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Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

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Page 1: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Emergency Incident Management

Unit 6

Chapter 13

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Page 2: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Introduction

• Incident Action Plans

• Strategy, Tactics & Tasks

• Size up

• Building Construction

• ICS Overview

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Page 3: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Objectives

• Explain the need for a plan at every incident• Differentiate between offensive, defensive,

and transition modes of attack• Explain the need for organized thought

processes in incident assessment• Describe the strategic priorities at an incident• Explain the terms strategy, tactics, and tasks

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Page 4: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Objectives (con’t.)

• Explain the need for size-up of an incident• Explain how a size-up is performed and what

information must be communicated• Describe the NIIMS Incident Command

System• Explain the need for unified command on a

multijurisdictional incident

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Page 5: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Management Responsibility

• First-in officer initiates the plan• All firefighters at scene must:

– Remain alert

– Be aware of the plan and the hazards present

• Standard rule– “Victims do not arrive at the scene in fire

trucks”

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Page 6: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Fireground Operations & Terminology

• Great deal of confusion– Too many “experts” going off in different

directions– Too much terminology that is very similar

• Strategy• Strategic objectives• Strategic priorities• Attack modes• Tactics• Tactical objectives 6

Page 7: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Fireground Operations

• Simplify:– There are 3 levels of decisions/actions

• Strategic• Tactical• Task

– Who functions at each level? • Strategic - Chief• Tactical - Company Officer• Task - Firefighters 7

Page 8: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Incident Planning

• Every incident must have a plan– No plan = incident out of control

• May not realize it, but we make plans w/o thinking• IAP = Incident Action Plan

– More complex incidents require more complex plans

• cf. Dumpster fire v. train derailment with hazmat release requiring mass evacuation

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Page 9: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Incident Planning for the Desk-Top Commander

• Step 1 in Incident Action Plan

• Establish goals (strategic objectives)

• Step 2 in IAP development:• Determine strategies to accomplish objectives• What are strategies?

– Attack modes

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Page 10: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Incident Planning for the Desk-Top Commander

• Step 3 in Incident Action Plan development:– Determine tactics

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Page 11: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Attack Modes (Strategies)

• Offensive –Aggressive, direct interior attack

• Defensive –Protecting exposures, indirect or exterior attack

• Combination –• Using different modes on different areas of the

incident• Carefully coordinate to avoid conflicting tactics• Requires clear communication

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Page 12: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Attack Modes

• Besides “Combination” mode there are:– Marginal– Offensive-Defensive– Defensive-Offensive

• Why bother making the distinction between modes?– Every FF on scene must know what mode

is being used and perform accordingly12

Page 13: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Strategic Priorities

Developed by Lloyd Layman• Rescue• Exposures• Confinement• Extinguishment• Overhaul• Salvage • Ventilation

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Page 14: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Strategic Priorities • RECEO SV

• Rescue– This is first strategic priority.– “May have to be delayed while hose lines

are placed between victims and fire”• Is this statement correct?????• Placing hose lines may be one way of attending

to our strategic priority of “Rescue”14

Page 15: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Strategic Priorities

• Exposures– Prevent fire from spreading to adjoining

structures or improvements– How do we do this?

• Play water on the exposure

• Confinement– Attack from unburned toward burned– Cut off spread of fire

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Page 16: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Strategic priorities

• Extinguishment– Overcome BTU’s produced– Fire flow formulas

• 1 lb of wood = 8000 BTU’s• 1 lb of plastic = 16,000 BTU’s

• Overhaul– Search for hidden fire– Make sure all fire is out

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Page 17: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Strategic priorities

• Salvage– Save contents– May be concurrent with other operations

• Ventilation– May have to happen before any of the

other priorities are attempted– Use when necessary

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Page 18: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Tactics

Methods to accomplish strategy• Interior search (team search)• Laying supply lines (forward or reverse)• Advancing hose lines to seat of fire• Ventilate roof to release smoke and heat• Spreading salvage covers, building chutes

or removing property

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Page 19: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Tasks

Individual jobs performed• Force a door• Don SCBA• Advance hose lines• Raise (throw) ladders• Cut holes• Operate equipment

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Page 20: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Size up

• Ongoing mental process that results in a plan• Components

– Facts– Probabilities

• Function of experience & training

– Situation– Decision – Plan of operation (IAP)

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Page 21: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Size up

• Continues as operations are carried out because situation is constantly changing

• Always critique incidents afterward– Look for what went right– Look for what went wrong

• Don’t make the same mistakes twice

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Page 22: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Construction Types

• Indicated by Roman numerals– Type I: Non combustible – Fire resistive – Type II: Non combustible– Type III: Ordinary construction– Type IV: Heavy Timber or Mill– Type V: Wood Frame construction

