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You could try to get a survivor in to do a presentation. I know that there are several who have been in horrific situations and badley burned. Maybe hearing from someone who has been through it will get them to take it to heart.
TCSS
I agree with this idea Wade, excellent way to scare the members straight. If you get someone who was involved in some major incident and survived that may be doing lectures now to educate others, that is the best way to go.
I remember years ago, when I was 19, fresh out of high school still living at home, taking every course that came out that year and going to every call, I was the youngest EMS Captain in my squad, EMT running dozens of calls a week and getting burnt out but not admitting it. I felt like I was on top of the world...untill...My chief at the time got a firefighter from some municipality, I forgot if it was FDNY or one of the local cities to me like Albany. He was involved in a partial collapse of the room he was searching for some victims. He told us he too felt invincible and when his chief officers were deciding the risk/benefit of trying a search for vicitims in a Type V(000) residence that was 3/4 involved, he took the initiative and started a search anyway. After telling us that, he reached into a box by his feet and pulled out what was left of his turnouts he was wearing that day, and put them on the table. Then he started a slide presentation of the fire, him and his crew entering the second floor window from the porch roof, than seconds later another picture showing the plume of fire and smoke coming from the same window after the ceiling collapsed on him and his crew, and the pictures of them being pulled out and taken by EMS, and the pictures of his burns while at the burn unit in Syracuse NY, the grafting process of his skin, he explained the terrible ordeal of getting his burnt skin rubbed with abrasives to remove the dead skin and the pain he went through even with pain killers...
To say the least, it scared the ever mother loving shit out of me and the others. I learned to be humble, respectful of my officers and their orders, and I learned that I needed to be smarter, not braver. I took more classes, read the books, got more books from the academy library, studied, went home and actually read the articles in the magazines I had for the sole purpose of the pictures of fires they contained, but now I read those articles and subscribed to more firefighting magazines. I went to Lectures put on by various career city fire chiefs at local College campuses and listened to what they said. It was an eye opener.
Today I am captain and proud to be, I teach my crews how to respect the fire and attack it from a different angle, and learn to realize when its too dangerous to risk anything. I tell them its not a cowardly thing to back out and start the master streams, its the SMART thing. I just found out recently that my Chief wants to nominate me as her assistant chief too, so wish me luck next month!
Stay safe chief, and best of luck to you in re-educating your crews on safety and caution, and the risk benefit analyses. Let us know how you make out.
Stay Safe
Moose
thats awesome news Moose Good luck next month it sure sounds like you have worked hard for it
Never stop learning !!
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