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Chris,
Good question with many answers. First, if you have 6 aquired structures and they are all truly 1403 compliant, good for you and the whole organization. This alone, is worth bragging about since many departments don't comply because they feel that it's not important. Remember, 1403 was developed because of a Brothers death during training exercise. We do know that there have been other multiple deaths during live fire training since then, but what we don't know is how many firefighters have had a succesful and safe training day because of this document. So, support it and follow it. No matter what. If you (the organization can't) then don't burn.
You hit on a very good question about training the younger generation. This is a national issue, just not in your department. We are hiring/recruiting younger, inexperienced firefighters these days, and with a fires lower than in years past, it is difficult and maybe impossible to have as many "seasoned veterans" as before. This will mean that they need training more than ever. While we can't control the number of runs they go on, we can control what we teach them.
If you are an instuctor--Then instruct--Focus on the basics that will make the entire fireground a success. The tactics of moving a line, fire behavior, search, ladders, ventilation, you get the point. Teach to their level and remember that it takes a long time to be a "good" firefighter. It takes discipline and passion. Share some of yours with them. Don't allow shortcuts. Enforce the basics and practice them often. Explain to them why they need to do it multiple times and about their "Muscle Memory".
1403 does not exist because "people were stupid". It exists because of a tragic event were we lost our Brothers. Sometimes things happen. We need to do everything to prevent that again. Every training day.
FTM-PTB
Greg
Greg Wild said:Chris,
Good question with many answers. First, if you have 6 aquired structures and they are all truly 1403 compliant, good for you and the whole organization. This alone, is worth bragging about since many departments don't comply because they feel that it's not important. Remember, 1403 was developed because of a Brothers death during training exercise. We do know that there have been other multiple deaths during live fire training since then, but what we don't know is how many firefighters have had a succesful and safe training day because of this document. So, support it and follow it. No matter what. If you (the organization can't) then don't burn.
You hit on a very good question about training the younger generation. This is a national issue, just not in your department. We are hiring/recruiting younger, inexperienced firefighters these days, and with a fires lower than in years past, it is difficult and maybe impossible to have as many "seasoned veterans" as before. This will mean that they need training more than ever. While we can't control the number of runs they go on, we can control what we teach them.
If you are an instuctor--Then instruct--Focus on the basics that will make the entire fireground a success. The tactics of moving a line, fire behavior, search, ladders, ventilation, you get the point. Teach to their level and remember that it takes a long time to be a "good" firefighter. It takes discipline and passion. Share some of yours with them. Don't allow shortcuts. Enforce the basics and practice them often. Explain to them why they need to do it multiple times and about their "Muscle Memory".
1403 does not exist because "people were stupid". It exists because of a tragic event were we lost our Brothers. Sometimes things happen. We need to do everything to prevent that again. Every training day.
FTM-PTB
Greg

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