Engine 13...Working Fire
Engine 21... Working Fire
Ten Minutes in the Street: “Dispatch to Chief..You’ve got Two Working Fires…”
It’s a weekday and a holiday…
The dispatcher gets a hold of you and informs you that you have companies working all-hands at two working fires; each one at different ends of the city.
Engine 21 is reporting a working fire and transmitting a second alarm at a Townhouse Fire with a report of a trapped occupant (
HERE) and Engine 13 is transmitting a working fire at a large commercial building (
HERE). You can tell by the transmissions, that both appear serious in nature and urgency. Greater alarm units and mutual aid companies are either enroute or are being dispatched. As you listen to the radio transmissions on the tactical channels both incidents are escalating in severity and magnitude.
As the Chief of the Department;
• Which alarm are you going to respond to, and why?
• If you’re not going to respond, why not and where are you going to go?
• With two major events transpiring simultaneously, as the Chief, what are the concerns and issues that you’d be thinking about?
• What information, if any would you be seeking and from who?
• What’s a stake, what’s your risk assessment of the incidents thus far based upon radio traffic? (read each scenario description,
HERE and
HERE)
Provides us some insights from a Chief Officer's perspective on what the concerns and issues are that would be going through your mind when confronted with such a series of events....