2016 Winter Fire School - MU Fire and Rescue Training Institute
Transcription
2016 Winter Fire School - MU Fire and Rescue Training Institute
mu | f r t i University of Missouri Extension Fire and Rescue Training Institute FEBRUARY 5-7, 2016 WEBCASTS 431 Saturday 8:00 am - 12:00 pm Attend in the Classroom or Online! 446 Saturday 1:30 pm - 5:30 pm NEW 466 Sunday 8:00 am - 12:00 pm NEW Hoarder Homes: Piles of Hazards for Firefighters Modern Fire Behavior: Tactics Have Changed, Have You? Use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles in Support of Fire, Rescue and Emergency Management Response RYAN PENNINGTON Firefighter Paramedic, Charleston West Virginia Fire Department BRIAN KAZMIERZAK, EFO, CTO Division Chief of Training, Penn Township Fire Department, Mishawaka, IN MATT TRANI United States Marine Corps (RET) Fighting fires in hoarded homes is rapidly becoming a familiar occurrence in today’s fire service. While the mission is still the same, the tactics used when fighting these fires needs to change to make for a safer environment. This presentation will put you in the first due unit arriving at a reported structure fire inside a hoarded home. From hoarder recognition to salvage and overhaul, participants will be exposed to the different thought process that is used while fighting fires in hoarded homes. Hoarder Homes: Piles of Hazards for Firefighters will return you to headquarters with the knowledge and tools needed to expedite these incidents. This class provides a firsthand look at the studies conducted by Underwriters Laboratories and the National Institute of Standards and Technology on modern fire behavior and dynamics, and how they can be delivered and instituted. This may be controversial to some, so prepare for great discussions. In the end, no one can argue with the numbers and this will change how the entire fire service operates. Discussions regarding fire command, control, accountability and especially fire behavior will be presented with several fire operational studies on “modern” fire behavior. Additional topics will cover how the fire will or will not behave based upon preexisting conditions, what is inside, what the building is made of and how it is made, weather, what the occupants may do, open doors, etc., and what we do when we get to the scene and go to work. Many departments have been trained to expect a hard hit as they prepare to go in and most have adjusted some attack guidelines based upon conditions. It is all about understanding the expected consequences, both positive and negative, of our actions and focusing on what is best for the people involved. High speed internet connection and Windows Media Player required. LES CREWS Special Operations Chief, Monarch Fire Protection District MATTHEW M LAVANCHY Assistant Fire Chief, Pattonville Fire Protection District JENNIFER GRITTON Vertical Vision LLC, Human Factors, Safety and Risk Analyst Today’s advances in aerial technology have led to the development and increased use of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) for observation and tactical planning. This technology is now available for use in the emergency response field to put “eyes on target” without endangering the lives of responders. This presentation is focused on the strategic and tactical use of unmanned aerial vehicles as a viable option for emergency personnel to quickly and safely gather essential incident intelligence for the use of tactical planning and observation of executed plans. Topics will include, but are not limited to: the concept of operations, FAA regulations, mission planning, logistical considerations, special operations and training requirements. DFS CEUs 4-Investigator For More Information See Registration on Page 21 Attend any of the above three webcasts online at the time designated, or in person on campus at the University of Missouri during Winter Fire School. 2 University of Missouri Extension OVERVIEW Contents Featured Speakers....................... 2 Live Webcasts............................... 2 WFS Command Team.................. 3 Schedule of Events...................... 3 Four Hour Workshops............4-14 Eight Hour Workshops.............. 15 Twelve Hour Courses................. 16 Scholarship................................. 16 FRIDAY General Information.................. 17 Lodging....................................... 18 Equipment Exposition............... 19 MU FRTI Staff.............................. 20 Training Coordinators............... 20 Webcast Registration................ 21 Fire School Registration............ 22 Conference At A Glance........... 23 NOON Customer Service Desk Opens (Holiday Inn Executive Center) 5 MU FRTI Sales Booth Opens (Holiday Inn Executive Center) Equipment Exposition Opens (Holiday Inn Executive Center) PFFIA Board Meeting (Holiday Inn Executive Center) 1:00 p.m. FMAM Board Meeting (Holiday Inn Executive Center) 9:00 p.m. Customer Service Desk Closes MU FRTI Sales Booth Closes Equipment Exposition Closes SATURDAY 6:30 a.m. Fire School Command Team The Fire and Rescue Training Institute utilizes an Incident Command System (ICS) model to run our fire schools and other special program deliveries. For many years, we have taught ICS to agencies throughout the state as a means to manage an emergency incident. We are proud to be “walking the walk and not just talking the talk!” The Fire School Command Team augments MU FRTI’s full-time staff and dedicates many hours to the planning and delivery of the Winter Fire School. The Fire and Rescue Training Institute would like to thank these individuals and their departments for their involvement. Customer Service Desk Opens (MU Campus) 6 7:00 a.m. MU FRTI Sales Booth Opens (MU Campus) 8:00 a.m. Classes Begin NOON Lunch Break 1:30 p.m. Classes Resume UNIFIED COMMAND 3:00 p.m. MU FRTI Sales Booth Closes 5:30 p.m. MIKE ARNHART Fire Chief High Ridge FPD MARC JEFFERSON Battalion Chief Kirksville FD KEVIN ZUMWALT Associate Director MU FRTI Classes Conclude Customer Service Desk Closes SUNDAY 7:00 a.m. PLANNING KEVIN COFFELT Assistant Chief, Fulton FD OPERATIONS ANDY WOODY Assistant Chief, Springfield FD LOGISTICS MIKE CHERRY Chief, Lincoln County FPD BILL HILDEN Firefighter, Boonville FD Fire