10-Minute Training: High winds & multiple renovations complicate fire in a commercial building. What would you do?
January 14, 2025
10-Minute Training: High winds & multiple renovations complicate fire in a commercial building. What would you do?
By Ed Hartin B Shifter Buckslip, Jan 14, 2025
Firefighters watching incident videos frequently think about what they would do if facing the same situation. Ten-Minute Training drills leverage this inclination using incident video, photographs or a simulation based on incident conditions in tactical decision-game (TDG) format. TDGs help us develop and exercise the cognitive skills incident commanders require. Every month, the B Shifter Buckslip will feature a 10-Minute Training scenario designed to provide a bit of synthetic experience while enhancing your ability to recognize patterns, identify relevant cues, expectancies, and anomalies, set plausible goals, and develop a workable incident action plan. EachTen-Minute Training will focus on either a company officer serving as IC No. 1, a command officer serving as IC No. 2, or a tactical supervisor.
This month, we’re heading to Hyannis, Mass., to tackle a fire in an older, renovated, multi-occupancy commercial building. High winds and a downwind residential-over-commercial exposure further complicate the situation, adding to the challenges faced by IC No. 1.
Ed Hartin serves as fire chief for East County Fire and Rescue in Camas, Wash., and he is a Blue Card instructor. He holds the Chief Fire Officer designation from the Commission on Professional Credentialing and is a Fellow of the Institution of Fire Engineers. Ed has undergraduate degrees in fire protection technology and fire service administration and a master’s degree in education. A second-generation firefighter, he began his career in 1974. Since 2017, Ed has developed over 450 10-Minute Trainings to provide ICs with deliberate practice to build competence