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AIR MANAGEMENT

We conducted some RIT training a few years ago. In doing so, we recognized a few problems or concerns. To make a real long story short, I will cite two instances.

1. A few members arrived at the training location with low air bottles connected to their SCBAs. Not only did they arrive with low bottles (which made us question the morning SCBA check), but they entered the training building on air with the same low bottles (which made us question their ability to have survived as long as they have on the job).

2. A few members ran out of air during the training and proceeded to remove their face pieces instead of performing the self-rescue techniques they had been taught. When asked why they did that, they said, “Chief, we did what we do in a house fire if we run out of air. We take off our face pieces and bolt for the door or closest window.” (Bear in mind that the training was conducted in a rather large warehouse.)

Most of the members who went through the training did very well as it related to air management and SCBA work. However, there is still work to do.

Air management is a new concept in the fire service. It is built on the principle that the officer in charge of the crew is responsible for maintaining an awareness of all crew members’ current air supply and how long the crew can remain in the building or area before egress is started. Ideally, egress will be conducted in enough time to ensure all members get outside or to a safe area that is not immediately dangerous to life and health (IDLH) before any member’s low-air alarm begins to sound.

We are beginning a new round of “hands-on” fireground training. This concept will be introduced to the officers and crews during this training. In Toledo, this process of total implementation is still a few months off; until then, it will be the members’ responsibility to maintain an awareness of how long they can remain safely inside an IDLH atmosphere.

-John “Skip” Coleman, deputy chief of training and fire prevention, Toledo (OH) Department of Fire and Rescue, is author of Incident Management for the Street-Smart Fire Officer (Fire Engineering, 1997) and Managing Major Fires (Fire Engineering, 2000), a technical editor of Fire Engineering, and a member of the FDIC Executive Advisory Board.

Question: How is your department addressing air management in training and fireground operations?

Phil Jose, captain; Mike Gagliano, captain; Casey Phillips, captain; Steve Bernocco, lieutenant, Seattle (WA) Fire Department

Response: Our department is an air-management department. Our fireground operations and policy require that firefighters follow the Rule of Air Management (ROAM), which says: “Know how much air you have in your cylinder, and manage that air so that you leave the hazard area BEFORE your low-air warning alarm activates.” In short, all firefighters must be out of the fire building before the low-air alarm activates. If a firefighter is in the hazard area when the low-air alarm activates, policy mandates an immediate radio report to the appropriate incident command system (ICS) position that includes the following elements:


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