Monday, December 4, 2017

Company Drill Dec 2017


Quarterly Drill  December 2017

The final quarterly drill for 2017 will be focused on aspects of a multi-vehicle mass casualty accident. The drill will be scenario based with several realistic tactical objectives that must be prioritized and accomplished in a safe and timely manner under the direction of the IC.

The Drill  
The scenario will be set up prior to training behind station 61.  At 1830 there will be a short briefing to provide an overview of the scenario, safety considerations, and to address any questions related to the training or any associated tasks.  Individuals will then be randomly assigned to an apparatus.  All Companies will then be randomly dispatched from the front of station 61 at approximately 2 minute intervals starting with the pre-determined IC.  The IC will assign each company tasks to meet tactical objectives based on their initial scene size-up.  The scenario will be finished when the scene has been stabilized and all tactical objective have been met.

Objectives:
Based on given Scenario:
    • IC verbalizes a proper initial arrival report.  (Paint a detailed picture for next arriving units number of vehicles, on or off roadway, traffic considerations, patient information) 
    • IC assigns units to spot apparatus to protect the scene
    • Triage (prioritize patients, update Central Dispatch with required patient care resources if needed) 
    • IC confirms that inner and outer circle is completed on all vehicles 
    • Demonstrate the proper use of cribbing for vehicle stabilization 
    • Demonstrate the proper set up of Para Tech Struts for vehicle stabilization (Quick deploy and bagged kits requiring assembly)
    • Safely access patients and provide appropriate patient care based on given injuries
    • Demonstrate and verbalize that all interior trim has been removed and inspected at cut points
    • Demonstrate the safe and effective use of the battery and/or hydraulic extrication tools (Cutters, Spreaders, Ram, Brake Cutter)
    • Individual companies demonstrate a safe and coordinated extrication maximizing the use of available tools and personnel.
    • Communicate 

IC Responsibilities:
The first arriving IC is responsible for providing a quality initial size up and assigning apparatus to address the tactical objectives in order of priority.  IC drives communication and maintains accountability of both Fire Department personnel and patients.

Officer Skills and Responsibilities:
The company officer is tasked with coordinating the crew and implementing the tasks assigned by the IC.  The company officer is is responsible for the safety in their immediate work area and communication with the IC as tactical objectives are met.  ***Remember, you are a company officer because you have shown technical competence at the task level.  Your job is to coordinate and manage a safe and effective extrication not necessarily operate a tool. 

Firefighter’s Tasks and Responsibilities:

The firefighter’s primary responsibility is to safely and effectively implement the task assigned by the company officer.  This requires knowledge of the location of the proper equipment, as well as the skills need to safely and efficiently operate the equipment to complete the assigned task.  

Tuesday, April 4, 2017

Get You Priorities Straight




Life safety is now and will always be our #1 priority.  Is your IAP contributing to victim survivability?

Check out the link below

Primary Search Before You Enter The Structure

Tuesday, July 12, 2016

Coordinated Interior Attack



The video link below from LA County demonstrates a coordinated interior attack with door control.  Obviously the structure of their department is different than ours, which should reinforce the importance knowing every aspect of our job.  


Throughout the week you are encouraged to take the knowledge from the video to the training ground and practice all three positions: Officer, Apparatus Operator, and Firefighter. Each position presents its own unique challenges that must be overcome for a successful operation.  




Tuesday, June 28, 2016

TACTICAL HOSE ADVANCE AND RETREAT



Firefighters constantly train on advancing a hose line into a building.  But we do not train enough on withdrawing when the scene becomes unstable.  Do you and your crew know how to get out quickly and safely?  Watch as we illustrate best practices of effectively maneuvering a hose line into and out of a structure.

Occupational Athlete



                                                                                                                 Photo By:  Traditions Training


Firefighters exemplify what it means to be an athlete.  They perform in the most hostile of environments with real consequences associated with their decisions and performance.  The game time is not scheduled and we may end up playing multiple games in a day, never knowing our exact opponent.  The physical demands are extreme as well as the consequences of not meeting the demands.