All posts by plamb

Tactical Fire Problem – Two Vacant dwellings

This week we have an urban fire problem of two vacant dwellings with some tactical questions.

1.) Consider your department’s first alarm response and within the first thee-four minutes 2 pieces of apparatus and a supervisor show up first. How do you deeply them?

2.) Which house gets checked first and why?

3.) What are the hazards that can be found based upon your view of this scenario?

4.) Have you and your department defined for everyone in your department the difference between, vacant, unoccupied ,and abandoned ? Are your procedures any different for the different definitions.

5.) In an urban department this might be routine. In a small suburban department it might not be so common. Train for it, prepare for it, and remember that you might have to conduct a “protected search”. I am using the term protected search because the rescue profile exists but it is low, and your crews should be protected by a hose line. The life of your firefighters must be protected.

Pete Lamb
Copyright 2013

Radio Problems and Communication

For several years the Fire Service has been conducting extensive testing to identify the cause of intermittent transmission quality problems. As many of you know at times transmissions are garbled or have static that makes communications difficult if not impossible.
Until the problems are corrected, personnel need to keep in mind some steps that can be taken to maximize the ability to provide clear communications.

Companies shall “Repeat back” tasks assigned via the radio.
In most cases the person sending the transmission will not know the
transmission quality. The person receiving the transmission needs to inform the sending unit their message is ” Unreadable “. The sender can then attempt transmission again following the steps outlined below.
Move a few steps in any direction and attempt communication again.
Speak in a normal tone of voice.
Hold microphone 5 to 6 inches from your mouth or ESP.
Keep transmission clear, concise and pertinent.
Re-keying the mike and attempting the transmission again may provide a clearer message.
Keep antennas on portable radios, pointed vertical and away from your body.
If transmitting on a speaker mike, try getting your portable out and away from your body if you are unreadable.
Do not handle radios by antenna.
Keep radios as dry as possible.
Keep batteries fully charged.
Be sure you are on the correct operating frequency before going on shift or committed to work.

If an URGENT CALL FOR HELP or other IMMINENT EMERGENCY RADIO TRANSMISSION is not successful on the assigned OPS channel, any member who hears the transmission should relay it to command or dispatch immediately.

Until we can get reliable commnuications in the hands of every firefighter, make sure you do all that you can to reduce the potential human factors.

Pete Lamb
Copyright 2013

Online Training Session -Size Up and Safety Thursday November 7, 2013


Sign up and register for a training event on Thursday November 7, 2013! This online training session covers principles of size-up and firefighter safety to make all firefighters, and officers more alert and aware on the fireground.

In addition there will be the ability to interact and live chat with me and have the ability to ask specific questions.

Introductory offer for 2 hour training session of only $ 25.00 per student. Class size is limited for the initial programs.

Eventbrite - Fireground Size-up and Safety Training - Do You See What I see?

Pete Lamb
Copyright 2013

Firefighter Training Podcast – Fireground Dangerous Conditions

This week a look at a couple of training opportunities, and a serious discussion about fireground dangerous conditions.

Fireground size-up and safety program being held November 2, 2013 at 9:00 AM Eastern Time. See more information at this link. http://petelamb.blogspot.com/2013/10/size-up-training-class-do-you-see-what.html

Second program being held at 7:00 PM Eastern on November 7, 2013 See more information and register here: http://petelamb.blogspot.com/2013/10/online-training-session-firefighter.html

For any more information, comments or questions please contact me at 774-987-9414 and leave a voicemail.

LISTEN TO THIS EPISODE HERE.

The dangerous conditions we will talk about are below:

Fire behind, below the attack team

Something that just doesn’t feel right on the scene

Limited ingress and egress situations

Unprotected openings

Size of the structure – water versus air supply

Been there too long – operations lasting greater than 10-15 minutes

Bad smoke – wrong color, wrong place, wrong movement

Lack of ventilation

If the crew cannot locate the fire

Floor or roof collapse stairway collapse

Collapse potential construction, occupancy, length of burn, lightweight materials, ankle deep water on floors, parallel chord truss, suspension columns, exposed steel

Electrical hazards gas utilities in general

Pressurized containers

Flying material- bouncing bricks

Uneven terrain

Chimneys

Building overhangs

Flashover and backdraft

Conflicting information from multiple sources

The plan isn’t working, standard fire attack broken

Commercial is different from residential

Firefighters that are not ready.

Pete Lamb
Copyright 2013

Tactical Fire Problem – Apartment Complex

This week a fire in a garden style apartment complex.

1.) Create a brief initial radio report using the conditions, actions, needs (CAN) format.

2.) The landscape in some of these buildings may not allow apparatus placement as close as you want. What is the length of the stretch for this scenario?

3.) How does your first alarm assignment compare with the apparatus and manpower that will be required to handle this.

4.) Have you preplanned these facilities in your response area? Is there detection? Is there suppression? (Sprinklers) Are there stand pipes available?

5.) What methods will you use to account for all residents that live in the entire building, not just that apartment.

Thanks and stay thinking, and stay safe!

Pete Lamb
Copyright 2013

Understanding Public Perception

My thoughts this week are to shed light on the aspects of public perception of the fire service and my hope is that you can take some of this information and use it within your own department.

