I was curious how other departments Officers function in that is it a must for them to know how to run the pump on an engine or is this something that an Officer is not required to know?
I agree with others here.ALL our officers can run any of the apparatus. You don't know who's going to be at a school or on vaca so everyone (officers)can cover in any position.Before you can become an officer you need to be proficient in Dept policy and vehicle operation.
It never hurts for the officer (or anyone else for that matter) to know how the pump works. But the officer has a whole different set of duties on the fire ground and should not be running a pump. If your officer is running a pump you have more serious things to consider including staffing, delegation of duties and span of control. Pump operators (or technicians or whatever your jurisdiction calls them) are the ones that are trained and experienced on it and belong at the panel.
As a rural on-call department, we never know who is showing up for any given call, so everybody has to know how to do everything. It makes for a steep(er) learning curve for the newbie's since we are trying to get them up to speed ASAP, but at a minimum, they can operate the pump.
As others have said, it may be only officers responding. Myself (Captain) and the Dep. Chief both farm so are usually around. Never know who else will be though.
You shouldn't be an officer, if you can't run every piece of machinery at the station your assigned to. Everyone needs to know how to pump the apparatus there on. What if something happens to the driver?