and Rescue Training Institute Customer Service Desk Opens (MU Campus) 7 8:00 a.m. Classes Begin NOON Classes End Certificates Issued Customer Service Desk Closes 3 FOUR HOUR WORKSHOPS 401 Saturday PM Only NEW 10 Things I Should Have Known as a Company Officer DAVID HALL Chief, Springfield Fire Department Leading a fire company can be one of the most rewarding positions in the fire service. Unfortunately, most are not prepared for the challenges that will be faced. The lessons covered in this session are the things I look back and wished I had known when assuming the position. This workshop will include interactive discussions and we will apply principles from some of your favorite movies. This class material is targeted to company officers and firefighters that aspire to lead firefighters. DFS CEUs 4-Instructor 402 Sunday Only Advanced Airway Management and Trauma Techniques PAUL HARRIS, BA, RN Lake Regional Health System This workshop is designed to acquaint the Advanced Life Support (ALS) provider with optional airway techniques that are uncommonly used. Although this class was designed for the ALS provider, Basic Life Support providers that are familiarized with these techniques will become valuable assets as assistants when performing these procedures. EMS CEUs 4-Division II 403 Saturday Only Alternative Fuel Vehicles and Motor Vehicle Collisions MIKE BOOTH Region A Training Coordinator, MU Fire and Rescue Training Institute As emergency service professionals, we know about alternative fuel vehicles, and when we think about these, we typically think of electric or hybrid vehicles. However, there are now other alternative fuels that we come in contact with. In Missouri, they are more prevalently used by cities and private industry. These vehicles are powered by compressed natural gas (CNG) and liquefied natural gas (LNG), and they have become a new concern for first responders. DFS CEUs 4-Hazmat Technician 4 404 Saturday Only 406 NEW The Art of Reading Buildings Before the Front Door DAVE DODSON Battalion Chief (RET), Eagle River Fire District, CO DOUGLAS HOLDMEYER Captain, Washington Fire Department Tired of the usual, boring building construction classes? We know it is an important topic, yet find the classes difficult to choke down. This class takes a whole new approach and is designed to provide essential tools and practice for making rapid street-reads on buildings for structural fire incidents for first due, rapid decision-making. DFS CEUs 4-Inspector, 4-Investigator 405 Attack From the Burned Side NICHOLAS A RISCH Lieutenant, Washington Fire Department This class is designed to give the first arriving firefighter the tools to prepare for an initial response, size-up, and building read. Using the old adage, “the first five minutes dictates the next five hours,” it is important to know what to do before the chief arrives. Starting with the subject of pre-alarm planning, topics will move onto response and efficiencies. Next, hazards and exposures are covered. This class will help you to tell the story of the structure before you enter the front door. SEAN M GRAY Lieutenant, Cobb County Fire Department, GA There are many different tactics for attacking structure fires. For years, the fire service has been preaching to attack from the unburned side. This isn’t always the best tactic. The new age fireground is evolving more than ever before. With the use of science to enhance our procedures, this class will show different tasks and tactics that can be used to extinguish fires that originate on the exterior and extend into the attic. Using case studies paired with practical experience, attendees will examine this particular fallacy along with others that have led to firefighters being injured and killed across the country in these types of fires. These strategies go against the grain of traditional firefighting, and have an innovative approach to fighting today’s fires. 407 Saturday Only The Best Seat in the House, Incident Safety and the Driver/Operator FOREST REEDER Division Chief of Training and Safety, Des Plaines Fire Department, IL Fire service humorists often poke fun at the amount or intensity of work of the vehicle operator/engineer at a fire scene. They might say the work of the first due engineer is over quickly after the first lines are charged and positive water supply is established. While part of that is true, this class will explore the safety and survival functions that can be performed by the person who has the ...best seat in the house: the engineer. You will learn various quick shortcuts for monitoring incident safety factors, how to become an additional safety officer and incident commander’s aide right from the pump panel position. Drivers, officers, and safety officers should attend this class to learn how to involve and use this safety position to monitor incident scene conditions and take actions that will make for a safer fireground. University of Missouri Extension FOUR HOUR WORKSHOPS 408 410 Blink: Critical Fireground Decision Making Building Construction and Fire Behavior for the Street Smart Firefighter JEFFREY JOHNSON Battalion Chief, Kansas City Fire Department MICHAEL J LOPINA Firefighter Education Group This class will engage attendees through lecture, scenarios, case studies, and simulations to show ways to make effective critical decisions on the fire ground. This class is designed for everyone that responds to the fireground, from the most basic level firefighter to the most experienced level officer. Fireground strategy and tactics will be discussed that impact firefighting in the rural setting, the suburban setting, and the urban setting. 