Title: Managing the Mayday
1Managing the Mayday
- John Skip Coleman, Deputy Chief
- Toledo (OH) Fire Department
- Rick Lasky, Fire Chief
- Lewisville (TX) Fire Department
2The lost or trapped firefighter situation is very
difficult and extremely stressful, but like
anything else we do in the fire service, we have
to train for it.
3In order for a firefighter to survive the
dangers of firefighting, he must know how other
firefighters have died or been seriously injured.
- Vincent Dunn
- Deputy Chief, FDNY (ret.)
4The one thing in life you have absolute control
over is
your attitude !
5The Mayday Or Call For Help Is Out
- Establish the terminology
- Urgent,
- Emergency,
- Emergency Traffic,
- and MAYDAY.
6Mayday is most often used when a member is in
peril
- Lost
- Trapped
- Out of air
- Down
7Mayday is most often used when a member is in
peril
- When a collapse has occurred or is imminent.
- Where any other circumstance that can seriously
injure or kill is present.
8Mayday is most often used when a member is in
peril
- Simply put, if we dont get out of this right
now, were not going to make it!
9Whatever you come up with
- make sure everyone who works on your fireground
understands it!!! - Train in it so that members will use it
automatically should they get in trouble.
10Clear all radio traffic
- Attempt to identify the member in trouble.
- RIT should ready themselves to deploy into the
structure. - An emergency alert tone can be activated at this
point.
11If the IC cant identify the member in trouble
- Immediately perform a roll call.
12Performing a Roll Call
- Start with first-in interior companies and work
out from there. - Emphasis should be on accounting for each
company. - Check to see if each has all of its personnel.
13Performing a Roll Call
- Asking for specific names can wait until you get
to the company with a missing member. - Once the member is identified and reported as
missing, announce the members name. - Ask if anyone operating on the scene knows this
firefighters last known location.
14Performing a Roll Call
- Throughout this process, ask the following
questions - Who is trapped? How many are trapped?
- What was the last location(s) of the member(s)?
- What was the last assignment(s) of the member(s)?
- Are they radio-equipped?
15Performing a Roll Call
- If possible, review the tactical worksheet
- There have been times when companies were
looking for someone only to find out that the
firefighter made it outside, or was working with
another company.
16Performing a Roll Call
- This is where training in your accountability
system pays off. - As much as we like to think that we stay
together, sometimes things happen and we become
separated.
17Once the missing member is identified
- Deploy RIT into the structure.
- Sooner with small residential structures
- Larger commercial structures
- Attempt to provide the precise location of the
member in distress or last known location. - Anything that will help to increase potential
rescue time.
18During the roll call
- once you have discovered who is missing, continue
with the roll call process. - Involve your dispatch center or fire alarm
office. - Consider volunteers and off-duty paid members
that respond to the scene in their personal
vehicles.
19Other tasks
- Is EMS on the scene?
- If not, request a minimum of one advanced life
support ambulance.
20Keep the operation going
- Keep working companies in their area of
assignment. - Continue to work on the fire and ventilate.
- Others can be redirected to assist in the rescue
effort (RIT support).
21What Command Should Expect From Crews
- Expect mutinies.
- This will be perhaps the hardest scene a fire
chief or IC faces. - The want and need to help is natural!
22To control mutinies
- You must do three things
- Expect them.
- Practice how to react to them.
- Control them.
23Training Drills
- Drills, again, tend to be a small obstacle to
overcome. - The essence of training, is to allow error
without consequence.
24Pick your battlegrounds.
- Vacant city-owned structures that will be used
for a training burn work best. - Training burn buildings also work well.
- If you anticipate mutinies and then attempt to
adjust to them, the real scene may end as you
hoped.
25Psychology of the trapped, injured, or lost
firefighter
- This firefighters sole focus will be on removing
themself from danger, if it is possible. - Obvious factors in the area will be ignored.
- Fire
- Smoke conditions
- Structural elements, and so on.
26Psychology of the trapped, injured, or lost
firefighter
- Firefighters in distress may walk (or run) past
an open window in obvious view because they were
looking for the stairs, or they may crawl over
and ignore a hoseline while looking for a safety
rope. - They may forget what is connected to the end of
the hoseline.
27Psychology of the trapped, injured, or lost
firefighter
- The firefighter in distress will usually revert
to what was learned and is routine. -
- This is where our training in the basics and
firefighter rescues pay off.
28Psychology of the trapped, injured, or lost
firefighter
- Dont expect a firefighter to accomplish a
manipulative maneuver learned in a one-hour
training session, especially if the task was
learned months ago and never practiced after that.
29Psychology of the trapped, injured, or lost
firefighter
- Finally, firefighters in distress will
overcompensate they will not be able to feel
safe enough. - Remember, their sole and overriding focus is to
survive.
30Psychology of the trapped, injured, or lost
firefighter
- When you locate the firefighter in distress, do
the following - Speak calmly.
