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Firefighters Support Foundation

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Engine companies will remove their nozzles and reconnect them and their engine to the preplaced hoselines. Wildland/Urban Interface Fires * Confronting the Fire at ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Firefighters Support Foundation


1
Firefighters Support Foundation
  • Wildland/Urban Interface Fires
  • --------------
  • Structural Preparation and Protection
  • v1.0

2
About FSF
  • The Firefighters Support Foundation is a 501c3
    non-profit organization whose primary mission is
    to develop, produce and distribute training
    programs to firefighters and first responders.
    All of our programs are distributed free of
    charge.

3
Permission
  • Permission is granted to reproduce or distribute
    this material so long as the Firefighters Support
    Foundation is credited as the source

4
Accompanying Video
  • This PowerPoint presentation accompanies the
    video presentation of the same title.

5
Presenter
  • Scott Magers has over 34 years of public sector
    fire service experience. He currently holds the
    position of Battalion Chief with Hillsboro Fire
    and Rescue, Hillsboro Oregon. Additionally,
    Chief Magers is a Type 1 Incident Commander with
    the Oregon State Fire Marshals Office, overseeing
    one of their Incident Management Teams.

6
Wildland/Urban Interface Fires
7
Background
  • In 2013 the National Interagency Fire Center saw
    more than 47,000 wildfires burn off 4.3 million
    acres.
  • From 2004 2012 more than 13,000 primary
    structures were lost in the United States due to
    wild fires.
  • According to the US Fire Administration In 2012,
    9,326,238 acres were burned in the United
    States. That is an area bigger than NJ,
    Connecticut and Delaware combined.

8
Situational Awareness
  • You cant determine how to fix the problem , if
    you dont know what the problem is!

9
Situational Awareness
  • Find out where the leading edge of the fire is,
    in reference to the location of the structures
    you are protecting.
  • Know the fuel, weather, and topography of the
    area.
  • Are there maps of the area or subdivision?
  • How much time to do you have before the fire gets
    here?
  • Has structural triage been done for the area?
  • Is the area evacuated?
  • Is electrical power working in the area?

10
Situational Awareness
  • Know the 10 Standard Firefighting orders and the
    18 Watch out Situations and how they apply to
    your area.
  • What resources are available?

11
Structural and Site Preparation
  • Evacuate civilian personnel and animals (animals
    will require you to use your best judgment)
  • Remove combustible objects from the perimeter of
    the home (boats, campers, trash receptacle, fire
    wood, etc.)
  • Clear all vegetation from around the structure to
    a distance of a least two to three times the
    anticipated flame length.
  • Prepare the structure by closing windows,
    removing light curtains, closing interior doors
    to limit fire spread, turning off fans and
    coolers, disconnecting any gas/LPG services,
    leaving on electricity, making sure all of the
    entrance doors can be opened, etc. In addition,
    make sure that a porch light and a central
    interior light are left on.

12
Structural and Site Preparation
  • Use garden hoses to fill engines tanks and
    buckets
  • Pre-treat the structure with a class A foam, if
    available
  • Ladder the roof. (Use homeowners ladder, if it
    is safe. If you will be staying with the
    structure, use the fire departments ladder)
  • If the structure has an electric generator, start
    it
  • If portable pumps or alternative water supplies
    are available, prepare them for use
  • Close the garage door and disconnect the garage
    door openers, so that if you lose power you still
    can get in
  • Note all hazards, including power lines, septic
    tanks, terrain features, private bridges and LPG
    tanks, roof mounted satellite dishes, or any
    structure on the roof

13
Structural Protection
  • Structural Fire Protection is divided into the
    following categories
  • Apparatus Positioning
  • Deployment for Structural Protection
  • Mobility
  • Methods of Confronting the Fire at the Structure
  • Spotting situations
  • Contain the fire fully
  • Partial containment
  • No containment possible
  • Retreat
  • Dont underestimate the value of a good exit
    strategy!

14
Apparatus Positioning
  • Note landmarks and hazards as you approach the
    scene
  • Back your engine in from the last turnaround if
    the driveway is short
  • Park your engine so it does not block traffic
  • Avoid parking next to flammable vegetation, under
    power lines, near LPG tanks or other potential
    sources of intense heat
  • Park engine to facilitate structural protection
    within reach of the hoselines
  • Survey the area for hazards such as septic tanks
  • Review maps and survey the area
  • Identify and communicate escape
  • routes and safety zones
  • Monitor fire behavior

