B-136 Incident Command Procedures Flashcards

1
Q

Span of control is defined as the number of subordinates one supervisor can manage effectively. In emergency situations, the accepted limit is ____

A

five (5).

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2
Q

The organization’s staff builds from the top down with the responsibility and performance placed initially with the IC. As the need exists, four separate sections can be developed, each with several units, which may be established. These sections are identified as:

A
  1. Operations – All activities directed toward hazard reduction and control.
  2. Planning – Collection, evaluation, and dissemination of information.
  3. Logistics – Provides support needs to the incident.
  4. Finance/Administration – Responsible for all costs incurred at the incident.
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3
Q

In addition to the four sections, Command Staff may include the following:

A
  1. Safety Officer.
  2. Public Information Officer.
  3. Liaison Officer.
  4. IC Aide
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4
Q

The Command Sequence consists of four parts:

A
  1. Incident Priorities
  2. Size up
  3. Goals and Objectives
  4. Tactical Operations
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5
Q

Divisions – Are assigned to specific ____. Structural situations will be designated by the ____ and ____ shall be used for floors

A
  • geographic areas
  • letter system for the sides of the buildings with Division “A” being the front of the building (or legal street address side of the building),
  • numbers (i.e. Division 5 for the fifth floor).
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6
Q

Groups – Are functional units that are identified by ____. Unit officers will report to the Division/Group Supervisor and receive orders prior to deploying their company to task work.

A

the function they perform (i.e. Salvage Group, Triage Group, etc.)

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7
Q

The first arriving unit activates the Command process by giving an initial radio report. This report should include:

A
  1. Unit designation of the Company/unit arriving on scene.
  2. A brief description of the incident situation (i.e. building type and dimension, hazardous materials release, mass casualty incident, etc.).
  3. Obvious conditions (working fire, vapor release, multiple patients, etc.).
  4. Brief description of action taken.
  5. Declaration of Strategy (this applies to structure fires, i.e. fast attack mode).
  6. Any obvious safety concerns.
  7. Assumption, identification and location of Command
    a. Identification and location of Command shall be by geographical location or well-known landmark. Unit numbered command locations shall not be used. Example: “Engine 9 will be Palm Avenue Command”, “Engine 2 is establishing Courthouse Command”, “Battalion 10 is establishing Airport Command”.
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8
Q

Nothing Showing Mode / Investigation Mode

A

These situations generally require investigation by the initial arriving company while other units remain in a staged mode. The officer should go with the company to investigate while utilizing a portable radio to Command the incident. Example: “Engine 18 arrival at a two story office complex, nothing showing from three sides. Engine 18 establishing Rock Island Command and going to Nothing Showing Mode”.

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9
Q

Fast Attack Mode

A

Situations that require immediate action to stabilize and require the Company officer’s assistance and direct involvement in the attack. In these situations, the Company officer goes with the crew to provide the appropriate level of supervision.

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10
Q

Fast Attack Mode - Examples of these situations include:

A

a. Offensive fire attacks.
b. Critical life situations which must be achieved in a compressed time.
c. Any incident where the safety and welfare of firefighters is a major concern.

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11
Q

The fast attack mode should not last more than a few minutes and will end with one of the following:

A

d. The situation is stabilized.
e. The situation is not stabilized and the Company officer must withdraw to the exterior and establish an ICP. At some point, the Company officer must decide whether or not to withdraw the remainder of the crew, based on the crew’s experience.
f. Command is transferred to another ranking officer.

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12
Q

Defensive Mode –

A

The defensive mode is utilized when conditions or hazards preclude direct entry into the hazard zone. The Company officer’s declaration of a defensive mode signals to all responding units that complex operations will be involved. The Company officer assumes Command and directs initial operations from a safe distance until Command is transferred to a higher-ranking officer.

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13
Q

Command Mode –

A

Certain incidents by virtue of their size, complexity, or potential for rapid escalation, require immediate, strong, direct, overall Command. In such cases, the Company officer will initially assume an exterior, safe, effective and visible Command position and will maintain that position until Command can be assumed by a higher ranking officer. Due to the Company officer’s distraction of having to run Command, the balance of the crewmembers shall not be assigned any perilous duties until the officer can rejoin them. Example: “Engine 92 is on scene of an overturned chemical tanker with a large vapor cloud travelling east. Engine 92 is in the Command Mode and is establishing Sawgrass Expressway Command”.

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14
Q

Transitional Mode –

A

Transitional operations are those operations conducted as the incident strategy is switched from offensive to defensive or defensive to offensive. Any change in operational strategies shall be carefully communicated to all firefighters on the fire ground.

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15
Q

____ shall be conducted anytime an incident strategy goes from offensive to defensive attack mode (or vice versa).

A

A personnel accountability report (PAR)

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16
Q

Should a situation occur where a later arriving company or chief officer cannot locate or communicate with Command (after several radio attempts), they will ____

A

assume command and announce this over the radio, and initiate whatever actions are necessary to confirm the safety of the missing crew.

17
Q

Level 1 Staging –

A

Second, third, etc. arriving units take up a position about one block away from the incident to avoid cluttering or “boxing in” the scene. Typically, the second due engine at a fire response will stage at the nearest hydrant, check the hydrant for operability and be prepared to lay a line. At this level, there is no Staging Area Manager.

18
Q

Level 2 Staging –

A

During Level 2 staging, a formal staging area(s) is designated. A Staging Area Manager is assigned and units are directed to the staging area(s). These types of staging areas are usually located in large open areas such as parking lots or fields and may be several blocks from the incident. It is extremely important that crews in a staging area(s) remain with their unit and not wander off. The crew and apparatus should be ready to deploy at a moment’s notice. Units in Level 2 staging should park or be arranged so as not to block each other in and allow direct access to or away from the incident.

19
Q

IC position activation:

A

Any situation requiring two or more units, or where in the judgment of the on-scene ranking officer, the IMS should be implemented for concerns of safety and scene control.

20
Q

Personnel shall be rotated in and out of Rehab on a ____ but shall be released only when ____.

A
  • first in, first out system

* additional personnel are requested by Command

21
Q

All communications with the primary dispatch center shall be done through ____. This includes requests for additional resources, Command transfers, and situation status reports.

A

the IC

22
Q

In the event that emergency information needs to be broadcast, the radio alert tone and the announcement ____ shall precede the message. The dispatch center shall repeat the message twice in its entirety. Until cleared by the IC, all routine radio traffic shall be suspended or taken to another channel.

A
  • “EMERGENCY TRAFFIC”
23
Q

During a multi-jurisdictional incident, the IC shall verity that the responding mutual aid companies have the ability to communicate directly with Command. This shall be accomplished by one of the following:

A

a. Incoming units with compatible radio systems are instructed as to what radio frequency/talk group(s) are being utilized.
b. Responding units which do not have compatible radio systems shall have an additional radio equipped agency representative respond to act as a liaison at the ICP and establish direct communications between these units.
c. The requesting agency shall provide radios to the responding mutual aid units thus allowing communications with the IC.
d. The responding agencies shall be teamed up with one of the on- scene units or Division Supervisors that have communications with the IC.