- Offer reassurance.
- Explain every action you are taking.
- Promise anything. Then, try to keep your promises.
31Psychology of the Mutineers
- The IC must understand that these individuals,
when activated, will focus or tunnel in on the
rescue. However, they may ignore the obvious - Fire conditions flashover, rollover, changing
smoke conditions, and the like. - Safety they might ignore safe practices.
32Psychology of the Mutineers
- Performance they may not be able to perform
multitasks. - Get crews inside with RIT to focus on fire
conditions. Back-up lines should be staffed by
crews who will focus on back-up. - Assign a safety officer specifically to RIT.
33The Psychology of the Others On-Scene
- As stated earlier, expect mutinies.
- They want to help their brother or sister!
- Some should remain and fight the fight.
- Utilize them for RIT support.
34The Psychology of Command
- Resist the temptation to be the hands-on guy.
This is a natural tendency. - Command will want more than the usual number of
updates, especially from RIT. - Command should build a small think-tank.
35What Command Should And Should Not Do!
- Command should consider time.
- New turn-out gear limits.
- RIT needs to get in.
- Hose streams need to be working in the area of
the endangered members ASAP. - SCBA work time extra bottles.
- Monitor the structures stability.
36Command should consider staffing constraints
- The RIT.
- Back-up line for RIT.
- Second and additional back-up lines.
- Support with special tools if needed.
- EMS personnel.
37Command should consider staffing constraints
- GET ENOUGH HELP TO THE SCENE!
38Command should remove nonessential crews
- Reason 1 To control or hold in check the
inevitable freelancing. - Reason 2 To get members who can provide RIT
support.
39The essential crews are the following
- The RIT.
- Any hoseline in the last known location of the
firefighters giving the Mayday. - Any hoseline that can be used to hold the fire
away from the area of the lost, injured, or
trapped firefighter(s).
40The essential crews are the following
- Ventilation in progress that will help draw fire
and heat from the area is also essential. - If additional crews are available, open up as
much of the building as possible without drawing
the fire into the area of the rescue.
41The essential crews are the following
- Finally, any available search crew still
conducting a primary search for viable victims
should continue.
42Withdraw nonessential crews
- All other crews are nonessential and should be
withdrawn, accounted for, and reorganized. - RIT support will grow to at least three times the
size of RIT.
43Consider all options
- Dont overlook breaching walls.
- Remember to establish a think-tank.
- Diagram the building.
- Evaluate staffing and
- time constraints.
44Communications
- During a Mayday this will be challenging at best.
- Stop the yelling as soon as possible.
45Communications
- Communications from Command and from company
officers should be deliberate, calm, clear, and
concise. - Only essential communications should be allowed.
Think about channel assignments.
46Command must build a think tank
- Now is the time to build a team at the command
post. - Consider two operations chiefs
- One for the fire.
- One for the rescue effort.
47The Fire
- The fire may have to held in check for the time
being. - This is where holding actions may need to be in
place while the search for endangered
firefighter(s) commences.
48The Fire
- The decision on what remains as is and what will
be suspended rests with Command.
49The Rescue
- The officer in charge of the rescue will need two
general things - A RIT.
- RIT support. RIT support is the Logistics of
the rescue.
50The Think Tank
- The three (or more) individuals (Command and the
officers in charge of the fire and of the
rescue) will need to be together and they must
talk.
51Command must be able to multitask conceptually
- Command will have many conversations, thoughts,
and visual observations running through his or
her head at the same time. - Command must be able to sort and prioritize these
thoughts and observations while clearly defining
tasks and expectations.
52Command Multitasking
- Continually thinking on two fronts, the fire and
the rescue. - Command must be allowed to step back and
momentarily weigh requests and realities and then
come up with a sound decision.
53Command should give up the portable radio ASAP!
- Get an aide to monitor the Command channel.
- By now, Command
- should have built a
- staff into the
- command structure.
54Returning to Normalcy
- After the firefighter rescue, Command should
conduct another PAR. - After the PAR, reestablish a plan of attack for
the original fire.
55Returning to Normalcy
- As soon as you can, send additional crews to the
scene for relief and reassign on-scene crews to
the necessary assignments. - As soon as relief comes, get the original
on-scene crews to a debriefing. They should be
required to leave the scene.
56Returning to Normalcy
- Consider support sectors such as a public
information officer to handle the media and
chaplain to handle critical incident stress
management (CISM). - Training in incident management, rapid
intervention, and rescue techniques obviously is
just a start.
57Returning to Normalcy
- Take time to review past incidents, and look at
what got you in trouble. - Determine your resources and develop your own
lost/trapped firefighter policy.
58How well Command manages the Mayday and how well
on-scene crews interact with one another will
determine the success or failure of the toughest
type of incident we will ever fight.
59MAKE A DIFFERENCE!
60Thank you !