Your community’s perception, or civilian perception of the fire service in general is based upon a lot of things. The civilian perspective and view of us is one of those external factors that affects us in many ways. The most obvious way is the public funding and support of our department and it’s mission. If the public is less than confident in your department or of firefighters in general, then funding and our future can look a lot different.

I think many of us in the fire service would agree that the image of the fire service was high after the events of September 11, 2001. It is my humble opinion that we as a fire service have now probably slipped to a level that we were previous or actually in some cases below that.

My point this week is that if we look at how our perception is formed we might be able to impact this in a positive way.

We are all very familiar with the fire triangle. I am now proposing a discussion on the public relations triangle. This triangle like all others gathers much strength when all the pieces are together but sever any one of the legs and the triangle or image crumbles.

The public Relations triangle is made up of the Department Head (Chief), the individual members, and the union or volunteer organization. The actions of any one of these three will have a positive or negative effect on your department and it;s public perception. Let’s take a look at how this works.

The Chief: If the chief is presenting some negative image at meetings at town hall, or within the community somehow, then the folks that have contacted him will have a negative image of the community. If they perceive the chief as distant or aloof then the department could also be cast in that light. Now a fire chief has a fine line to walk, because as a natural course of the performance of their duties they can negatively impact some folks. Take for example a fire chief that attempts to enforce the fire code and inspection procedures, well it is very likely that some business owners may not like him so much and may have adverse thoughts toward the department. I think that this is very different from a fire chief who plays favorites with some business people and some follow the code and others don’t. The perceptions are both negative, but one is certainly for a proper and correct reason of enforcing the fire code properly. I ask you to think of local or national things where the fire chief may have negatively impacted their department. Has the chief allowed themselves to be non functional and have they become the weak leg of the triangle?

The individual members: If one of your members has a negative experience either personal or professional it will impact the strength of this triangle. The person on the street as a civilian will say, “Did you see what the firefighter did?” The local newspaper will say ” Local Firefighter xyz….Blah Blah” but in any case it will still say firefighter. In one recent case I have seen in the northeast it was actually “Former fighter charged with….” so this leg of the triangle of members might even extend to former or retired members in some cases. If you have large or overweight firefighters, what public perception does that give as it relates to our “readiness”. If you have firefighters that may not be there on the department for the right reasons, they may injure your perception by their overt actions or statements in the public.

The Union Local or department organization: When the president of the volunteer organization or the local union president takes actions, those actions become reflective of the entire department. These actions could be and are usually of a public nature to attempt to speak and advocate for the department or the interests of all of the members. It is important to note that most organizations are to look out for the well being of the members, it is very rare that they actually speak for ALL of the members. This results in public statements that might be contrary to the thoughts of individual members, and in may cases adverse to the position of the fire chief. In addition while advocating for their membership, they may be at odds with the public, or the economic realities of the community or area.

What can we do about the public relations triangle? Here are some thoughts. I hate to raise problems without some possible solutions.

First is to be aware that your organization’s image has three distinct parts and pieces to it and that any of them are fragile and interdependent so be vigilant of all three to protect your image.

Second if you are a member of an organization or department, remember the old adage, of ” Don’t embarrass your boss.” Your actions on and off duty are scrutinized by the public and the public might not always be fair. It is what it is. Know it and understand it.

If you are a chief and / or a department administrator remember that your individual actions and issues that arise at town hall have an impact on your department. Sometimes as administrators we do not realize that our advocacy for our department can backfire. Life just ain’t fair and sometimes politicians will make a “department pay” for the actions of the boss.

If you are the president of the local or the president of the association in a volunteer setting realize that you are not the chief, and the “Us and them” trap is an easy one to fall into. Your actions, statements, and comments will be perceived as coming from the department in general. While your interest is the best for all members, just understand that not every member of your organization will always agree 100% of the time. You may not be speaking for all.

Finally communication is the key to all of the public perception. The member have to know where the boss is going, and the organization or the union has to also be in agreement on the overall department mission. When everyone knows where the bus is headed, it makes the trip go a lot smoother.

Work with all three legs of the public relations triangle to build a strong and unbreakable department image.

Pete Lamb
Copyright 2013

Second Online Training Session Firefighter Size-up & Safety – Do You See What I See?


Sign up and register for a training event on Thursday November 7, 2013! This online training session covers principles of size-up and firefighter safety to make all firefighters, and officers more alert and aware on the fireground.

In addition there will be the ability to interact and live chat with me and have the ability to ask specific questions.

Introductory offer for 2 hour training session of only $ 25.00 per student. Class size is limited for the initial programs.

Eventbrite - Fireground Size-up and Safety Training - Do You See What I see?

Size Up Training Class – Do You See What I See?

Sign up and register for a training event on Saturday November 2, 2013! This online training session covers principles of size-up and firefighter safety to make all firefighters, and officers more alert and aware on the fireground.
In addition there will be the ability to interact and live chat with me and have the ability to ask specific questions.
Introductory offer for 2 hour training session of only $ 25.00 per student. Class size is limited for the initial programs.
Eventbrite - Fireground Size-Up & Safety Training - Do You See What I See?