409 Saturday PM Only NEW NEW Building Classification: Know What You Are Looking At STEVE GETTEMEIER Fire Marshal/Deputy Chief, Florissant Valley Fire Protection District This class is designed to show the correlation between building construction and fire behavior in the five types of construction using visual slides, videos, photos, and audio to engage the audience. Consideration of modern fire behavior and tactics are discussed, while emphasizing all aspects of fireground tactics, both old and new. DFS CEUs 4-Inspector, 4-Investigator 411 NEW Character Counts JERRY WELLS Battalion Chief, Lewisville Fire Department, TX This class will look at and describe the structural features that help categorize a building into one of the five types of construction. These five categories are based on the NFPA 220: Standard on Type of Building Construction, the International Building Code, and the International Fire Code. This class will be a visual presentation, but building materials will be on display and open discussion in class will facilitate learning of the material presented. They call us “super heroes” and “the bravest,” but how do we measure up to the expectations of the public? Everyone wants to work at the rock star firehouse. The best way to get there is to transform your firehouse to be the envy of your department. We will discuss the six pillars of character: trustworthiness, responsibility, fairness, respect, caring attitude and citizenship, and how these simple words can affect our fire service company. If you understand these concepts, you will be off to a great start. DFS CEUs 4-Inspector, 4-Investigator DFS CEUs 4-Instructor 412 Saturday Only Command Presence JERRY JENKINS Division Chief, Columbia Fire Department Do you fill the role of incident commander? Are you mentally prepared to fill the role of incident commander? This class will focus on ways to prepare yourself to command and stay in control during the most challenging incidents. Advice and techniques will be presented to help you focus on command presence, situational awareness, and self-control and how they relate to managing the incident under stress. A lack of command presence can be hazardous to both civilians and firefighters, and will definitely lead to ineffectiveness. Command presence is just as essential to controlling the incident as having the right apparatus, equipment and people. Be part of the solution to controlling the emergency scene, not a link to the chaos. Controlling emergency scene chaos through command presence will provide confidence and credibility to your crew, your department, and your community. 413 Sunday Only NEW Commanding the Fire Service ALAN V BRUNACINI Chief (RET), Phoenix Fire Department, AZ BOBBY HALTON Chief (RET), Albuquerque Fire Department, NM There have been millions of books written on leadership compared to a handful of texts on command. For the fire service, it has yet to be written. In this interactive class, we will engage in a brief study of the difference between these two concepts. We will also look at the tools and techniques necessary for firefighters, officers and command personnel to meet the demands posed by this awesome responsibility. This workshop will encompass the outline of that upcoming book and its purpose and function in the fire service. Fire and Rescue Training Institute 5 FOUR HOUR WORKSHOPS 414 Sunday Only NEW Converted Dwelling Fires CURT ISAKSON Battalion Chief, Escambia County Fire Rescue All across the country, in urban and suburban neighborhoods, single family dwellings are converted to accommodate multiple occupants, extended families, and may even house commercial businesses. Multiple problems can occur when these buildings are converted from what was originally for one family but now houses multiple families, with a large number of people coming and going at all hours of the day and night. Illegal renovations, multiple locked interior doors, faulty electrical systems, and various code violations are just some of the additional hazards you may be faced with. A higher than normal fuel load and excess clutter create life safety issues in regards to rapid fire growth and limited egress. Lack of a proper alarm system may delay notification of the occupants and we may also face extinguishment challenges due to these modifications. This class will cover these challenges and more, and we will look at a case study that recently challenged my department, which involved a two story residence that was built as a single family dwelling, but was converted to a halfway house for men. It housed sixteen beds inside with no obvious signs from the exterior. These challenges are real. Are you prepared to face them? 415 Sunday Only Decision Making: First Arriving JERRY JENKINS Division Chief, Columbia Fire Department Proper size-up for a fireground operation starts before the initial alarm. This workshop will go through the size-up process from pre-planning to assigning crews on the scene. All firefighters, not just officers and chiefs, should be a part of the size-up assessment. Participants will learn how to make size-up an everyday practice, regardless of the size of the incident. We will take the “blinders off” and look at the “big picture” of an incident to help incident commanders make good decisions and keep firefighters safe. We will focus on the strategic goals of an incident and ensure that the incident priorities and tactical objectives are carried out. 6 416 Saturday PM Only 419 NEW Emergency Medical Technical Refresher: Pediatric Fire Code Options and Resources in Missouri PAUL HARRIS, BA, RN Lake Regional Health System GREG CARRELL Acting State Fire Marshal, Missouri Department of Public Safety Accidents are the leading cause of death in children, accounting for more pediatric deaths than all other causes combined. Accidents also account for 21.7 million injuries to children that require medical care annually. This class will discuss the assessment and management of newborns, infants, and children suffering from: airway and breathing problems, hypoperfusion and shock, trauma, common medical problems, cardiac disease, special medical needs, and child abuse and neglect. EMS CEUs 4-EMT-Module VI, 4-Division IV 417 Saturday AM Only NEW Ethics in the Firehouse: A Paradox DAVID HALL Chief, Springfield Fire Department Every day, fire and EMS personnel are making headlines, but not in the way we would hope. This workshop will discuss ethics, values, and the role of organizations in guiding behavior through candid discussions and fun case studies. This workshop is targeted to ranks within an organization who will face ethical dilemmas. DFS CEUs 4-Instructor 418 NEW Fire and Life Safety Education: A Firefighter’s Perspective TED MARTIN Fire Chief, Branson Fire and Rescue This workshop is being presented in an