Fire and Rescue International Vol 6 No 3

Page 27

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Wildfires: Command Corner

Command Corner: Incident response safety By Chief Tim Murphy, US Forest Service Africa Disaster Management Technical Advisor

T

he number of injuries and fatalities among emergency responders who are responding to incidents is increasing at an increasing rate. Below is a checklist of considerations that should be utilised when responding to fires and other incidents: Checklist of considerations •  Emergency responder and public safety will always be the number one priority •  Utilise LCES (lookouts, awareness, communications, escape routes, safety zones) in all incident activities •  Personal protective equipment will be used on all incidents. •  Upon arrival at the scene size up incident: - What has happened? - What is happening? - What will or could happen? - Is this a HazMat situation? - Decision point, go - no go. •  Anytime traffic flow is affected by the incident, contact the jurisdictional law enforcement agency for assistance. •  Conduct all operations as far from

To ease this feeling, they should remember that the jurisdiction always remains in charge and that the IMT works for the agency administrator that provides the IMT with a delegation of authority outlining the expectations, clear mission and assignment and outcomes to the incident management team incident commander and staff and that all incident documentation stays the property of the relevant jurisdiction. Think of this when building an effective team! Volume 6 | No 3

traffic lanes as possible to provide for crew and public safety. •  Park units on the same side of the roadway whenever possible to avoid traffic congestion. •  Personnel do not exit the emergency vehicle until instructed to do so by the leader. •  Exit the emergency vehicle away from the roadway or where hazard exposure is minimised. •  Exit the emergency vehicle with full personal protective equipment. •  Post a lookout to watch for and control oncoming traffic. •  Utilise forward and rear spotters when visibility is impaired or road conditions warrant. •  Utilise and place road traffic warning signs whenever possible. •  If equipment needs to be removed from the traffic side of the apparatus, one person will retrieve the equipment and a lookout will watch for oncoming traffic. •  Fire engine operators will operate pumps from the non-traffic side or from the cab of the apparatus when possible. Keep all hose, fire tools and equipment out of traffic lanes when possible.

•  Must have a qualified incident

commander and staff members •  Must have clear objectives •  Requires balanced skills, roles and responsibilities to achieve overall objectives •  Implement effective ICS processes, effective information systems and coordination of resources •  Provide good communication across the team and for the community •  Follow appropriate trusted leadership •  Pledge support and trust by listening and giving support

LCES diagram •  During night operations utilise

reflective clothing, vests and other safety equipment as necessary. •  All emergency responses on roadways will be concluded as quickly as possible to reduce personnel exposure. •  Cancel or demobilisation unnecessary apparatus as soon as possible. Each agency emergency vehicle operator will follow their particular laws and agency policies governing the operations of emergency vehicles.

•  Conduct openness and conflict

management professionally

•  Always insist on mutual

cooperation

•  Ensure individual development •  Work towards sound inter-group

relations and respect for each other

•  Seek regular performance and

goals review as a team member

Now, ask the question again: do you have an effective team? If no, we do! Contact us for our team assistance or for training your own team. FIRE AND RESCUE INTERNATIONAL | 25


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Articles inside

A history of quarantine and the lessons learnt from the small village of Eyam in the English countryside

8min
pages 41-43

Thoughts of a retired fire fighter - by Retired Battalion Chief Joe Carber (Now deceased)

1min
page 44

Getting to the point to protect your self - by Morné Mommsen

6min
pages 38-39

Pandemic proof workout option for first responders - by Aaron “Zam” Zamzow

3min
page 40

Burnout: When there’s nothing left to give

5min
pages 36-37

The late Divisional Commander (DC) William John Olivier, a born fire fighter at heart

11min
pages 32-35

The Garden Route in flames book: Chapter 6 Ensuring that optimum use is made of prescribed burning application in the Garden Route region - by Dr Neels de Ronde

6min
pages 28-29

Rocket HEMS Bell 222 medical aviation simulator first in the world 18

6min
pages 30-31

Command Corner: Incident response safety - by Chief Tim Murphy

2min
page 27

The importance of an effective incident management team during emergency situations - by Michelle Kleinhans

5min
pages 24-26

Comment

2min
page 4

Lead more and manage less? - by Etienne du Toit

2min
page 19

City of Tshwane strengthens Emergency Services department with state-of-the- art aerial fire fighting ladders, the first in Africa

3min
pages 6-8

Warehouse fires: strategies and tactics are the facts - by Colin Deiner

13min
pages 12-18

City of Cape Town Fire and Rescue Service Fire Training Academy now IFSAC accredited - by Frederik Munnik

15min
pages 20-23

The urban-industrial interface: where industrial fires meet communities

2min
pages 10-11

The Institution of Fire Engineers (IFE) unveils future global strategy

3min
page 9

FRI Images

1min
page 5
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