Fire Management Program Guide - 2022

Page 184

Fire Management 2022 Program Guide

INCORPORATED LANDS INITIAL ATTACK-MUTUAL AID TO MUNICIPALITIES Utah’s municipalities are protected by a variety of Fire Service organizations ranging from fully paid to a combination paid and volunteer to fully volunteer. It is commonly recognized that under certain circumstances a single entity may not have the resources to handle some incidents on its own. Fire Service organizations commonly render mutual aid to one another. Mutual aid is a force multiplier that can be pivotal in the success or failure of initial attack. Successful, aggressive initial attack can prevent catastrophic wildfires.

FFSL Role in Mutual Aid: •   Direct fire suppression assistance with engines and personnel •   Liaison for local and federal agencies that may be threatened •   Maintain information flow to Interagency Fire Center •   Provide tactical advice, present options and coaching to local entity •   Bridge between communications systems VHF-800 MHz •   Monitor triggers and accept Delegation of Authority if necessary •   Work on task books and other practical training opportunities with local personnel •   Assist with fire cause and origin determination •   Assure proper use of preplanned aircraft (if any) •   Monitor federal response as it pertains to the minimum billing threshold •   Maintain positive professional relationships

Coding Time: Split Funded Personnel that have a county base code such as wardens, assistant wardens and seasonals should charge to their county base code on all private land fires incorporated and unincorporated unless delegated to the Division. If delegated charge all time to 1810. FMO’s, Area Managers, Dispatchers etc. should charge all in-state fires to unit 1810 in all cases. Care should be taken to not to spend an excessive amount of time on mutual aid assignment after containment. Mop up, patrol and checking the fire should be the responsibility of the municipality. Municipal fires should follow the standard naming convention using landmarks as the basis for the name. Avoid using “500 West” as it could be easily duplicated in multiple jurisdictions. Remember, the name could be in the news, use good common sense.

DIRECTION •   Firefighter and public life safety should be the number one priority for all responding agencies in all cases. •   The Fire Warden should be dispatched to assess the situation if they are requested. •   Jurisdiction should be established and confirmed with the Interagency Fire Center with GPS coordinates as soon as possible. •   Determine if the fire poses an immediate threat to unincorporated lands or federal land. If so, boundary line protocol should be used. See AOP on FFSL Enterprise website.

184 – Chapter 7 Suppression


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WEB REFERENCES

0
page 246

CONTACT INFORMATION

8min
pages 248-254

ACRONYMS

2min
pages 244-245

DE MINIMIS BURNING CHECKLIST

0
page 241

PRE-SUPPRESSION / PREVENTION SECTION

10min
pages 224-231

BURNING PERMIT

9min
pages 234-240

ADDENDUM TO HOLD HARMLESS AGREEMENT

0
page 223

STATE COOPERATOR AGREEMENTS

1min
pages 206-207

STATE AGREEMENTS

3min
pages 204-205

FALLER CERTIFICATION LEVELS

1min
page 201

CHAINSAW QUALIFICATIONS

4min
pages 199-200

RED CARDS FOR FIRE DEPARTMENTS

1min
page 198

FIRE DEPARTMENT TRAINING

2min
page 197

FIRE WARDEN

1min
page 195

WILDLAND FIRE INVESTIGATION

3min
pages 190-191

AIRCRAFT

1min
page 185

COST CONTAINMENT GUIDELINES

1min
page 189

FEDERAL FIRE POLICY

2min
page 187

INCORPORATED LANDS

2min
page 184

EVACUATIONS

1min
page 183

FEMA

1min
page 181

SEVERITY

1min
page 182

PRESCRIBED FIRE

8min
pages 163-167

WILDLAND/URBAN INTERFACE

2min
page 180

STANDARD OPERATING PROCEDURES

7min
pages 172-175

FIRE WARDEN

2min
page 176

SMOKE MANAGEMENT

2min
page 162

RISK MANAGEMENT

1min
page 141

HAZARDOUS FUELS/MITIGATION WORK

7min
pages 156-159

AIR QUALITY

2min
page 161

FIRE RESTRICTION/CLOSURES

5min
pages 150-152

INTRODUCTION

1min
page 140

BURNING PERMITS

2min
page 160

EMERGENCY MEDICAL PLANNING AND SERVICES

4min
pages 142-144

ENGINE INVENTORY

2min
pages 147-148

REPORTING COUNTY FIRE ACTIVITIES

2min
pages 134-135

INCIDENT COST TRACKING

2min
page 133

PRE-SEASON AND/OR EMERGENCY CONTRACTS

2min
page 132

WATER SOURCES

2min
page 131

LAND AND FACILITY USE AGREEMENT (LUA

2min
page 130

PURCHASING

8min
pages 124-127

FY’22 LODGING RATES UTAH CITIES

10min
pages 119-123

TRAVEL

7min
pages 115-118

SELECTED DIVISION POLICIES

46min
pages 75-101

FIRE INFORMATION MEDIA GUIDE

6min
pages 104-106

WORKERS COMPENSATION FUND (WCF) CLAIM PROCESS

8min
pages 109-112

UNIFORMS

4min
pages 113-114

SELECTED DEPARTMENT POLICIES

16min
pages 66-74

ADMINISTRATIVE RULES

35min
pages 37-53

UTAH CODE ANNOTATED — TITLE 19 ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY CODE

4min
pages 35-36

MISSION STATEMENT

3min
pages 6-7

CHAPTER 1 QR CODES

30min
pages 11-26

UTAH CODE ANNOTATED — TITLE 76-6-102 – 76-6-105

6min
pages 27-29

UTAH CODE ANNOTATED — TITLE 17 COUNTIES

2min
page 34

UTAH CODE ANNOTATED — TITLE 53-7 MISCELLANEOUS

1min
page 33

UTAH CODE ANNOTATED — TITLE 53-2A EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT ACT

6min
pages 30-32

RESOURCES

3min
pages 9-10

DIVISION RESOURCES

1min
page 8
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