Should the Fire Service Training Path Be Revised?
I just finished reading Crucible of Fire by Bruce Hensler. The subtitle implies that the book is about the 19th century origins of the modern fire service. This is only partially true; the book is also a broader examination of fire service culture with some hard reflection thrown in. It is thought-provoking and full of things that American fire people don't like to think about. I believe that a few of his statements are inaccurate and a few of his conclusions are wrong, but I think you should read the book. At any rate, I'd like to think more of at least one of his ideas.
Among the controversial arguments Hensler makes is the idea that our training model should reflect a commitment to prevention first. In this vein he suggests that the recruit academies should teach the science of fire and fire prevention, emergency management, IMS, and other broader concepts. Following mastery and some practice in these areas the young firefighter would be taught the tasks of firefighting. This, he says, is similar to the model the military uses where an inductee goes from basic to advanced training in a progressive roadmap throughout his development. (Mr. Hensler will forgive me, I hope, if I have mis-paraphrased him here; I am speaking from recent memory of his arguments.)
This is an intriguing model, to say the least. I think the fire service would do well to reorient its approach to recruitment and acculturation and this might offer a way forward there. Too often a fire department wants a blue collar worker for a firefighter spot. He's mechanical! He has callouses on his hands! Then they want that guy, five years down the line, to be an officer and, ten years down the line, a chief officer. For some reason they fail to notice, or outright deny, that finding the blue collar worker in the same package as the educated professional is rare. We want obeisant drones then we are surprised when our leaders cannot usefully conceptualize the organization's environment and fail to adapt.
It's not just that, as Hensler argues, the training model front-loads task-level suppression training (which is true). Hensler contrasts the American fire service's obsession with restricting leadership to people who came up through the ranks. I don't disagree with that approach (that is, I don't think you can have an officer's academy that trains people who were never firefighters to be fire officers). But I do think that he is on the same scent. We need to do a better job professionally developing our leadership. Maybe we could train them in areas other than suppression first in order to properly contextualize suppression. Maybe we could pull them out of the field a little later, at least the promising ones, to educate them in various facets of leadership and management.
Anyone paying attention knows the world has changed and is changing even faster. Every fire department that has political and community leaders calling it superfluous has to do a better job adapting. We can reimagine our world.
……. Patrick Mahoney
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Crucible of Fire: Nineteenth-Century Urban Fires and the Making of the Modern Fire Service
by Bruce Hensler is available in both Hardcover and Kindle eBook formats.
CLICK HERE
to read more about the book and to order one.
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Should Fire Training Be Banned? a commentary
29 commentsFireHat Finds a Stinker
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The State Firemen's and Fire Marshal's Association of Texas is the first major fire service organization I am aware of to come out in favor of a ban on mandatory training. Yes. The largest fire service group in Texas (I'll confide to you that this is a volunteer firefighters' group, at least unofficially). They are pushing SB 766, the so-called Volunteer Firefighters Protection Bill. It would explicitly bar any state agency from requiring training of volunteer firefighters. In the SFFMA's words, "it has become increasingly difficult to recruit people to volunteer to protect their communities and those who do should not have to ask Austin bureaucrats for permission first!" Well then.
The SFFMA's efforts to promote SB 766 are the most shameful thing I have ever heard of a fire service organization doing. As a longtime volunteer and former member of the SFFMA I am appalled at their actions. As a professional firefighter I am scared by their myopia. As a resident and citizen of Texas I am outraged by their advocacy of incompetence. This move is in direct opposition to Life Safety Initiative 5 of the Everyone Goes Home program and would forever put the lie to any claims of "professional volunteers." It's disgusting.
Texas has a mixed reputation around the United States, to say nothing of the world. As a proud Texan I can't dispute this, even if I'd like to argue that it's unfounded. When it comes to the fire service I'd be really hard-pressed to argue for our system. Here, paid firefighters have to have Firefighter I, Firefighter II, HazMat Awareness and Ops, and, in effect, EMT-Basic to even get in the door and on a truck. Volunteer firefighters, on the other hand, are required to obtain exactly no training.
Yes, you read that right. Texas, a titan of size and economy, has no training requirements for most of its fire protection personnel. I've never heard anyone try to reconcile this with any reasoning except economic. You know, training is too expensive and time-consuming; volunteers just can't do it. That sort of thing. If I were still a volunteer I'd be insulted in the extreme. Nevermind that a great many states and other countries do require training for volunteers. Nevermind that this job is more dangerous and complicated than ever. And nevermind that the people of this state are being protected at wildly varying standards. Above all, this is dangerous and it likely deceives the public.
While NFPA 1001 and a whole slew of other standards recommend certain training for operating in hazard zones and the Everyone Goes Home program, through Life Safety Initiative 5 has taken the position that training should be mandated by law, the State Firemen's and Fire Marshal's Association of Texas has struck a bold path of its own. They don't see it yet, judging by the obfuscations of their executive director on Facebook, but it is a path to the past ending in irrelevance.
Thank you. Patrick S. Mahoney
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