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1. Fire control will require a significant amount of personnel. How would you handle this fire in regard to supervision of strategically-sensitive areas? How would your departent handle it? (might not be the same answer, right?) Do you get enough command officers and if so, what is normally done with them?
This seems to be a very labor intensive fire due to all the issues at hand. I'm thinking 3 or maybe even 4 alarm fire by the time we are done with it. I would handle the strategically-sensitive areas by making sure I do not exceed the span of control. I would do this by assigning division officers to take care of the tasks at hand. Since this will take time to set up, my fear would be the continuos spread of the fire. My department is only a 4 station department so we would definitely be using mutual-aid on this fire. In my department we would have enough command officers (the white wave :-)). If I were in command initially I would probably have the first one to arrive to assume the Safety Officer position. That is assuming that I would stay in command because if not then he would take command. I would use the other command officers as my division/section officers and command staff.
2. Where would you stretch lines? In what order? What size would they be?
If there is a stairwell to the D side of the structure, I would begin there with a 1 3/4" line (for mobility) for initial attack, I would have a second attack line (2 1/2") to the fire floor as a back up coming from the same side. I would then have an engine with a deck gun protect Exposure D. Depending on the report I receive from the attack group I may and most probably will deploy a third attack line (2 1/2"). Since the fire is coming from the A and D side, I am assuming the it is in multiple rooms along with the fact that it is in the cockloft noted by the heavy smoke on the opposite end of the building.
3. What should be happening at the roof level?
Vertical ventilation and consider a trench cut.
4. What would your RIC team be doing at this fire on your dept?
Looking for secondary means of egress, setting up ladders when found and reporting their location to command.
5. What ops would you be conducting in the 3 story exposure?
Evacuation first then having a crew investigate for possible extension.
6. What ops would you be conducting in the attached exposure?
Since there are stores on the first floor and having common shafts, I would need to have a crew check the most adjacent structure first and identify any hazards along with extension from the fire. Evacuation first of course.
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