Brigade Magazine - Spring 2021 Edition

Page 65

PHOTO: ELISSA ROSSITER

BRIGADE NEWS

Breathing new life into Wodonga West Speaking about a recent recruitment drive following the devastating fires in 2019-20, Wodonga West Fire Brigade 2nd Lieutenant Dave Rossiter was well aware of the hurdles. “Our biggest issue was there was no formal process for how people joined and integrated into the brigade,” Dave said. “The historical process was to pair a new recruit with a senior member who became their mentor and their role was to answer questions and help them work out their training needs. “This may have been suitable when there were only one or two new recruits at a time, and these senior members didn’t really have a consistent structure to work to and the attrition rate was high.” To make matters worse, about half the brigade members on the books hadn’t been seen for two or more years and only about 12 people turned out regularly. Dave knew things had to change. Before becoming the training officer, he was the recruitment officer for four-and-a-half years and the 2019-20 fire season gave him the opportunity he was hoping for. “After the really bad fire season our district office had significant interest from people wanting to join brigades,” Dave continued. But the brigade was too busy with the fire session to follow up the enquiries until halfway through the year. “I contacted all of them and interviewed most of them and we initially had 24 new recruits. These members had to do their General Firefighter training, and I used this opportunity as a catalyst for something else I was keen to achieve. “We didn’t have enough individual mentors for 24 new people, so I contacted some of the senior members who were disengaged from the brigade and requested them to take on a new responsibility. I formed five new recruit ‘crews’ which included two senior members as their crew leaders/mentors and four to five new recruits, similar to a strike team formation.

My aim was to re-engage the senior members, and fortunately I found that some of them got back their passion to lead and be involved with the brigade.” Kris Dykes was one of those who’d become disengaged mainly because of a busy life and believing that he didn’t have a place in the brigade. “My skill set wasn’t being used by the brigade, so I didn’t prioritise my involvement in brigade activities,” Kris said. Since taking on the role of new recruit mentor/crew leader, Kris has regained his passion to lead within the brigade, and he was elected as 1st lieutenant in the recent brigade elections. Following the successful completion of her General Firefighter training, new member Janelle Beach said doing the training with a small group of people and a senior member as a mentor was an effective way to transition into the brigade. “It helped create faster connections with members and created a team ‘feel’ right from the beginning,” Janelle said. “We not only wanted to be successful in our training for ourselves, but also wanted that success for everyone in our group, without being lost as ‘just a number’ among recruits. “This approach really brought out a close-knit team environment within the broader team of 24 new recruits. We encouraged each other at every step of the training and assessment process which ensured we all passed together.” At the end the recruitment process, the brigade gained 13 new operational members who completed their General Firefighter training in February, and two new non-operational members. “Our new members have continued to breathe life into the brigade and weekly training is attended by an average of 16 new and senior members,” Dave said. “The whole process has revitalised the culture in the brigade.” STORY DUNCAN RUSSELL

65


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Articles inside

New Disability Inclusion Guide

6min
pages 79-80

New Juniors sign up across the state

6min
pages 76-77

Through the Ages: Wangaratta Group

1min
pages 74-75

Upwey Juniors learn how to save lives

2min
page 78

Safer Together work continues to flourish

6min
pages 72-73

New station for Tatura

1min
page 71

New station at Port Fairy

4min
pages 66-67

Breathing new life into Wodonga West brigade

3min
page 65

FEATURE: How brigades have spent VESEP grants

6min
pages 62-64

FEATURE: Family support is crucial

4min
pages 52-53

Volunteer Recruitment Hub update

2min
page 57

Phillip Island station build continues

2min
pages 60-61

Wayne’s cooking legacy

2min
page 56

New equipment for road rescue crews

2min
page 51

Commendations for saving captain’s life

2min
page 55

Faces of CFA

2min
page 50

The Member Wellbeing Advisors team

3min
page 47

Eat well and stay healthy

2min
page 48

Understanding PTSD

3min
page 49

Mental Health Continuum Model

3min
page 45

Strengthening capability using diversity and inclusion

5min
pages 37-38

Structure fire case studies

17min
pages 39-44

Improving how we engage with communities

3min
page 36

The benefits of burn camps

2min
page 33

Recognising scarred trees

2min
page 32

Winners of the CFA 2021 photo competition

1min
pages 24-25

Volunteer Succession Planning Framework

2min
page 31

Donations rollout update

3min
page 30

Women’s Reference Groups

4min
pages 26-27

Remembering our fallen firefighters

3min
page 28

Understanding fire-generated weather

3min
page 29

Using tools to predict bushfire behaviour

2min
page 23

Chief Officer’s Quarterly Operational Update

12min
pages 12-15

CFA operations in a climate-challenged world

5min
pages 16-17

Incident statistics

0
page 8

The latest news from the CEO, Chief Officer and senior leaders

12min
pages 9-11

CFA helps with NSW flood response

3min
page 7

General Firefighter training update

5min
pages 18-19

Apollo Bay double emergency

3min
page 6

Storms batter Victoria

5min
pages 4-5
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