• May also have additional information• Type IV 2 hour rating

• Type IV unprotected 22

Page 23: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

• Correct location

• Size

• Fuel type

• Slope and aspect

• Rate of spread

Size up wildland

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Page 24: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Size up – wildland

• Exposures in path

• Potential

• Additional resources needed

• Objectives

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Page 25: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Size up structure

• Correct location

• Height/stories

• Size

• Type of structure (Construction)

• Location and area involved

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Page 26: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Size up – structure

• Exposures

• Additional resources needed

• Your actions

• Obtain an “all clear”

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Page 27: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Incident Command System

• National Interagency Incident Management System (NIIMS)– Developed by National Wildfire Coordinating

Group– National Interagency Fire Qualification System

• Qualification, training, and certification of personnel– Took FIRESCOPE ICS– Built a training & credentialing system around it

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Page 28: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Incident command system

• ICS based on the “6 Principles of Command” (Ch. 7)

• Provides a basic organizational structure for all types of emergencies– Large or small incidents– Simple or complex in nature

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Page 29: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Incident command systemComponents of the ICS

• Common terminology- Uses clear text – no “10-codes”

- No “agency specific” terms

• Modular organization- Expands and contracts in a logical manner- Use only what you need

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Page 30: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Incident command system• Integrated communications

- Uses common radio channels

• Unified command structure- Regardless of jurisdiction or function- All stakeholders participate in strategic

decisions• Consolidated action plans

- Unified objectives30

Page 31: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Incident command system• Manageable span of control

- 3 to 7 with 5 optimum

- Pre-designated incident facilities- Command Post- Staging- Base

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Page 32: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Incident command system

• Comprehensive resource management- All agencies resources are pooled- All report to a common staging area and are

considered incident assets- Example: Providence, East Prov. & No. Prov. All

go to Smithfield for a major incident- Each agency will use same staging area

- Single resource

- Strike team

- Task Force 32

Page 33: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Incident command system

Resource status• Assigned: in use at the incident• Available: able to respond in 3 minutes or

less• Out-of-service: not ready for immediate

deployment. Still subject to recall to available status. Does not mean mechanical failure.

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Page 34: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Command staff

L IA IS O N O F F IC E R S A F E TY O F F IC E R IN F O R M A TIO N O F F IC E R

IN C ID E N T C O M M A N D E R

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Page 35: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

General staff

O P E R A TIO N SC H IE F

P L A N SC H IE F

L O G IS TIC SC H IE F

F IN A N C EC H IE F

IN C ID E N TC O M M A N D E R

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Page 36: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Operations section

S TA G IN G

D IV IS IO N S G R O U P S S IN G L E R E S O U R C E S

B R A N C H (E S )

O P E R A TIO N S C H IE F

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Page 37: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Planning section

R E S O U R C E SU N IT

S ITU A TIO NU N IT

D O C U M E N TA TIO NU N IT

D E M O B IL IZ A TIO NU N IT

TE C H N IC A LS P E C IA L IS TS

P L A N SC H IE F

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Page 38: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Logistics section

S U P P L YU N IT

F A C IL ITIE SU N IT

G R O U N D S U P P O R TU N IT

S U P P O R TB R A N C H

C O M M U N IC A TIO N SU N IT

M E D IC A LU N IT

F O O DU N IT

S E R V IC EB R A N C H

L O G IS TIC SC H IE F

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Page 39: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Finance section

TIM EU N IT

P R O C U R E M E N TU N IT

C O M P E N S A TIO N /C L A IM SU N IT

C O S TU N IT

F IN A N C EC H IE F

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Page 40: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Simple command structure

E N G IN E 1 E N G IN E 2 TR U C K 1

IN C ID E N TC O M M A N D E R

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Page 41: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Divisions/groups

Divisions are geographic.• Floor, area, etc.

Groups are functional.• Rescue, ventilation, salvage, etc.

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Page 42: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Multi-story structure

D IV IS IO N 1(F IR S T F L O O R )

D IV IS IO N 2(S E C O N D F L O O R )

D IV IS IO N 3(TH IR D F L O O R )

IN C ID E N TC O M M A N D E R

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Page 43: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Incident command system

Incident type sections added • Hazmat• Multi-casualty incident (MCI)• Urban search and rescue (US&R)• High-rise

Sections have organizational structures and position descriptions.

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Page 44: Emergency Incident Management Unit 6 Chapter 13 1

Unified Command

• Fire Department may not be in charge of all incidents that they respond to– Police incidents - police are in charge– Multi-Jurisdictional incidents

• We don’t establish our own command structure– We work within the existing command structure

• Unified Command Concept - all “players” have a say– Meet in CP or EOC – Jointly develop the IAP

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