effort to provide information that is focused on fire and life safety education from the perspective of a firefighter. The information presented will prepare students, primarily serving in rural volunteer fire protection districts, and smaller combination and career fire departments, to startup or improve their current fire departments’ fire and life safety education programs in their local community. The presentation will incorporate instruction, discussions, and practical applications to illustrate these subjects. DFS CEUs 4-Instructor JASON WEBB Director of Inspection, Testing and Maintenance, National Fire Sprinkler Association Jurisdictions across Missouri use fire code enforcement as a major part of their overall community risk reduction effort. Many others have considered it, but are baffled by how to adopt and enforce a code with non-existent resources, as well as the barriers that some current state laws create, and even what existing state laws and resources are available to help in the process. In this class, we’ll discuss what options are available to fire departments and districts that may have an interest in looking at fire codes to help reduce risk in their communities and how to build and maintain support for fire codes. We will also look at current state laws and licensing regulations that address things like blasting, fireworks, nursing home fire safety, and residential sprinklers along with how they impact this process. The information provided will be appropriate for everyone from those just looking at codes for the first time to those who currently have a code adopted but are looking for an update on these important issues. DFS CEUs 4-Inspector 420 NEW Fire Operations During Civil Unrest AARON BOCKHORST Firefighter, EMT, Ferguson Fire Department After the events in the summer and fall of 2014 in Ferguson, Missouri, the public safety personnel were introduced to a new set of operational challenges. The problems and situations that were encountered during this time were unlike anything we had ever experienced. It was apparent that the way we’ve always done things was not going to work in these situations. This class will examine these challenges and the changes made to accommodate these situations. We will also discuss the resources needed to manage such an event along with lessons learned to help manage any future events of civil unrest. University of Missouri Extension FOUR HOUR WORKSHOPS 421 424 Firefighter Friendly Thermal Imaging Firehouse Law: Five Legal Concepts for Current and Future Leaders MATT BLACK Firefighter, Kansas City Fire Department Thermal imaging can be a misunderstood discipline. Its immense value in functional mitigation is accompanied by inherent dangers. These dangers are most often associated with misinterpreting the display and deficient appreciation for the camera’s intrinsic limitations. This class evaluates the benefits afforded to the common fireground functions, alongside the pitfalls of each that lend themselves to unsuccessful operations or risks to company safety. 422 Sunday Only NEW Firefighter Line of Duty Deaths and Injury – Why? MIKE BOOTH Region A Training Coordinator, MU Fire and Rescue Training Institute Statistics show that while the number of fires are decreasing, the number of firefighter deaths and injuries are increasing proportionately! What can we do to stop this trend? This workshop will look indepth at the contributing factors and address ways to reduce deaths and injuries of firefighters and EMS personnel. Topics covered will include a review of the National Fallen Firefighters Foundation’s life safety initiatives, the impact of a lineof-duty deaths or injuries, how to define the problem, fitness and wellness concepts, pre-incident planning, training safety, and available resources for your department. DFS CEUs 4-Instructor, 4-Inspector, 4-Investigator Fire and Rescue Training Institute Sunday Only NEW CARL SCARBOROUGH Assistant Chief-Training, Central Jackson County Fire Protection District 423 NEW Fireground Decision Making for Operational Consistency JIM SILVERNAIL, CFO, MS Battalion Chief, Metro West Fire Protection District This presentation is designed to demonstrate the critical importance of a consistent coordinated fire attack, the functions which are required to deliver this action, and how each individual agency is capable of this delivery and decision-making process. Suburban based fire operations and capabilities are much different than their urban counterpart and their tactics must reflect these differences. During this class, participants will be challenged to customize or re-evaluate their tactics and strategies to meet the following handicaps: understaffing, a lack of dedicated truck companies and resources, and response area characteristics and challenges. Once participants understand the in-depth needs of each essential fireground function and compare it to their agencies capabilities, they will be tasked with creating a plan for consistent operating methods and will be given scenarios to test their implementation. This presentation will provide fire service leadership personnel with explanations of some common legal concepts that are utilized and sometimes misunderstood in the fire service. Information will be presented through lecture, case studies, and class discussions. Specific areas of law to be discussed are not guaranteed, but the most likely to be covered will include: cause and just cause, proper due process, at-will employment, Title VII as it applies to hiring, firing and discipline, union organization and collective bargaining, Weingarten Rights, Garrity Rights, the First Amendment, the Fourth Amendment, and the interrelation of federal and state laws and regulations. 