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Posted: Apr 27, 2017

Fire Engineering/ISFSI George D. Post Instructor of The Year Award: Aaron Fields

Aaron Fields at FDIC International 2017

Aaron Fields, the recipient of the 2017 Fire Engineering/International Society of Fire Service Instructors (ISFSI) George D. Post Instructor of the Year Award, was honored at Thursday’s General Session in the Sagamore Ballroom. A firefighter with the Seattle (WA) Fire Department, he was named Seattle Firefighter of the Year in 2011 by his peers. He is a Washington state fire instructor and has taught at the state fire academy for recruit school and departmentwide for engine company operations training. He is the founder of the Nozzle Forward program, which has been running for 10 years and has taught more than 10,000 students in more than 300 classes in more than 35 states. He teaches hands-on training at FDIC International, Andy Fredericks Training Days, Wichita HOT, and at other seminars. He is a member of the UL/NIST Panel for Fire Streams.

The impetus to practice for what would become the Nozzle Forward program was from some early fires that did not go well. Fields developed the program to gain more mechanical advantage and “create a system rather than a grab bag of techniques.” The program is a systematic study and methodology for hoseline management, movement, and fire attack.  It is a hybrid of many methods with a focus on how and why. Fields spend years studying from some of the top engine trainers in the country. The program is also an example of his ethos: “Comfort is the enemy of growth,” “Humility is the key to learning,” and “Work fixes everything; when all else fails, Just Do Work.”

Steve Pegram, president of the ISFSI, says about the selection committee’s unanimous choice of Fields: “Aaron was nominated by his peers for working to create a grassroots program to enhance and improve engine company operations. His “Nozzle Forward” approach has been widely accepted and continues to focus on its original mission of fine tuning basic nozzle firefighter skills. Aaron also shares his experience and unique approach to teaching at national fire events annually, at FDIC as a HOT instructor, and as a member of the UL Fire Attack panel. Aaron is a firefighter who has dedicated his life to being the best firefighter possible. His personal ethos guide him and his cadre of instructors with a common passion to teach and help firefighters across the country to be aggressive, but smart, firefighters.”

The award, which incorporates the Training Achievement Award previously given by Fire Engineering at the FDIC, is named for George D. Post, who was a long-time member of the ISFSI. Post was a member of the Fire Department of New York, an illustrator of fire service publications, and a developer of instructional materials; he is considered by many to be the father of visual training material used to train fire service personnel around the world.

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Posted: Apr 27, 2017

Making a Difference

“It’s not enough to merely survive in fire and EMS today. To thrive in this business, you need to find value in what you do: value in yourself, value in the service you provide to the community, and value in your brother and sister firefighters,” Mike McEvoy, technical editor of Fire Engineering and EMS coordinator or Saratoga County, New York, and keynoter at Thursday’s General Session. “The truth is that the “grab” or “save” is chance and may never happen in an entire career. You might not know it, but you do make a difference every day. You use your special powers for good, not evil, and people really appreciate it.” McEvoy reminded the audience: “It is the greatest job in the world.” He suggested that they could accomplish a switch from negativity to positivity by “tapping back into those things that helped us fall in love with the fire service when we first started out.” McEvoy touched on the importance of good morale and its ramifications. “When we connect with the people we serve, our morale improves!  Our purpose becomes apparent. We know we are making a difference.”

These remarks constituted a portion of his tips, suggestions, and guidance directed at making fire and EMS work less stressful, more pleasant, and more fulfilling for responders and possibly serve as antidotes to burnout, depression, and other ailments that contribute to conditions that erode mental health. 

McEvoy acknowledged that he was “worried” by the statistics from a research study published in the Journal of Psychiatric Research:  

• A third of firefighters have post-traumatic stress disorder, a number two or three times higher than in the civilian population.  

• Almost half of firefighters have had suicidal thoughts, 10 times higher than in the general population.  

• 19% of firefighters have planned suicide; 15½% have tried to kill themselves. 

“No one,” McEvoy said, “should have to suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder or suicidal thoughts. Help and treatment are available. We have to do something to turn this around. There is really no need for us to be miserable. If you want to reconnect with the value in your brother and sister firefighters, if you want to make a difference in their lives, you need to know them. Know their families, their kids, their girlfriends and boyfriends. If a member is in pain, ask, ‘What can I do to help?’ No firefighter should ever have to live with depression, PTSD, suicidal thoughts, drug or alcohol problems. If you see something, say something. We have to do a better job of being our brothers’ and sisters’ keepers.”

