The podcast for and about firefighters, "Code 3" covers topics of interest to those in the fire service, in about 20 minutes. We take one subject, one guest, and get it done. We don't waste your time.
If you spend any time on social media, you’re probably familiar with Curt Isakson.
He has a massive presence on Facebook and about 6,000 followers.
Chief Ike, as he’s also known, has had a 30-plus-year career in the fire service.
He's also been an advocate for treatment of firefighters who sufFer from PTSD.
So it was not a big surprise when Curt decided to enroll in the IAFF’s Center of
Excellence for Behavioral Health Treatment and Re...
When Bill Niemann joined the fire service in 1976, the landscape looked very
different. This was a time of rubber boots, and riding the tailboard of the
engine. SCBAs were the newest thing, and not everyone got to have one.
When Bill Niemann joined the fire service in 1976, the landscape looked very
different. This was a time of rubber boots, and riding the tailboard of the
engine. SCBAs were the newest thing, and not everyone got t...
If you’re a member of a volunteer department, you’ve probably run into the problem of Incident Command.
The issue is, who’s going to be the IC on a given fireground.
Now, if your volunteer department is lucky enough to have career firefighters showing up to calls with you, the problem’s not so bad. Odds are, that career firefighter is going to be the one who takes command of the scene.
But what if the response is all-volunteer? Who ta...
This edition of Code 3 is a little different than most.
It’s about a Fire Chief who lost his job after he incurred the wrath of the Union
Local’s officials and, ultimately, the IAFF.
Scott Freitag was the chief of the Central Arizona Fire and Medical Authority, or
CAFMA.
The agency was created under Scott’s leadership when two fire districts combined under
a JMA to form CAFMA in 2015.
CAFMA covers 365 square miles of territo...
Are you tired of being told to “think outside the box?”
Well, if you are, I have good news: today’s show is about thinking inside the
box.
It's about looking at structures as a series of boxes, determining which box has the
active fire in it, and how to attack that fire. Boxes determine flow path in
large modern residential structures.
It’s an interesting idea, and it was developed for the Plano, Texas fire department
by Eric Wahlberg, a ...
One of the first tools you were taught about when you started this job is the basic ground
ladder.
Once you learned how to throw one, it was no big deal, right? The longer the ladder, the more firefighters get to carry it. Except…
What if there’s not enough people on the fireground to do that?
You might be surprised to find that the 24-foot extension ladder can safely be carried and placed by just one firefighter.
Now, a lot of underst...
One of the least exciting jobs for a firefighter is the dreaded Community Risk Reduction assignment.
In an urban environment, CRR may mean doing a meeting with the people you serve. Or maybe you’re changing smoke alarm batteries.
Either of those—not exciting, but not so much work, either.
But if your department covers urban and rural areas, where you could be tasked to fight a brush fire, well, now you may have to do some physical lab...
(This episode is a rebroadcast of a June, 2018 edition of Code 3) On June 30, 2018, the fifth anniversary of the LODD of 19 members of the Granite Mountain Interagency Hotshot Crew at Yarnell Hill, a memorial ceremony was held in Prescott, Arizona, their home base. The brief ceremony commemorated their loss and celebrated their lives. This is the event.
Incident commanders, here are some questions for you:
How much thought do you put into where you set up your command post?
Is it usually on the alpha side of a structure? Why is that? Routine? Street access?
What about distractions? For example, noise. That can not only give you a headache but also make you miss an urgent radio call, right?
My guest on this edition of Code 3 has been considering questions like this for a while. He ha...
This week’s show is related to last week’s. If you haven’t heard episode 344 with Jennifer Stanislaw, go ahead and listen to it—it dovetails nicely with this one.
On this episode, we’re talking about the importance of setting standards for probie training.
Years ago, that training consisted of handing the probie a mop as often as a ladder. It was designed to “teach a solid work ethic.”
But just as hazing has (mostly) faded away in the...
Firefighters around the country are looking at the possibility of a new OSHA ruling very carefully.
I’m talking about the two-in/two-out rule, contained in NFPA 1500.
There’s a new report written by five prominent members of the fire service that says two-in/two-out doesn’t make firefighters any safer. Instead, the time wasted waiting for a RIC crew to get ready makes it more likely that civilian victims will be killed.
The report use...
From Day One in the fire service, the lecture is the standard teaching method.
Sometimes, it seems like fire departments must keep Microsoft in business, what with all the PowerPoint software they must be ordering.
And you know the instruction -- notice I didn’t say “learning” – keeps going like this until you retire. Want to be a Battalion Chief? There’s a lecture and PowerPoint for that. An Engineer? Yep, got it covered. Captain?...
Every firefighter who rides an engine has a favorite tool: The Halligan Bar. As nearly all young firefighters learn, it was invented in 1948 by an FDNY Deputy Chief named Hugh Halligan.
Not long after that, he created the Halligan Hook. Sometimes it’s called a New York Roof Hook.
This six-foot bar is a favorite of truckies who need to open up roofs.
But there’s another way to use the Halligan Hook: as a rescue tool.
It takes a little ...
If you were among those fortunate enough to be in the audience at the opening of FDIC 2024, you heard something special.
I’d say it was a call to arms… a call to take revolutionary action.
Chief David Rhodes spoke for about a half-hour, laying out a case for change in the fire service.
His main argument: that the fire service has become too risk-averse. That the leaders of departments are so afraid of injuries—and of course, lawsuits...
Fire departments around the U.S. are approaching a tipping point.
At the same time career departments are seeing a drop in applicants, they’re also losing existing firefighters.
This is a problem.
Once upon a time, not so long ago, it was tough to get a job in the fire department.
But now, fewer people line up for those spots.
Maybe it’s generational, maybe it’s just a natural cycle and it’ll change.
Or maybe it’s something more.
Here t...
There’s a constant battle between firefighters who believe that safety on the fireground precludes aggressive tactics.
The opposite is also true.
What’s the compromise between the two?
It seems as if firefighters don’t believe that it’s possible to be both aggressive and safe.
It is, of course, and my guest today is here to offer some suggestions about how you can implement both.
He’s no wimp—he puts Mrs. Smith first, his crew second, ...
What’s potentially harder to locate victims in than a hoarder house?
A stuffed-full self-storage locker.
But that’s exactly what can happen. And even if the victim’s not inside at the time of the fire, their activities may have caused it.
Those storage spaces are frequently climate-controlled, and they’re cheap…maybe $100 a month for a small one.
That makes them seem like a great place to live for someone who can’t afford to rent an a...
Are you ready for this?
There’s a whole class of hazardous chemicals that can damage your hearing, and they’re by-products of your average structure fire.
Yes, that’s right: When you burn home furnishings, you don’t just get carcinogens. You get “ototoxic” chemicals.
Now, the PPE you wear routinely for firefighting protects against this.
But—just like the stuff in smoke that causes cancer—ototoxic chemicals are a threat when you least...
A recent study done at North Carolina State University took a look at PFAS chemicals used in turnout gear and came to some interesting conclusions.
PFS layers are what give current turnout coats and pants their oil and water repellency.
They're also a known carcinogen, so donning PPE made with PFAS is dangerous even before you step onto your engine or truck.
Unfortunately, when the study looked at alternatives, it found that all oil ...
One
of the best ways to learn anything is by experience.
A
better way, though, is to learn from others’ experiences.
That’s
why we’re talking with today’s guest—to get some insight from someone who
learned the hard way.
Captain
Jeremiah King has been with the Central Arizona Fire and Medical Authority for
more than 20 years.
But
the story of this response takes place when he was about four ...
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