425 Saturday PM Only NEW Forcible Entry: Gaining Access and Egress JOHN NORMAN Deputy Assistant Chief (RET), Fire Department of the City of New York Before any interior operations can be conducted, the fire forces must gain access to the structure. This can be easier said than done in many occupancies. This class shows your personnel the proper approach to all of the most common forcible entry challenges. It also covers many of the more difficult and less frequent problems, while stressing a systematic approach that should lead to the fastest possible entry with minimal damage at any operation. Topics covered during this workshop will include: forcible entry size-up, conventional forcible entry, hydraulic forcible entry, “through the lock” methods, high security problems and security gates, and padlocks and similar devices. Emphasis will be placed on the most efficient method of gaining entry with the basic tools in the vast majority of situations, as well as a variety of alternate methods that may be utilized when the basics fall short. 7 FOUR HOUR WORKSHOPS 426 NEW From Overhaul to Fireball: Lessons Learned CHIP ASHFORD Captain, St. Charles Fire Department DAN CASEY Captain, St. Charles Fire Department This class describes lessons learned from a “near-miss” that occurred while battling a residential fire that injured four veteran firefighters in the City of St. Charles in the month of January, 2014. Wind driven fire conditions forced firefighters from salvage and overhaul operations to maydays, bail-outs, and a rapid intervention team scenario within minutes. Video footage from multiple sources at the fire give us the rare opportunity to see true wind driven fire conditions develop. This will help us better understand the dangers of fire operations during these types of conditions, and how to better control our flow paths. Interviews from the veteran members of our department, who were able to escape, provide first hand facts and detailed accounts of the incident. The firefighters involved were forced to bail out of the building and suffered a variety of injuries requiring several weeks of recovery. These injuries required time in the hospital burn unit and took an emotional toll on all of our members. 428 Saturday Only Gallons Per Second CURT ISAKSON Battalion Chief, Escambia County Fire Rescue In this workshop, we will focus on exceeding fire flow needs while still managing water during the crucial initial hoseline advancement on an interior offensive attack. You will learn why it is necessary to think in terms of gallons per second at this critical time. Strategies are presented for managing the booster tank supply until a sustainable water supply has been established. This class is especially relevant for engine companies that commonly engage with the booster tank and deploy suburban fire tactics. All aspects of first-due fire tactics at your most common structural fires and how to quickly and effectively suppress will be covered. NEW Funeral Basics for Honor Guard BRENT JONES Lieutenant, Milwaukee Fire Academy This workshop will explain how to prepare and plan for retiree, active duty, and line-of-duty-death funerals. We will cover everything from notifications to graveside proceedings. We will differentiate between the levels of service expected from a retiree to a line-of-duty-death and the processes involved. If time allows, the class will review the week-long process of sending off the nineteen Granite Mountain Hotshots from Prescott, Arizona. This was the tragic ending of what occurred in a deadly wildfire during the summer of 2013. 8 Saturday AM Only NEW Guide for Structural Firefighting RICHARD SMOKEY DYER Fire Chief (RET), Kansas City Fire Department 429 Getting There Safely: Improving Apparatus Response and Roadway Operations Safety MIKE WIEDER Executive Director, International Fire Service Training Association 427 430 Traffic collisions are the second leading cause of firefighter deaths in the United States. Statistics show that firefighter fatalities as a result of being struck by vehicles while operating at roadway incidents are steadily increasing in recent years. Recognizing these alarming facts, the United States Fire Administration (USFA) and the International Association of Fire Fighters (IAFF) worked together to develop a training program for fire service personnel. This program addresses these issues and presents information that can be used to reduce the likelihood of injuries or deaths when responding to incidents or while working on the roadway. In this session, the co-developer of this program and author of the IAFF/USAF cited report will take you through the entire program. The valuable information being presented in this program is reinforced with numerous case studies and examples and will allow you to implement this knowledge right away. While we haven’t necessarily changed what the fire service does or how they do it, we can change our behavior by examining the effect new building construction materials and techniques and furnishings have had on the burning characteristics of today’s structures. Becoming aware of how those new burning characteristics impact firefighter safety is a critical skill set. NFPA 1700 is a new document that is currently being developed utilizing the science of fire dynamics. This class will discuss the testing that has been done and is ongoing to provide the fire service with new scientific principles that will improve our ability to control and suppress structural fires. The goal of this course is to increase knowledge of dynamic principles and how they impact fire service operations. Participants will improve their level of safety and building occupant survivability through tactical considerations. We will address ventilation and flow paths, the use of offensive exterior fire attack, and the tenability conditions of victims. 