Fire Rescue Magazine's Blog (463)

Deep Impact: Going the extra mile to help someone can affect your entire community

Deep Impact

Going the extra mile to help someone can affect your entire community

By Ray Gayk



Have you ever thought about the impact your department has on the community you serve? Sometimes the impact is very clear, such as when we help save a life or make a great stop on a fire. We train hard for those moments, and when… Continue

Added by Fire Rescue Magazine on July 7, 2010 at 8:00am — 1 Comment

Leadership Skills: Opportunity's Knocking--Will You Open the Door?

Leadership Skills: That Noise You Hear … It’s the sound of opportunity knocking—will you open the door?



From the June issue of FireRescue magazine



By Chief Marc Revere



There’s a fable about a lumberjack who was purported to be the best in the land and had won numerous competitions. The edge of his axe blade was honed to perfection;… Continue

Added by Fire Rescue Magazine on July 6, 2010 at 4:40pm — No Comments

Fire on the Mountain: FireRescue recalls the South Canyon Fire

Fire on the Mountain: FireRescue recalls the South Canyon Fire

By FireRescue Editor-in-Chief Timothy E. Sendelbach



The South Canyon Fire is perhaps one of the most controversial fires in U.S. history. To this day, it sparks conversation and concern about firefighters’—and commanding officers’—understanding of entrapment situations, situational awareness, LCES, etc. In short, it stirs emotion because it was an avoidable…

Continue

Added by Fire Rescue Magazine on July 6, 2010 at 8:00am — No Comments

Put It All Together: Integrate multimedia into post-incident analyses to solidify lessons learned

By Brett Bowman & Jennie Collins
Photos Courtesy Prince William County (Va.) Department of Fire and Rescue


Have you ever participated in the experiment where a person reads a group of people directions to fold a piece of paper in half, fold it in half again, tear off the upper right-hand corner, etc.? By the end of the exercise, there are usually multiple versions of the end product because there was no visual reference to ensure…
Continue

Added by Fire Rescue Magazine on July 2, 2010 at 4:30am — No Comments

“Marketing” Isn’t a Dirty Word: How to market your service, personnel & apparatus to your community

By Chief Jeffrey D. Johnson, EFO, CFO, MIFireE


From the July issue of FireRescue magazine


At the bedside of an 80-year-old woman with a fractured hip, I learned my first lesson in marketing. As my crew—clad in bunker pants and T-shirts emblazoned with the word “fire”—began treating the woman, the local private ambulance crew entered the opposite side of the room. They were dressed in crisp uniforms complete…
Continue

Added by Fire Rescue Magazine on July 1, 2010 at 8:00am — 2 Comments

Challenge News: Firefighter Combat Challenge has strong start

CHALLENGE NEWS

On Your Mark … Firefighter Combat Challenge has strong start

Story & Photos by Michael DeGrandpre…



Continue

Added by Fire Rescue Magazine on July 1, 2010 at 8:00am — No Comments

More FDIC Hot Products from FireRescue's Technical Editors

The July issue of FireRescue magazine features technical editors’ picks for the best new products showcased at FDIC 2010. Here’s what we couldn’t fit in the magazine:



Council Tool’s Special Operations Survival (SOS) Tool

Review by Greg Jakubowski

OK, I’m a bit of a “tool geek.” I like companies that are always thinking about ways to help us do our job better. Carrying handfuls of tools to a fire building doesn’t work very well,…

Continue

Added by Fire Rescue Magazine on July 1, 2010 at 6:30am — No Comments

Hackensack Tradegy: A Failure in Command

Leadership, communications & building construction cited as major factors in 22-year-old tragedy

By FireRescue magazine staff…





Continue

Added by Fire Rescue Magazine on July 1, 2010 at 5:00am — 1 Comment

Is the Airtanker Industry Dying?

Is the Airtanker Industry Dying?

By Mike Padilla



The airtanker business in the United States is in a state of crisis and everyone, except perhaps the federal government, knows it. We’re down to our last 18–19 large airtankers (LATs), which are expected to have only a few operational years left.



For years, wildland firefighting strategists across the country have relied on airtankers as…

Continue

Added by Fire Rescue Magazine on June 30, 2010 at 8:00am — 3 Comments

Forcible-Entry Basics: Successful forcible entry includes size-up, the right tools—&, of course, solid skills

It’s too late to learn forcible-entry techniques once the alarm goes off; there’s usually only enough time to determine which technique will be needed and to ensure the appropriate tools arrive at the entry location. It’s the amount of training you do ahead of time that determines the…
Continue

Added by Fire Rescue Magazine on June 30, 2010 at 8:00am — 4 Comments

The Politics of Power: Understand how others view your authority

LEADERSHIP SKILLS

The Politics of Power

Understanding how others view your authority can help you use it more effectively