15
Deployment for Structural Protection
  • Check your personnel protective equipment (PPE),
    including fire shelters
  • Brief the crew use the Look Outs,
    Communications, Escape Routes, and Safety Zones
    (LCES) principles
  • Ensure that the occupants are apprised of the
    most current evacuation orders
  • Quickly survey structure and surrounding areas
  • Advance two 1 ½-inch hoselines in the direction
    the fire is coming from, around each side of the
    structure, not to exceed 200 feet
  • Ladder the side of the structure away from the
    fire
  • Advance a hoseline to the roof to extinguish any
    brands or small fires
  • Place a garden hose in the engine tank filler or
    alternate water source
  • Use hoselines on the ground to suppress or steer
    the fire around the structure
  • Be prepared at all times to pick up and deploy as
    the threat passes

16
Mobility
  • Never allow your company to become tied down.
    Limit your hoselines to 200 feet.
  • If you must retreat in a hurry , leave your hose
    and, if possible, take your fittings and nozzles.
  • All hoselines should be taken off the same side
    of the engine and should not block egress. They
    should never block the street or cross in front
    of the apparatus.
  • The roof may be protected by the pre-placement of
    a hoseline, or in some cases the residents
    garden hose.
  • A hoseline should always be available for the
    protection of the apparatus.
  • In large scale incidents an engine may be
    deployed to lay out hoselines for the protection
    of structures ahead of the fire. Engine
    companies will remove their nozzles and reconnect
    them and their engine to the preplaced hoselines.

17
Confronting the Fire at the Structure
  • Spotting Situations
  • The biggest problem with spot fires is
    extinguishing the fire brands before they start a
    larger fire. Attempt to extinguish spot fire as
    quickly as possible before they grow.
  • If you find yourself in a spot fire situation
    make sure you have a lookout in place. Lookouts
    will be able to see of the spot fire will cut off
    your egress if you need to leave in a hurry.

18
Confronting the Fire at the Structure
  • Contain the fire fully (extinguish and/or control
    the fire) as it approached the structure or the
    yard
  • This technique may or may not involve the use of
    water
  • In those cases where it does not require the use
    of water, the fire may be slowed significantly by
    removing the fuel and the extinguished with
    handtools

19
Confronting the Fire at the Structure
  • Partial Containment is used when you can control
    the fire prior to reaching your structure.
  • This carries the most risk to your personnel
  • The rear hoselines attack and split the fire from
    the rear of the structure
  • The lines are then moved to the front of the
    structure where they control the fire at the
    sides of the building and peel the fire away from
    the building
  • Then working back toward the rear of the
    structure
  • As the main fire passes, hoselines are then used
    to extinguish spot and smoldering fires in the
    area of the structure
  • Check for any extension into the structure

20
Confronting the Fire at the Structure
  • Should the fire be so large, or traveling so
    fast, that no direct attack can be mounted, a
    no-containment-possible mode is selected
  • This mode is very dangerous to firefighters, YOU
    MUST have a safety zone identified and are ready
    to retreat, should it be necessary
  • The objective is to cool the structure to
    withstand the heat as the fire passes
  • You are also relying on any pre-treatment to the
    structure that your crew was able to perform
    prior to the fire reaching your area
  • DO NOT STAY LONGER THAN IS SAFE. RETREAT TO YOUR
    SAFETY ZONE WITH PLENTY OF TIME TO DO SO!

21
Confronting the Fire at the Structure
  • As with any structural attack, these methods of
    defending a structure may be used in their purist
    sense, or they may be used in conjunction with
    each other.
  • Make sure you have a good grasp on your
    situational awareness before determining what
    method you will use.

22
Retreat
  • Do not overstay your ability to safely meet your
    objective!
  • At times it will become necessary to retreat due
    to the intensity of the fire
  • Take care in retreating
  • Other companies may be doing the same
  • Civilians may also be leaving the area
  • Your egress may have changed because of the fire
  • Maintain your situational awareness during your
    retreat

23
Suppression of the Wildfire
  • Many structural fire departments are becoming
    increasingly involved in the suppression of
    Wildland or Wildland/Urban Interface Zone fires.
    There are two methods of attack
  • Direct Attack
  • Indirect Attack

24
Direct Attack
  • The direct attack method generally works best on
    fires burning in light fuels, or on low-intensity
    fire accessible to the firefighters, enabling
    them to work close to the fire edge to perimeter.
  • Direct attack usually begins by selecting an
    anchor point and advancing hand lines directly
    around the fires edge or perimeter. Flames are
    knocked down with the water or throwing dirt on
    the fire.
  • Crews then follow up behind scraping the
    vegetation to mineral soil along the edge
    creating a fire line.

25
Indirect Attack
  • A method where the control line is located a
    considerable distance from away from the fire
    active edge.
  • Indirect attack is accomplished by building fire
    line some distance away from the fire edge or
    perimeter, and then burning the fuel between the
    fire line and the edge of the fire.
  • Indirect attack also takes advantage of natural
    and manmade barriers and allows selection of the
    final perimeter control edge.

26
The best Defense is a Good Offense!
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