By Janelle Powell, Opinion Contributor
In a dazzling display of bureaucratic brilliance, the City of Chicago has rolled out a new policy for the Chicago Fire Department that essentially boils down to this: Unless you’re visibly on fire, you’re on your own.
The new general order, effective June 28, 2025, sets a brave new standard for how Chicago responds to residential fires under seven stories tall. Under this policy, firefighters are prohibited from entering a burning building unless there is visual confirmation of someone inside—or if someone radios in to say there might be.
This isn’t satire. This is Chicago.
The directive uses a lot of fancy words like “Defensive Operations,” “incident command,” and “scene size-up,” but the bottom line is crystal clear: if you’re unconscious from smoke inhalation (which, incidentally, is how most people actually die in fires), you better hope you’re unconscious in a window.



No visible victim? No confirmed report from dispatch? Then the Chicago Fire Department’s finest—trained, skilled professionals—will now stand outside and watch your house burn down.
Because of safety.
Not yours. Theirs.
And just so we’re clear, this isn’t because our firefighters suddenly got soft. It’s because City Hall got cheap.
They’re calling this a “safety policy,” but let’s cut the crap – it’s a liability and budget policy. It’s the city saying: “We can’t afford lawsuits when firefighters get hurt, so instead of fighting fires, let’s just observe them… from a safe distance.”
That’s right – after decades of training men and women to run into burning buildings to save lives, Chicago is now training them to pause and assess while flames eat through bedrooms, smoke fills lungs, and civilians pray someone makes the call saying they’re inside.
Here’s what it looks like in real life.
Video from a recent Northwest Side blaze shows multiple firefighters standing by as a home burns. No one saw the victims. No entry was made. No aggressive suppression. Just a fire and wait.
You know, the new Chicago way.
To be clear, no one wants to see firefighters hurt. But firefighting, like policing, comes with inherent danger. And those who answer that call do so because they are willing to risk everything for someone they’ve never met. That’s what makes them heroes.
This policy strips them of that honor – and worse, it leaves residents hanging when seconds matter most.
It also opens the door to staggering legal liability. How long before a family sues the city for watching their loved ones die from smoke inhalation while firefighters waited for “confirmation”? It’s not a question of if, it’s when.
Chicago’s City Council must intervene. Because firefighting is not about checking boxes – it’s about saving lives. And the people of Chicago deserve better than a fire department turned bystander.
If you’re inside and can’t scream, wave, or call 9-1-1, just know this.
Your city is watching.
They just aren’t coming in.