431 Hoarder Homes: Piles of Hazards for Firefighters AVAILABLE AS A WEBCAST See page 2 for description and classroom and webcast schedule. University of Missouri Extension FOUR HOUR WORKSHOPS 432 Saturday AM Only NEW 434 Sunday Only NEW How Building Construction Has Changed: What You Need to Know Hybrid and Green Buildings: Not as Simple as Type 1, 2, and 3 Anymore STEVE GETTEMEIER Fire Marshal/Deputy Chief, Florissant Valley Fire Protection District STEVE GETTEMEIER Fire Marshal/Deputy Chief, Florissant Valley Fire Protection District This workshop will uncover some drastic changes on how we should all be looking at the buildings in our area. We will compare and contrast how building construction has changed over the past 100 years. Due to the subject matter and based on how construction seems to be changing on a daily basis, this workshop will rely heavily on visual presentation with informative class discussions throughout. This class addresses concerns associated with hybrid or green buildings, which are also known as alternative construction. These types of buildings usually do not fit neatly into construction types we have seen in the past and will present problems in the future if they are not identified correctly. A visual presentation and samples of building materials will aid participants and help to identify these new buildings. DFS CEUs 4-Inspector, 4-Investigator DFS CEUs 4-Inspector, 4-Investigator 433 Saturday AM Only Hybrid and Electric Vehicles: What Emergency Responders Need to Know ALAN BRAUN Training Officer, Cole County Fire Protection District With over two million hybrid vehicles on the road and the current administration’s goal of having 1 million electric vehicles in service by 2015, emergency responders on the front lines of handling accidents, extrications, and fires, must be trained to respond to incidents involving these vehicles. This lecture will provide an overview of the skills needed to safely respond to incidents involving hybrids, plug-in hybrids, and electric vehicles by covering identification methods, basic electrical concepts, vehicle systems and hazards, and emergency response procedures. Fire and Rescue Training Institute 435 Sunday Only Ice Rescue Awareness TOM COLLINS Fire Chief, Kirksville Fire Department Most of the State of Missouri faces freezing water on ponds, lakes or streams. As emergency responders, we will be the ones faced with ice rescue calls. In this class, we will cover some of the issues you will confront during an ice rescue incident, such as: the ice conditions that cause us problems, environmental conditions as they relate to the victim and the rescuer, victim assessment and consideration, patient handling, team organization, basic knots needed and rescue options. Rescue gear for all levels of response will be covered. Self-rescue techniques will also be discussed as well as NFPA 1670 and how it relates to ice incidents. EMS CEUs 4-Division IV 436 NEW Integrated Care Solutions BRIAN SCHAEFFER Assistant Chief, City of Spokane Fire Department, WA A small number of patients are generating a large number of EMS calls and emergency department visits. Many systems have begun to consider alternatives to traditional transport. The Spokane Fire Department took a different approach towards addressing the increasing pre-hospital medical needs by creating a multi-discipline plan that includes one-person paramedic units, fire department social workers, hotspotter programs and several other initiatives to improve the quality of life for the most at-risk populations. This successful plan is now being modeled in several cities across North America. EMS CEUs 4-Non-Core 437 ISO Public Protection Classification: FSRS Update Overview of Changes RANDALL DOWNS Manager, Insurance Services Office This presentation consists of a general overview of the Insurance Services Office and the Public Protection Classification program with specific focus given to the recently filed and adopted updates to the Fire Suppression Rating Schedule (FSRS). An open discussion of engaging questions and concerns will be encouraged. DFS CEUs 4-Inspector 9 FOUR HOUR WORKSHOPS 438 NEW 440 NEW 442 Saturday Only It’s Not Just About Hooks and Hoses Keys to Effective Public Relations Leadership Principles for the Fire Officer BRUCE BJORGE Captain, Western Taney County Fire Department ERIN HEDLUN Public Relations Officer, Green County Office of Emergency Management CRAIG A HAIGH Fire Chief, Hanover Park Fire Department, IL This class will highlight the basic elements of effective public relations for firefighters of every rank and experience, both volunteer and career. Successful media relations, community engagement, and social media interaction are valuable skills for all firefighters to process. This class will outline the best practices for interaction with the media, the community at large, and citizens via social media platforms. Topics covered include effective communication tools, a guide to successful media interviews, media relations on scene, and how to effectively engage citizens via social media channels. Content will be delivered visually with relevant real-life videos, personal examples and practical simulations. Due to time constraints of the job, family life, and the needs of the department, many leaders are unable to commit the time required to attend formalized classes on leadership. This class is designed to address the leadership principles necessary to effectively direct and manage volunteer, combination, and small to medium sized career departments. It will identify leadership philosophies and facilitate a patch of discovery designed to help participants identify their own leadership qualities, strengths, and weaknesses. Discussion of individual department challenges are encouraged. Chief Haigh will provide numerous examples, case studies and insights drawn from his 30 years of experience leading volunteer, combination, and career fire departments. DON WEAVER Attorney, Weaver and Associates, Attorneys at Law Designed specifically for board of director members, chief officers and training officers, this class discusses the importance of training your personnel on agency policy as well as fireground tactics. There are many ways that a fire agency can find themselves in legal trouble. Fortunately, much of this risk can be predicted by looking at the experiences of others. We will discuss the types of risk an agency can be exposed to, the importance of having good agency policy, different approaches to training personnel on policy, and training goals for personnel for policy compliance. To examine this, we will hold a mock trial and demonstrate how things can go wrong. It is important to have well-trained personnel and to make sure your agency’s training program provides training on all aspects of your agency’s operations, including training on policy and tactics to ensure the success of your agency’s future. 