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2009 Fire/EMS Safety, Health and Survival Week

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The 2009 Fire/EMS Safety, Health and Survival Week is starts today June 14th – June 20th.

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For a review of what the event is look here.

For useful resources to participate in the event look here.

Protect Yourself: Your Safety, Health and Survival Are Your Responsibility encourages chiefs and fire/EMS personnel to focus on what they personally can do to manage risk and enhance their health and safety. This year’s theme reflects the need for personal responsibility and accountability within a strong safety culture. From IAFC.org

Take the time as you volunteer your time, have crew night, or work your shift this week to review the resources made available to you by the IAFC and IAFF. It is up to us to effect change and this is a great opportunity to learn.

You can also take the time to review the 16 Life Safety initiatives found here.

As of this writing we are at 46 LODD’s for the year, down from 53 at the same time last year. The initiatives were created to stop all LODD’s. While that is a lofty goal, I cannot fault them for shooting for the moon. After all, if they were only trying to get a 10% reduction then it would seem as though they sold themselves short and might have wasted their time.

The initiatives require buy in from FD brass as much as they do from individual firefighters and company officers. Harry R. Carter has a great article on Firehouse.com that gives retrospect to what this week is all about and how firefighters may or may not view it.

It is so easy for us to think that “IT” cannot happen to us. “IT” could be anything that will bring unwanted pain and anguish upon us including injury and/or death. That complacency is exactly what this week is about. The truth is that every year friends and family members of over 100 brave firefighters stand solemnly at a funeral saying that they never thought it could happen to their loved one. “IT” can and will happen to so many of us but it does not have to. The 100 I mentioned earlier were on duty. There are so many more.

We have to make change. We have to want change. We have to demand change.

It is not fair to stand by and say nothing. Talk, listen, and learn. Make the necessary changes so that “IT” won’t happen to you!!!

Read More:

Fire Departments Ready for Safety, Health and Survival Week

Rescouces: 2009 Fire/EMS Safety Week

Keeping up with the Joneses

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Not all of us firefighters can tour the U.S. for all of the great fire service conferences, conventions, training events, etc. Most of us do have the capability of getting on the internet from time to time. For those of us who do not get to go to the events, we have websites who offer introspect that can be regarded just as important.

There are many great websites out there which offer opinion, training, and editorial on the fire service. Some are updated daily, others updated from less but are still very important. Don’t get me wrong, the news sites are great for keeping up with what incidents are going on; some even showing what to do, what not to do, and close calls we can all learn from. The bonus for firefighters are sites which offer that some news with opinion, and others mostly opinion. Some of the sites I am referring to are Firegeezer, Firehouse Zen, Firefighter Hourly, Firefighter Behavior, The Housewatch, and even STATter 911 from time to time.

These sites offer a variance of views and commonly elicit comments which offer even more viewpoints of issues. The commentary, whether you agree or disagree with the viewpoint, will make you think.

This happens on websites all the time, it happens at conferences occasionally too. Probably the most visible case is Lt. Ray McCormack’s talk at FDIC this year. The HouseWatch spoke of it here and Firefighter Behavior hit on it here. Unfortunately, I was not at FDIC. Even more unfortunate is that as much time as I spend on the computer I missed the talk completely because Fire Engineering Editor Bobby Halton had it pulled from internet circulation just days after it appeared. By all accounts, from what I have read, the  speech was well deserved and the ones who “got it” were those who were able to look past some of the words and understand the meaning. I believe that it was a tremendous disservice to the fire service to have the talk pulled from the internet with little explanation. After all, don’t we deserve the right to formulate our own opinions. For those who came out with a harsh thumbs down on the talk, there were plenty in line to offer explanations of how they inferred the talk and how it made sense. I can only hope that one day we will all be able to read or watch the talk and be able to formulate our own opinion and learn.

In this business, it is easy to play it safe and stay on course of talking about the “feel-good brotherhood” of the fire service. Who the hell is anyone to point out to cracks in our foundation? I think that is what we need…a better understanding of what problems have created cracks and the assistance we need to fill the gaps.

One of the biggest band-aids in the fire service is how we still do our jobs understaffed as safely and as well as we have done in the past. We have to face the facts; we run more calls, we have more regulations, we have less staffing and fewer trucks. Yet we are expected to do it as well as we did before with a smile on our face. Not everyone gets to respond with the staffing levels of the FDNY or DC. Even those large departments have lost companies. Some lose minimum staffing, others lose entire companies.

It is up to us to ask the serious questions. It is up to us to expose the cracks in the foundation that politicians and administrators don’t want the public to know about. It is up to us to bring our issues to the forefront. We need to stand up for what is right and demand what we deserve.

Utilize the websites listed above to learn and review the fire service. Whether you agree or disagree with their standpoint I assure you that you WILL learn something.

42 Children Die in Mexican Day Care Fire – Where are the Safety Regulations?

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42 children have died in a day care fire in Mexico and many others are hospitalized. Many are pointing to safety rules as being the reasons for the possibility for such tragedies as this to occur. Mexico is not a stranger to such fire related tragedies either:

Similar problems have been blamed for previous disaster in Mexico: In 2000, a fire killed 21 people at a glitzy Mexico City disco that only had one available exit, lacked smoke detectors and did not have enough fire extinguishers. Last year, 12 people died when police raiding a Mexico city nightclub blocked the overcrowded club’s lone working exit, creating a deadly stampede. The emergency exits had been blocked.

Read the entire article here

I thought at first I would reference this story to discuss firefighters worse calls. You know the ones that hit you in the gut and stay with you the rest of your career. However, I decided instead to speak about safety initiatives.

For many years, leaders in the fire service have been hounding Local, State, and Federal Politicians to create regulations for residential sprinklers. More importantly, firefighters are attempting to make residential sprinklers mandatory or at least offer incentives for utilization of residential sprinklers.

Fire Codes have required sprinklers in Commercial buildings and multi-family housing for some time. There are some localities which require residential sprinklers or offer incentives, but they are few and far between.

Firefighters usually don’t bother with asking for things that are unnecessary or not warranted. Over the course of fire history, firefighters have battled some very deadly fires. These fires were tragic but fortunately served as learning experiences for the U.S. These fires were used as case studies to create and/or improve life saving measures, building codes, fire codes, and other regulations. It is hard to correctly estimate how many lives have been saved by learning from mistakes.

Tragedies such as the one mentioned above happen a lot less often in the U.S. because of our regulations. This is a good thing. That is why firefighters are fighting harder than ever for residential sprinklers.

More firefighters and civilians die in residential fires than other fires.

View the links below to check out more about residential sprinklers:

Fire Sprinkler Initiative

Firefighters: Fire Sprinklers in Homes Needed

A Call to Join the Sprinkler Fight

HOMEBUILDER ASSOCIATIONS…..Their Anti-Fire Fighter Efforts Continue….AMERICAN FIRE SERVICE TAKES STRONG STAND AGAINST HOMEBUILDER MIS-GUIDED TACTICS

If you would really like to see the power of residential sprinklers view the video below:

Welcome to FireCritic.com

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The Fire Critic is a hopeful new website which aims to disect the Fire Service. We are determined to discuss the good, bad, and ugly of the fire service. We also plan on discussing tools, equipment, apparatus, tactics, politics, initiatives, standards, legislation, other websites, authors, and many other things across the fire/EMS service.

If you have ideas for us feel free to utilize the contact form to get a hold of us, otherwise you can email us at firecritic@firecritic.com.

This website has not been created as a mockery of the fire service, however we do not plan on shying away from hard topics that makes some of us cringe when discussed!

Stick with us and see what we have to offer!