said.

The word on the street is that the drugs in the neighborhood are dirty. Cocaine might be spiked with fentanyl, and fentanyl might be spiked with the veterinary tranquilizer Xylazine, or 鈥渢ranq鈥 鈥攁ll of which elevates the possibility of bad reactions.


Knowing how xylazine presents clinically, as well as how it impacts overdose management is important for any provider responding to illicit drug overdoses

It鈥檚 not uncommon to see people in the park with multiple festering ulcers on their arms and legs 鈥 one of the side-effects of tranq. Nor is it uncommon to see people bent in half, like twisted statues, because of muscle rigidity the firefighters refer to as the 鈥淔entanyl fold.鈥

Battalion Chief Brian Franco, who first worked at Station 11 two decades ago as a firefighter, said, 鈥淲e鈥檝e seen from the overdoses than we did with heroin.鈥

And yet with fentanyl, the drug naloxone, if administered quickly enough, can reverse the effects of opiates and save lives. Sometimes it鈥檚 used by friends of the victim, or by a MacArthur Park overdose response team recently initiated by Councilmember Hernandez and the L.A. County Department of Public Health. Or by crews from Station 11.

鈥淭he vast majority of our [overdose] calls now are fentanyl,鈥 said Capt. Adam VanGerpen, who serves as a public information officer but also goes on runs. 鈥淚f we see that there are very shallow respirations 鈥 then we鈥檙e gonna open up their eyes and see if their pupils are pinpoint. Now we know it鈥檚 probably not 鈥 cardiac arrest or 鈥 respiratory arrest. Now we鈥檙e thinking, OK, this is an overdose.鈥

It can be easier to treat a fentanyl case than a PCP or meth overdose, VanGerpen said, because the latter two drugs can make a person agitated and combative. If it鈥檚 a fentanyl overdose, responders will administer the naloxone as a nasal spray (Narcan), inject it into a muscle, or pump it through an IV, depending on the situation.

鈥淎nytime we鈥檙e successful, it鈥檚 satisfying,鈥 said Capt. Adam Brandos. 鈥淚n a station like this, where we run so many calls as we do, and it鈥檚 kind of a monotonous routine, those little wins are really good with the morale. But it鈥檚 not so satisfying to see the repeat. And we鈥檙e not changing the cycle at all. 鈥 It keeps repeating itself over and over again.鈥

Sometimes, Brandos said, a single response can trigger a cascade: 鈥淲e may go on one call in the park where that call turns into four, because 鈥 of the other guy who鈥檚 over by the tree, and the other gal that鈥檚 over by the lake, and then the other person that鈥檚 over here. So that鈥檚 pretty normal.鈥

What is most striking about it all, Brandos said, is that these scenes play out so frequently they have become normalized.

When you first set eyes on the depths of social collapse and public distress, it鈥檚 shocking. But it鈥檚 all there again the next day, and the next, and although the shock endures, a bit of numbness takes hold, along with doubts that anyone in power is up to the task of restoring any semblance of order.


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Anthony Temple, an emergency incident technician at Station 11, took me on a dark virtual tour of a typical day, beginning at the Westlake/MacArthur Park Metro Station, which has doubled in recent years as a subterranean hall of horrors:

鈥淧eople have overdosed ... on the subway platform while people are getting out of the train,鈥 Temple said. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e got people moving around this person, and we all come down there and do what we鈥檝e got to do and take them to the hospital and leave. And you go back to the station and you get dispatched on another overdose where the person will be down, on the sidewalk, kind of like hanging into the street. 鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 just day in, day out, morning, noon, night, sidewalk, platform, staircase, park,鈥 Temple said. 鈥淵ou know, it鈥檚 just like everywhere.鈥

Two members of the crew, Viray and Brandos, said they鈥檝e brought their children to the neighborhood to show them where Dad works, and to show them

And the reaction?

鈥淪hocked,鈥 Viray said of his 14-year-old son and 8-year-old daughter.

鈥淚 wanted to show them what some decision-making could look like,鈥 said Brandos, whose girls are 9 and 11. 鈥淭hey wanted to know why everybody was leaning over on the sidewalk. ... I told them exactly what was going on.鈥

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The crew told me they share a camaraderie that鈥檚 specific to the demands of Station 11. If you choose to work there, it鈥檚 because you like staying busy, you take pride in the number of runs, and you learn to accept that you didn鈥檛 create the crisis and can鈥檛 fix it. You can only respond to it, one call at a time.

Just before 6:30 p.m., a call came in. A middle-aged man was down at Alvarado Street and Wilshire Boulevard, across the street from the park, in possible cardiac arrest from an overdose. A truck and an ambulance rolled, lights flashing, sirens blaring. They were on the scene in less than three minutes.

The subject was down in front of Yoshinoya Japanese Kitchen, which is bordered by vendors selling electronics, clothing and toiletries. Some of them were closing down in the fading light of day, and people were still gathered behind the restaurant in an alley that serves as a drug bazaar. It鈥檚 a hellscape that has become part of the terrain, like the palm trees that rise over Alvarado Street and the street lamps that have gone dead.

One vendor went about his business as if he鈥檇 seen this scene play out so often he didn鈥檛 need to look again. Some passersby paused to check out the commotion, perhaps waiting to see if the unconscious man would make it. A boy of 10 or so moved in close enough to watch as three firefighters moved toward the man.

The air was rank with the day鈥檚 burned energy and wasted chances, and in the spot where I stood behind the ambulance, trash fanned out six feet into the street from the curb. A bag of chips. A Yoshinoya takeout bag. Coke cans. Empty food containers.

All of this is the normalized reality of a neighborhood that once stood as a gem of the city, and now suffers in wait for someone, anyone, to stand up and say this should not exist, cannot exist, and must end, for the sake of civility and for the benefit of the working people who make up the majority of the residents here, raising children who deserve better.

Firefighter/paramedic Luke Winfield put on a pair of white latex gloves and prepared a naloxone IV, tied a blue tourniquet around the man鈥檚 upper arm and plunged the life-saving drug into the crease of his elbow.

After several seconds, the man jerked up as if on springs, back from the edge of death. He asked what had happened.

鈥淵ou overdosed,鈥 one of the firefighters said.

Still wobbly, he fell onto a vending cart and lay on his back, looking up at the reincarnated sky as it faded to pink. He was going to make it. This time. They loaded him into the ambulance for a ride to the hospital.

I asked Winfield how many times, in his two years at Station 11, he had done what he just did.

鈥淗undreds,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his hub is insane.鈥

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