439 Sunday Only Juggling Hats: The Multiple Responsibilities of Managing a Volunteer Department CRAIG A HAIGH Fire Chief, Hanover Park Fire Department, IL This class is designed to address the difficulties of managing a volunteer or combination department. Customer expectations and call volumes continue to increase while leaders are faced with more and more unfunded mandates, flat or declining revenues, greater training and certification demands, lack of staff availability, recruitment and retention concerns, vision casting, and organizational succession planning. Chiefs and command officers tackle all of these issues while trying to juggle a “real job” and family demands. This class will address the multiple management demands in an attempt to better equip the volunteer chief or command officer with tools to help address some of these concerns. DFS CEUs 4-Instructor 441 Sunday Only Large Vehicle Rescue: Awareness ALAN BRAUN Training Officer, Cole County Fire Protection District Accidents involving semi-trailers and other large vehicles call for specialized knowledge and skills by emergency responders. This workshop is designed for those emergency response personnel who have an interest in, or experience in vehicle extrication and wish to expand their awareness. Large Vehicle Rescue: Awareness will provide participants with the insight and information needed when efficiently operating and using tow trucks, rescue struts, cribbing, and airbag systems typically used to lift and stabilize heavy vehicles. Realistic vehicle extrication scenarios will be presented and discussed along with the tactics and strategies that are best suited for the problems associated with these large vehicles. 443 Sunday Only Making Training Count FOREST REEDER Division Chief of Training and Safety, Des Plaines Fire Department, IL Is it time to change your training program into a survival program? Are your members tired of the same old drill or presentation? This class is designed to give attendees resources and planning tools to help them upgrade their training programs to make training count. Every training minute matters and building a survival focused training program with quick, short but intense training drills will help meet this challenge. DFS CEUs 4-Instructor DFS CEUs 4-Instructor 10 University of Missouri Extension FOUR HOUR WORKSHOPS 444 NEW Managing a Mass Casualty Incident: Tour Bus GARY WOODSON Fire Chief (RET) Effective mass casualty management is a complex and demanding evolution for all emergency response personnel. Imagine arriving on a scene to find an overturned bus with people trapped, injured and screaming for help. Because most buses do not have seat belts, this vastly increases the likelihood of injuries and deaths in an accident. Here are some of the questions you need to ask yourself: Do I have a planned response for a large-scale school bus crash? Do I have adequate supplies and the proper tools? Have I trained on bus extrication? Do I have adequate mutual-aid resources? We will have discussions based on real incidents and review the way the incident was managed, and then review the lessons learned. 447 NEW Now You Are the Training Officer: Building Your “Instructor’s Tool Kit” 449 Operations and Placement of Apparatus MIKE WILBUR Lieutenant (RET), Fire Department of the City of New York RANDAL E NOVAK Bureau Chief, Iowa Fire Service Training Bureau Regardless of whether you are a full-time fire service instructor, a company officer, or a training officer, you have entered the “world of adult learning.” This workshop will look at the role of the instructor and the skills necessary to succeed in this role. We will revisit the basics and add to our “instructor tool box.” We will use the four step method of instruction as the guide for this workshop, focusing on preparation, presentation, application, and evaluation. DFS CEUs 4-Instructor This dynamic class is a must for all firefighters, fire officers, company and chief officers, drivers, and engineers. Each rank will derive benefits from the materials presented. Topics discussed will include the characteristics and operating features of rear mount, platforms, and quint apparatus. Special emphasis will be made on truck company placement for various types of occupancies and for rescue and life safety strategies and tactical work of quint apparatus. Finally, strategies and tactics will be discussed in the operation and proper position of aerial ladders and tower ladders and how to successfully deploy both at the scene of a fire. 450 445 Saturday PM Only NEW Organizational Destiny Rests with You: The Role of Succession Planning Saturday AM Only CRAIG A HAIGH Fire Chief, Hanover Park Fire Department, IL Medical Buffet: Emergency Medical Technician Refresher PAUL HARRIS, BA, RN Lake Regional Health System Gain knowledge and expertise in this workshop with a buffet of medical topics. Discussion, analysis and advice will be presented on obstetrical and gynecological emergencies, behavioral emergencies, environmental emergencies, and allergy/ virology, with a focus on flu and novel virus. EMS CEUs Ob/Gyn-1 Hour Modules VI, Behavioral-1 Hour Modules IV, Allergy/Virology, 446 Sunday Only NEW Modern Fire Behavior: Tactics Have Changed, Have You? AVAILABLE AS A WEBCAST See page 2 for description and classroom and webcast schedule. DFS CEUs 4-Investigator Fire and Rescue Training Institute 448 Saturday Only NEW Nuggets for the Leader and Mentor: Train ‘em to Take Your Place CARL SCARBOROUGH Assistant Chief-Training, Central Jackson County Fire Protection District This presentation will provide fire service personnel with ideas and “thinking points” applicable to those who are already in leadership positions, as well as those who aspire to reach them. Concepts for self-improvement will be discussed in detail. In addition, concepts for assisting the next generation to achieve their goals and succeed in the fire service will be examined and discussed. Succession planning is one of the most challenging dimensions of organizational leadership, but is essential for future organizational success. This class will define succession planning and emphasize that the future of the department begins by hiring the right employees. Once hired, leadership must be intentional about employee development in order to build the future leaders of the organization. Hiring philosophies and practices and techniques for organizational assessment, along with the creation of individualized development plans designed around succession planning will be emphasized. We will look at the role of specialized leader training and development programs including the vital aspect of a mentor program. The focus will be on the fact that successful succession planning programs depend on a long-range organizational commitment designed to positively impact and develop employees throughout their entire professional career. 