But They'll Die as "Valiant Heroes"

A slight observation commentary


Earlier this week some of us were shocked and surprised with the confined space close call in Indiana. Two men were found unconscious at the bottom of a well. Two firefighters went down to rescue and them and became incapacitated as well. Reports state that vapors from muriatic acid were the cause.

Would you like to be shocked again? Here is a comment reportedly from a Indiana firefighter, on the news story at FFN:

“yes the should but the sad thing is that in indiana you don't. and even if you did have to its still just the good ol boy system in the rural depts. its kind of the dont ask dont tell method hell in my dept. there has been a person with NO certs packing up and making entry. and only like 3 or 4 people even have hazmat awareness. and now im the training officer and am trying to take care of the problem and not getting much done. if that was my dept dipatched to this run i think i would be the only one not to jump in the hole.”










It is 2010 and we still have civilians putting on a fireman's costume and trying to mitigate emergency situations. Unfortunately if one of these civilians dies, then their death will be investigated, most likely declared having occurred 'in the line of duty", and memorialized with a department funeral, flag-draped coffins and tons of electronic condolences on Facebook. A year later NIOSH will release an investigative report and we will read of their department background and errors. We'll hear their names read aloud at Emmitsburg. Maybe OSHA will fine them.


This is where I have a problem. In the fire service 'learning disconnect' how will we get beyond the subculture of acceptable errors and faulty inbred thinking? Maybe it will have to take the first refusal of PSOB benefits for having operated in defiance of convention and common sense. Maybe it will take rethinking our social networking and whether or not such venues as FirefighterCloseCalls and Firefighter Near-Miss have desensitized firefighters and failed to alter cultural norms. I don't believe that is the case, but it should be considered. It certainly merits discussion in a post other than this brief one.


When civilians, and that is what you are when you operate without outside of your required education and guidelines, don the costume maybe they should be punished. Of course you can't do worse than dead but, if these civilians aren't concerned about their own lives, maybe they'll stop and think abut how their actions will affect the benefits intended for their family. If that doesn't work, let them sell memorial t-shirts.


Good luck Indiana training officer.


Munice Gazette

"What Happened?"
"Rescue Attempt Was Nothing New for Veteran Firefighters"
"Victims Evidently Unaware of Confined Space Precautions"


Read more of Backstep Firefighter and other bloggers at FireEMSBlogs.com

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Comment by Jay Nicholson on June 2, 2010 at 10:57pm
Perhapse a viewing of Patton's opening speach would be in order. To paraphrase- No one won a war by dying for their country...
Comment by Bill Carey on June 1, 2010 at 12:45pm
Today, the IAFC issued a statement regarding the latest confined space incidents, "IAFC Urges Safety During Confined Space Incidents" They also mention available resources for departments as well as note previous con-space near misses.
Comment by Art "ChiefReason" Goodrich on June 1, 2010 at 9:16am
Bill:
Excellent observations.
It has given me fodder for a blog.
I don't know that the near miss sites has "desensitized" us.
What I believe is occurring is that we are reading about the near misses, but follow up or corrective action information isn't hitting its mark.
If we don't see the effort made to alter the behavior that contributed to the near miss, then most likely, the same behavior will be repeated, because there is no incentive to change.
IMHO.

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