The staff here at Mayday Mondays just returned from the Fire Department Instructors Conference (FDIC) in Indianapolis. This annual fire service tradition provides attendees with lectures and practical firefighter training on various fire (and EMS) topics and tactics. In addition, fire service vendors and manufacturers show their latest product and equipment to thousands of visiting firefighters. A Mayday Monday lecture was held on Thursday to several attendees. Thanks to Fire Engineering for supporting the Mayday Monday mission.
This month we honor New Haven (CT) Firefighter Rico Torres, Jr. On May 12, 2021, the New Haven (CT) Fire Department was sent for a fire in a two-story dwelling. There, units found fire in the basement and two residents trapped in the building. Firefighters were able to rescue the two occupants but during the firefight Torres transmitted a Mayday call. Rescuers found Torres along with his officer in charge, Fire Lieutenant Rankins. Both members were unconscious. Rankins was critically injured and Torres would not survive. The medical examiner ruled Torres’ accidental death was caused by asphyxiation due to lack of breathing gas. Here are links to two news reports on Firefighter Rico Torres: Fire and Cause of Death.
- Air Management Drill
- Firefighter Basics: Low-Air Alarms
- Manage Your Air
- Throw Back to Basics: Buddy Breathing
- Firefighter Survival: SCBA Air Confidence Drill
To honor Firefighter Torres, this month’s skill-drill is to prepare for an out of air emergency. We will practice two possible solutions to out-of-air emergencies.
- Buddy breathing. Most modern self-contained breathing apparatus (SCBA) have added technology to buddy breath. Have members don full personal protective equipment with SCBA. Get a partner and practice making the buddy-breathing connection. Raise the stakes by taking away vision and/or introducing empty cylinders.
- Filter breathing. If you run out of air while inside a IDLH-atmosphere, one option is to filter breath through your protective hood. After disconnecting the mask-mounted regulator, pull the hood up and over the opening in the facepiece.
Please get out and practice these skills/drills. We don’t want the first time you experience an out-of-air emergency to be in an IDLH-atmosphere.
Tony Carroll is deputy chief of operations with the Louisa County (VA) Fire & EMS Department.
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