When conducting a primary search, the Officer must take several things into consideration very quickly:
Size Up
While en-route to the call you need to monitor the radio. Listen to where the fire is located. Know the type of structure and occupancy you are responding too. As you arrive on the scene, look at as many sides of the building…
ContinueAdded by David Polikoff on January 10, 2017 at 9:33am — No Comments
Added by AB Turenne on January 10, 2017 at 9:30am — No Comments
The purpose of the contest is to motivate Firefighters, EMTs and Medics to change the…
ContinueAdded by Aaron Zamzow on January 10, 2017 at 9:21am — No Comments
For as long as I can remember I have heard people say, as a person in a leadership position you are not supposed to play favorites. That by doing this it causes distrust and damages your credibility. Not only that, it is an unfair way to lead. I will agree to an extent. I think there is a fine line we have to walk when it comes to playing favorites with the firefighters in our stations.
So, do I play favorites? I sure do! My favorites are the ones that…
ContinueAdded by Jarrod Sergi on January 7, 2017 at 8:20pm — 1 Comment
We were doing truck checks this past Tuesday like we always do. This is the day that we do the bay floors, check our saws, tune everything up, run all fans, extrication tools, and all that good stuff. I was on Engine 1 for the tour and we had already ran all of our equipment and before I went over to ask the Heavy Rescue or Ladder dudes what they had left to run I checked my nozzles. It’s not uncommon for me to walk around each shift and check the nozzles and hose loads from previous shifts…
ContinueAdded by Chad Menard on January 6, 2017 at 2:23pm — No Comments
Do you have the capability to listen to the police on your radios? You can glean crucial information from the police. Have you ever been dispatched on a call for a sick person that ended up to be a person that is having a mental crisis and ultimately required police intervention? There are times we are dispatched to assist the police, but you are giving very limited information. By monitoring the police channel you can get the missing information. There are call that may require the fire…
ContinueAdded by David Polikoff on January 6, 2017 at 9:19am — No Comments
You Can Make a Dent
Joseph Kitchen, Bath Twp. Fire Department (Lima, Ohio)
Have you ever felt as if your department was so broken that its problems could not be fixed? Or, have you ever felt like there were so many issues with the fire service in general, that nothing you…
ContinueAdded by Joseph Kitchen on January 3, 2017 at 1:31pm — No Comments
I want to talk about…. what is brotherhood? Plain and simple. Brotherhood is treating others like family. In a family, sometimes you're there to prepare people and make them better. Sometimes you've got to be hard on them. Sometimes you just need to be there for them. I think a lot of that gets lost. Sometimes people think it's not their job. We're just co-workers and I think that's the wrong attitude because not everyone grows up the same.
Some of you…
ContinueAdded by John Lovato Jr on January 3, 2017 at 11:00am — No Comments
The dispatch speakers in the fire house have a volume control. All the speakers in the fire house should be set at a level that they can be heard at all times. Giving the excuse, “if they need us they will dispatch us” is a lazy excuse. Situational awareness applies to all and it is important to know what is going on in the county at all times. Major incidents that you are not due on may impact the next call you are due on. Aggressive companies will know if they are next up if a fire…
ContinueAdded by David Polikoff on January 3, 2017 at 8:32am — No Comments
Firefighters represent a lot of things in the public imagination. Words like “courage,” “selflessness,” “integrity” and “reliability” spring to mind. But there is a darker side to fire culture as well - a system of thought that can sometimes shatter families and lead promising firefighters to an early grave.
…
ContinueAdded by Mark W Lamplugh Jr on January 2, 2017 at 2:30pm — No Comments
As 2016 winds down, it is time to think forward to 2017. Most make resolutions that they never follow through with. To my fire service brothers/sisters I want to challenge you, make a resolution that will strengthen you, your shifts and the fire service in general. Keep your fire service resolutions for the entire year. Don’t give up 2 months in. Remember complacency kills. Below are some ideas, but please feel free to come up with your own:
Added by David Polikoff on December 30, 2016 at 8:04am — No Comments
This year has certainly been interesting related to the legal issues facing the fire service. We continue to see the fire departments in the news for many high profile fires, rescues, service calls and the other good things we do on a daily basis.
Interestingly enough, in spite of the fact there has been a plethora of information from your favorite fire service attorneys (Murphy, Varone, Comstock and Pinsky) in…
ContinueAdded by John K. Murphy on December 29, 2016 at 12:26am — No Comments
Not to be overly dramatic, but to me, fire attack is combat. Not much different than any other type of fight. My intention is to present an overwhelming force that ends the fight quickly and in my favor. This isn’t to be confused with fighting sports. In the sporting environment, it’s often my turn, your turn, then my turn, and so on. As my favorite defensive instructor says, “In a real fight, it’s my turn, my turn and my turn.” The enemy never gets a chance beyond the ambush! Also,…
ContinueAdded by Eddie Buchanan on December 24, 2016 at 11:31am — No Comments
Added by Robert W. Burdick on December 23, 2016 at 1:05pm — No Comments
I’m going to try something different, instead of sitting at the kitchen table in the fire house let’s pull up the chair that sits vacant most nights but is where your presence is most requested…our dining room tables.
There are few professions…
ContinueAdded by Dave McGlynn on December 22, 2016 at 7:00am — No Comments
If you are unsure of who Lt. General Hal Moore is I would encourage you to research one of the most decorated war time heroes in modern history. In fact, General Norman Schwarzkopf, who was a student of Lt. General Hal Moore at West Point, calls him one of his “heroes.” General Moore was born in Bardstown, Kentucky; a small town of 11,700 people, per the 2010 census records. How does a small-town gentleman rise to be one of the most decorated military figures in history? I believe he lived…
ContinueAdded by Brian Ward "FireServiceSLT" on December 21, 2016 at 6:32pm — No Comments
Yes, we still have crews who work in collapse zones. Yes, we still have crews going in with uncharged lines. Yes, we still have people on the fireground who don’t speak up when they see something wrong, or don’t listen when people do speak up. And yes, it’s a damn shame when it feels like we lost good brothers for no good reason.
But I…
ContinueAdded by Barrett Dorner on December 21, 2016 at 3:30pm — No Comments
Imagine you are dispatched to a motor vehicle collision and when you arrive you see a driver unconscious with trauma to the neck and upper extremities bleeding profusely. Without quick action he is sure to die. But there are power lines on the car. What comes first? Deal with the power lines or go for the victim?
Many of us around the country are arriving…
ContinueAdded by Grant Schwalbe on December 21, 2016 at 10:20am — No Comments
Many times, we see fire trucks rolling down the road with lights flashing and sirens blaring, you can see the firemen in the back getting ready. Do you ever think about what you’re really watching? It’s a lot more than just a fire truck driving fast, making a lot of noise! It’s an everyday person that either left their family or left their job, someone that may have been off work and dropped what they were doing because someone is having the worst day of their life.
Have you ever…
ContinueAdded by Jeremy Perrien on December 20, 2016 at 8:28pm — No Comments
As a firefighter, we face death in a million forms every day. It could be the crash of a falling roof beam, entrapment in a quick-moving blaze, or the slow poison of the toxins we’ve accumulated in our lungs. But there’s one that seems to make some people especially uncomfortable: suicide.
For those of us who have never felt the urge, it can be incomprehensible that anybody would want to…
ContinueAdded by Mark W Lamplugh Jr on December 19, 2016 at 1:30pm — No Comments
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