| by John F. Skip Coleman, Deputy Chief of Training/EMS/Communications,
Toledo (OH) Department of Fire and Rescue
Coleman details how fire departments of any size should deal with second and third alarm, or mutual aid fires. First, he discusses the organization and structure that should be present within any department to handle the bigger fires. Later chapters deal with fighting fires in specific occupancy types. As always; safety, basics, and common sense are stressed.
In this hot new title Coleman covers:
Accountability at major fires
Managing the mayday
Resource allocation
Construction features
Unlike most texts, Colemans scenarios and case studies are applicable to small, medium, and large departments. Company officers, battalion chiefs, and deputy/division chiefs will all benefit from the experience and wisdom found in Managing Major Fires!
Contents:
Part I
The form of the response
Review of the incident management system
Sectoring large incidents
Resource allocation
The rules of engagement: risk assessment in the fire service
Accountability at major incidents
Managing the mayday
Part II
The fireground
Fighting fires in older apartment buildings
Fighting fires in garden apartments
Fighting fires in strip malls
Fighting fires in vacant commercial occupancies
Fighting fires in institutional occupancies
Fighting fires in lumberyards
Fighting fires in enclosed malls
Fighting fires in restaurants
Fighting fires in churches
Fighting fires in nursing homes
Fighting industrial fires
Fighting fires in hotels
Fighting fires in professional buildings
Buy Managing Major Fires from Fire Engineering Books & Videos today!
256 Pages/Hardcover/2001 0-912212-96-9 |