One Team, One Mission: Best Practices for Company Officers Working with Mutual Aid Departments

One of the greatest strengths of the American fire service is its willingness to help neighboring communities. Every day, fire departments respond across jurisdictional boundaries to assist one another on emergencies ranging from single-family house fires to large industrial incidents. Successful mutual aid operations are rarely the result of luck, they are built upon preparation, …

When Another Fire Officer Gives a Dangerous Order: The Professional Response

Fireground operations are built upon a foundation of discipline, teamwork, and respect for the chain of command. Firefighters are taught early in their careers that following orders is essential to maintaining accountability and coordinated operations. However, there may come a time when a fire officer is confronted with one of the most difficult leadership challenges …

Best Practices for the First Arriving Company Officer as Incident Commander

When the first-arriving company officer assumes command of a working fire before the arrival of a chief officer, the entire trajectory of the incident is often shaped within the first several minutes. Those early decisions influence firefighter safety, survivability for occupants, fire spread, accountability, communications, and ultimately the outcome of the incident. The company officer …