He reminded his responder audience that they possess the personality characteristics to succeed as a firefighter, medic, or law enforcement officer--traits that exist in only 10% of the population. “When the adrenaline is flowing, you are happy,” McEvoy pointed out. “When the adrenaline starts pumping in John Q Public, they are terrified, anything but happy.” This fact is important, he explained, “because we tend to think everyone is like us, that anyone could do this job. That is not true. It takes a special person with a unique set of personality characteristics.” 

McEvoy cautioned, however, that at least two of these special characteristics can hurt them in their personal lives. “Control orientation and high expectations don’t contribute to positive relationships,” he noted. “If we expect few to no mistakes from everyone in our personal lives, we are sure to be disappointed routinely.”  

Another eroder of morale and happiness discussed by McEvoy was negativity. Sometimes, he explained, “we become negative because we lose the value of the service we deliver to others.” He intimated that perhaps this loss could be connected to “how we define HERO. “My definition of a HERO,” he said, “is

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Posted: Apr 27, 2017

Rick Lasky Receives the Tom Brennan Lifetime Achievement Award

Rick Lasky and wife Jaime

At the Thursday morning General Session in the Sagamore Ballroom, Chief (Ret.) Rick Lasky, a 37-year veteran of the fire service, was presented with the 2017 Tom Brennan Lifetime Achievement Award. Lasky, the interim chief of the Trophy Club (TX) Fire Department, was chief of the Lewisville (TX) Fire Department for 12 years and, prior to that, chief of the Coeur d'Alene (ID) Fire Department. 

In summarizing Lasky’s significant achievements, FDIC Education Director Bobby Halton, notes: “Few firefighters have impacted the fire service to the degree that Chief Rick Lasky has. Whether it is his innovative work in the Saving Our Own program or his inspirational and aspirational work in his Pride and Ownership program, Rick has set the bar high and always exceeded expectations. He has a commitment to the fire service that is unparalleled in modern times.”

Lasky has influenced numerous, diverse areas. His role in helping to develop the “Saving Our Own” program, wherein firefighters are taught how to save firefighters trapped or lost in a burning building, earned him the 1996 International Society of Fire Service Instructors “Innovator of the Year” award. He has been a long-standing editorial advisory board member for Fire Engineering and the Fire Department Instructors Conference (FDIC) International. He has written articles related to fire department operations, administration, training, and safety; he is the author of Pride and Ownership-A Firefighter’s Love of the Job and co-author of Five-Alarm Leadership: From the Firehouse to the Fireground, published by PennWell Books. Lasky co-hosts the radio show “The Command Post” on Fire Engineering Talk Radio and “Humpday Hangout “The Issues and Challenges in Today’s Fire Service” on the third Wednesday of the month on fireengineering.com. In addition, he writes a blog on Firefighter Nation.

He has an AAS degree in fire science from Columbia Southern University (CSU) and was selected as the CSU 2012 Distance Education and Training Council Outstanding Graduate; he is a member of its Fire Science Advisory Board. He serves from time to time as an on-air analyst for FOX News regarding fire service-related topics.

The Lifetime Achievement Award is named for Tom Brennan, who was the editor of Fire Engineering for eight years and a technical editor. Brennan had more than 35 years of fire service experience, including more than 20 years with the Fire Department of New York and five years as chief of the Waterbury (CT) Fire Department. He was co-editor of The Fire Chief’s Handbook, Fifth Edition (Fire Engineering Books, 1995) and the recipient of the 1998 Fire Engineering Lifetime Achievement Award.

PRIDE AND OWNERSHIP: THE LOVE FOR THE JOB -- THE FIREFIGHTER

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PRIDE AND OWNERSHIP: THE LOVE FOR THE JOB — THE COMPANY OFFICER

PRIDE AND OWNERSHIP: THE LOVE FOR THE JOB — OUR TWO FAMILIES

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Posted: Apr 27, 2017

Midland (TX) Unveils New Fire Station

The Midland Fire Department accompanied by city officials and building contractors unveiled the department's newest fire station. Fire Station 6 is located at 301 Tradewinds Blvd. near the southwest corner of Champions Dr. and Tradewinds Blvd. The new station was a $4.4 million and features three engine bays, a study, kitchen, and housing area for firefighter/paramedics.
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Posted: Apr 27, 2017

Youngstown (OH) Consolidating Fire Stations

A feasibility study will determine if the city should consider consolidating its main fire station downtown and one on Madison Avenue at a new location.

The city is looking to find a new location for its No. 1 fire station at 420 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. and the nearby No. 7 station at 145 Madison Ave. on the North Side that also would house the department’s headquarters, vehicle maintenance, inspections and investigations departments as well as a fire rescue truck, a pumper and a ladder truck, said fire Chief John J. O’Neill Jr. - See more at: http://www.vindy.com/news/2017/apr/26/youngstown-consolidating-main-madison-fire-station/#sthash.2LgHjMNU.dpuf

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