Responding to an incident at night and looking for an address, at least for me always seemed to be a little more difficult, not being able to rely on physical landmarks as much. Perhaps I am old school, but my question here focuses on how you respond to an incident as both the apparatus driver and the company officer .
The firefighter's role in the actual response does not come to play... Unless of course both the Engineer and Captain are off shift and the firefighter is the only "regular" person assigned to the station, making his or her knowledge of the area paramount.
When you are dealing with responding to an incident, reading the map book at night, trying not to blind the driver and dealing with small print always seemed like a nightmare sometimes when the response time was minimal. Couple this with looking for addresses at night that seem to be non existent sometimes in the rural areas and actually finding the address and right house and you end up getting an acid stomach and headache... But now... we have computers in engines! One thing I can guarantee about computers is that just like a cell phone, when you need it the most, it won't work... No coverage, dead battery, etc.
One of the coolest things I saw on an engine company cab roof liner (right seat) was a map that had been pasted to cardboard, laminated and attached with velcro to the ceiling. The map was only intended to cover the engines first-in district and took away the need to open a map book and look at connecting pages. Company officers could easily see hydrants, hundred blocks, target hazards or whatever one has on their first in map. Having the map laminated is very helpful if you have to evacuate or shelter in place, create divisions, etc. What makes this a helpful tool is that it is always available and everyone knows where it is. It's also helpful for those optically challenged with seeing things in fine print... While this may come off as being totally old school. The practice of making a larger map, pasting your map pages together into one single map gives you redundancy in case your computer terminal goes down and makes it an easy tool to use for your company officers.
Of course the driving at night thing, using a map light to read the map does not go away with the roof mounted map. Not to state the obvious, but use of a red light in the cab minimizes the glare and blinding factor of a white light... Kind of like a dark room or submarine. This is an easy fix that makes reading things at night a little less distracting to the driver.
The one thing that I did not mention nor ask was my assumption that all firefighters actually memorize their first in district, making maps not really necessary as far as finding things. Locating hydrants, and FDC's... that's another story and using the now inexpensive Garmin GPS systems for your automobile, always an option but who has the time?
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