By Chief Marc Revere



Power, like politics, is often considered as a dirty word. However, we all seek it, we admire it when it’s… Continue

Added by Fire Rescue Magazine on June 22, 2010 at 8:00am — 1 Comment

The DIY Training Tower: How to build one with limited funds & staff

The DIY Training Tower: How to build one with limited funds & staff

By Bob Kolva



How do remote rural and small-town fire departments keep their personnel up to date on structural search and rescue, ventilation and firefighter rescue techniques when the nearest urban training facility is hours away? That was the question we asked ourselves when, once again,…

Continue

Added by Fire Rescue Magazine on June 21, 2010 at 9:00am — 21 Comments

Tactical Lessons Learned from Charleston

Tactical Lessons Learned from Charleston

By Tim Sendelbach, FireRescue magazine Editor-in Chief



The Sofa Super Store Fire is an incident that I can only hope every member of the fire service never forgets. The nine men who lost their lives that tragic night are well deserving of our fullest respect; the lessons they left behind are invaluable to us.



As a member of the fire’s Post-Incident…

Continue

Added by Fire Rescue Magazine on June 17, 2010 at 6:19pm — No Comments

If These Walls Could Talk: How would your department measure up to the Charleston investigation?



If These Walls Could Talk

How would your department measure up to the Charleston investigation?

By Timothy E. Sendelbach

Editor's Note: This article originally appeared in the July 2008 issue of FireRescue magazine.

For the last 10 months, I’ve had the…

Continue

Added by Fire Rescue Magazine on June 17, 2010 at 6:19pm — No Comments

3 Years Out: What's Changed in Charleston?

3 Years Out: What’s Changed in Charleston?

By Cindy Devone-Pacheco



Three years ago today, nine firefighters lost their lives inside the Sofa Super Store in Charleston, S.C. It was an incident that many in the Charleston Fire Department (CFD) thought could never happen to them. It was an incident that, in the most savage way possible, exposed the fallacy of that mindset. Ultimately, it led to a litany of accusations, investigations,…

Continue

Added by Fire Rescue Magazine on June 17, 2010 at 6:00pm — 3 Comments

Reliable Firefighters: Wisdom from other high-risk professions

FIREFIGHTING 360

Reliable Firefighters: Wisdom from other high-risk professions

By Billy Schmidt



Reliability: It’s the cornerstone of the firefighting profession (I use the term “firefighting profession” to include all emergency services professionals). It’s the combination of anticipation and resilience, a firefighter’s… Continue

Added by Fire Rescue Magazine on June 17, 2010 at 8:00am — No Comments

Hotel Vendome: Remembering the Worst Firefighting Tragedy in Boston’s History

By FireRescue magazine staff


On June 17, 1972, nine Boston Fire Department (BFD) firefighters were killed and eight others were injured when a section of the Hotel Vendome collapsed during overhaul operations. Those killed in the line of duty were:
• Firefighter Thomas W. Beckwith (Engine 32)
• Firefighter Joseph E. Boucher (Engine 22)
• Lieutenant Thomas J. Carroll (Engine 32)
• Firefighter Charles E.…
Continue

Added by Fire Rescue Magazine on June 17, 2010 at 6:00am — 1 Comment

How the Apparatus Industry Is Weathering the Economic Storm

Inside the Apparatus Industry

Weathering the Economic Storm: The apparatus industry seems to be doing well despite the economy’s effect on other parts of the fire service

Story & Photos by Bob Vaccaro



The economy has been wreaking havoc on the fire service all around the country.… Continue

Added by Fire Rescue Magazine on June 16, 2010 at 8:00am — No Comments

North Carolina Firefighters Save Brother Firefighter Experiencing Cardiac Event

Story & Photos by Bob Bartosz



From left to right: West Edgecombe Paramedic Daniel Walker, Paramedic Kenneth Campbell, Rocky Mount Firefighter James Bridgers, Kevin Farmer, Rocky Mount Fire Engineer Todd Joyner, Fire Captain Michael Roupp and Senior Firefighter Steven…
Continue

Added by Fire Rescue Magazine on June 15, 2010 at 4:59pm — No Comments

Canines to the Rescue, Part 3: Can that dog hunt?

Canines to the Rescue, Part 3: Can that dog hunt?

By Brett Martinez



Author Note: This the third article in FireRescue magazine’s rescue canine Web series.
Part 1 discussed the type of K-9 teams currently deployed in the field, while…

Continue

Added by Fire Rescue Magazine on June 14, 2010 at 9:00am — 1 Comment

Find Members Fast


Or Name, Dept, Keyword
Invite Your Friends
Not a Member? Join Now

© 2024   Created by Firefighter Nation WebChief.   Powered by

Badges  |  Contact Firefighter Nation  |  Terms of Service