Top Banner
TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000
50

TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Dec 13, 2015

Download

Documents

Kelly Brown
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER

Arlington Fire DepartmentOfficer Development

September 2000

Page 2: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Definition of a Company Officer

• Supervises a single resource of the Fire Department

• Member of a Company who acts in the capacity of a Company Officer (CO)

Page 3: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Difficult Transition

• The Company Officer’s position is one of the most important in the organization.

• Promotion to Company Officer is worthy of acknowledgement.

Page 4: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Once responsible to perform the work; now must get work performed through others.

Page 5: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Preparation for promotion or appointment

• Mastery as a firefighter

• Officer development training program

Page 6: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

THE COMPANY OFFICER’S

RESPONSIBILITY FOR SAFETY

Page 7: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Firefighting is one of the most dangerous

occupations in the United States

Page 8: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Key Safety Behaviors

• After ten years of research, Fire Chief Alan V. Brunacini of the Phoenix Fire Department, developed 25 key firefighter safety behaviors.

Page 9: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Think(Insert fire photo)

Page 10: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Drive Defensively

(insert photo of fire truck accident

Page 11: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Drive Slower

rather than faster

(insert photo of fire truck rollover)

Page 12: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

If you can’t see, STOP

(insert photo of obstructed view)

Page 13: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Don’t run for a moving rig

(insert photo of FF running for rig)

Page 14: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Always wear your seat belt

(insert photo of seated, belted FF)

Page 15: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.
Page 16: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Wear full turnouts and SCBA

(insert photo of FF w/turnouts near fire)

Page 17: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Attack with a sensible level of aggression

Page 18: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Always work within the organizational structure - NO FREELANCING

(insert photo of Command giving assignment)

Page 19: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Keep your crew intact

(insert photo of crew together)

Page 20: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Always have a communications link to the next organizational level

Insert photo Command talking on radio

Page 21: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Don’t ever breathe smoke

Insert photo of smoky area

Page 22: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Always have an escape route

Insert photo of secondary exit

Page 23: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Never go beyond your air supply

Insert photo of smoky house fire

Page 24: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Use a big enough and long enough hoseline

Looking EastLooking East

Page 25: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Evaluate the hazard - Know the risk you are taking

Page 26: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Follow Standard Incident Procedures

Page 27: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Vent early and vent often

Insert photo of ventilation holes

Page 28: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Provide lights for the work area

Page 29: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

If it’s too heavy, get help

Photo of FF’s carrying heavy equipment

Page 30: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Always watch your incident position

Photo of FF’s around fire involvement

Page 31: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Look and listen for signs of collapse

Page 32: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Rotate fatigued companies -- assist stressed companies

T-1 & E-1 OfficersT-1 & E-1 Officers

Page 33: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Pay attention ALL the time

Page 34: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Everybody takes care of everybody else

Page 35: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Large Group Activity 1.2CREW SAFETY

Page 36: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.
Page 37: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Cover of Trapped Firefighter

Page 38: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Cover of Trapped Firefighter

Page 39: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Photo of too many FF’s on ladder and second floor porch area

Page 40: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

THE COMPANY OFFICER’S RESPONSIBILITY FOR

INCIDENT MANAGEMENT

Page 41: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Safe and Effective Incident Operations Require:

• That someone be in charge

• All resources must operate within the action plan

• Roles and responsibilities must be defined

• The tracking of all resources

Page 42: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Safe and Effective Incident Operations Require:

• Resources assigned to a tactic or task remain intact

• The Incident Commander must be able to communicate immediately

Page 43: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Individual Activity 1.3Incident Management

Assessment

Page 44: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

THE COMPANY OFFICER’S RESPONSIBILITY FOR

INCIDNET MANAGEMENT (contd)

Page 45: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

The Company Officer’s Responsibility as Initial IC

• Size-up

• Identify strategy and select tactics

• Develop incident action plan

• Implement action plan

• Manage incident resources and coordinate overall emergency activities

Page 46: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Additional functional responsibilities of the IC include:

• Scene Safety

• Liaison with other agency representatives

• Dissemination of Incident information

Page 47: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Responsibilities When Functioning as CO

• Tactical size-up

• Maintain crew integrity

• Maintain an awareness of conditions

• Maintain immediate communications

• Operate to meet assigned tactics

• ALWAYS operate within the incident action plan

Page 48: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Responsibilities When Functioning as CO

• Operate within the established organizational structure

• Maintain ongoing supervision

Page 49: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

What are the traits of an effective Incident Commander and

Company Officer on emergency incidents

Page 50: TRANSITION TO COMPANY OFFICER Arlington Fire Department Officer Development September 2000.

Summary

• Emergency operations responsibilities

• Key safety behaviors

• Incident management