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Full Description
This unprecedented text has more than 1,000 years of combined experience in command case studies by incident commanders from coast to coast. Why read this book? •Improve communications, risk assessment, and accountability with less radio traffic. • Develop an aggressive team to save more civilian lives while keeping firefighters from unnecessary risk. • Bridge the tactical gap between the incident commander and crews working at the front. • Apply military models of decentralization and empowerment to outpace the incident, regardless of type. • Integrate the latest data from Firefighter Rescue Survey and UL FSRI to maximize effectiveness. • Rapidly organize tactics and resources for house fires, apartment fires, hotels, motels, commercial buildings, taxpayers, big boxes, strip malls, row houses, high-rises, Maydays, vegetation fires, wildland urban interface, multi-casualty incidents, hazardous materials incidents, and even unified command incidents.This book meets the FESHE curriculum for the Strategies and Tactics and Disaster Planning and Control courses, connects to job performance requirements (JPRs) of NFPA 1021 for Fire Officers I-IV and is consistent with the most current NFPA, NIMS and FIRESCOPE standards and expectations.
Contents
Foreword by John Norman
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1 History of Command
Chapter 2 Command Philosophy and Mindset for Modern Incidents
Section I: Fundamentals of Incident Command
Chapter 3 Incident Command Professional Qualifications, Development,and Standards
Chapter 4 Anatomy and Physiology of an Incident
Chapter 5 Size-Up, Risk/Gain Management, and Communications
Chapter 6 Aggressive Command and Tactics for Life
Chapter 7 Incident Planning and Organizing
Section II: Commanding Structure Fires
Chapter 8 Single-Family Dwellings
Chapter 9 Multi-Family Dwellings, Hotel, and Motel Fires
Chapter 10 Commercial Fires
Chapter 11 High-Rise Fires
Chapter 12 Rapid Intervention and Maydays
Section III: Commanding All-Risk Incidents
Chapter 13 Vegetation Fires
Chapter 14 Hazardous Materials Incidents
Chapter 15 Multi-Casualty Incidents
Chapter 16 Unified Command
Section IV: Appendixes
Appendix A: Los Angeles City Fire Department Informational Summary—Green Sheet
Appendix B: Tactical Review Guides
Appendix C: Fire and Emergency Services Higher Education Model Curriculum: Strategy and Tactics (CO279)
Appendix D: NFPA 1021: Fire Officer Professional Qualifications for Emergency Services Delivery and Emergency Management
Appendix E: Quick Action Plans—Leveraging High-Rise Building Intelligence for Incident Commanders
Appendix F: Report Writing
Glossary
Review Questions Key
Index
About the Authors