11 FOUR HOUR WORKSHOPS 451 NEW 453 Sunday Only 455 NEW Public Relations for the Fire Service Reading Smoke 2016: Tactical Solutions Responding to Natural Gas Emergencies RON TISIUS JR Engineer, High Ridge Fire Department DAVE DODSON Battalion Chief (RET), Eagle River Fire District, CO MIKE CALLAN Emergency Response Training Many departments are functioning without a formally trained public information officer and in some cases it ends with the chief. In other cases, it simply does not happen. This is a vital function for fire departments because public relation efforts allow departments to manage public opinion. How the public perceives their fire department can be the deciding factor in budgeting, staffing, equipment purchasing and other areas that are critical to safely and successfully protecting the public. In this workshop, we will provide fire departments with the tools needed to create a positive and healthy relationship with the public. 452 Fire officers must adjust to the changes in fire behavior that have occurred in recent years or more firefighters will die or be injured. Being able to read smoke on arrival is the key to predicting fire behavior. It helps you discover the specific location and intensity of a fire, building collapse potential, and the likelihood of hostile fire events such as flashover. This year’s program is updated with new videos and attendees will leave with street smart tips that will help fire due decision makers. DFS CEUs 4-Hazmat Technician Sunday Only Preparing for New Building Hazards Facing the Fire Service FRED MALVEN Assistant Chief for Special Operations, Nevada Community Fire Department, IA Dozens of critical building related developments have significantly altered the performance and general predictability of buildings under fire conditions in the early twenty-first century. While lectures and publications by Francis L. Brannigan and others had made the safety of buildings a day-to-day topic of discussion in the past, many of the serious threats posed by changes during the last decade have gone largely unnoticed. This class will begin with a brief review of some of the more important issues identified by Brannigan and his contemporaries. It will then discuss the major changes that have taken place in the 2000s that include: taller and more complex wood-frame apartment buildings, exceptionally vulnerable structural systems, increased opportunities for fire spread, maze-like interior arrangements, and more hazardous furnishings and contents. The session will conclude with a discussion of fire department options for responding to these critical changes in the building fire environment. DFS CEUs 4-Inspector, 4-Investigator 12 This training session provides first responders with practical knowledge of awareness, recognition, hazard assessment, risk evaluation and safe emergency response procedures for responding to natural gas emergencies. The interactive program incorporates instruction, video and a textbook to provide a broad representation of natural gas operations and tactical response options. Responding to Natural Gas Emergencies helps emergency responders, community officials, and the operator work together to prevent and effectively respond to a pipeline incident. 456 454 Saturday Only NEW Resilient or Brittle Firefighters and Their Organizations ALAN V BRUNACINI Chief (RET), Phoenix Fire Department, AZ BOBBY HALTON Chief (RET), Albuquerque Fire Department, NM The fireground is an incredibly complex and dynamic environment and few people have studied it as deeply or completely as Chief Alan Brunacini. Together, with his old friend Chief Bobby Halton, these two chiefs will focus on how firefighters interact in these complex environments and how their organizations support or fail to support their efforts. They will tackle the issue of how to handle the dilemmas of the fireground and the trade-offs for competing goals on the fireground and the issue of limited resources. The chiefs will discuss issues about blame versus accountability and how to extend and enhance learning opportunities. They will also discuss how to use second stories to find deeper meaning behind our experiences. NEW Safety Tips for Emergency Responders: Rail Safety JOE LAIR Senior Rail Safety Inspector, Missouri Department of Transportation Safety is a way of life for first responders. Every day, as emergency service professionals, we put ourselves in harms way to protect the public in their homes, office buildings, factories, agricultural facilities, and other locations, each with distinct hazards. We understand emergency personnel have to know a great deal about a variety of different industries and settings and we want to make it as easy as possible for you to learn the basic safety tips for when you are on railroad property. Emergency responders will understand how to work safely around railroad equipment and proper safety handling techniques for railroad equipment. We will give you valuable information on what to do with emergency notifications, who to contact, and what information the railroad needs from emergency services. Then we will discuss materials that are transported by rail like crude oil and hazmat trains, and the routes they take throughout the state. DFS CEUs 4-Hazmat Technician University of Missouri Extension FOUR HOUR WORKSHOPS 457 NEW Small Departments: Growing Beyond the Single Line Mentality JON TRENT Fire Chief, Nixa Fire Department Our greatest adversary to organizational growth is past success! This class challenges firefighters at all levels of any organization to take a critical look at onscene performance. Through the process of examination, the following topics will be considered: How does your organization, shift, and crew define your on-scene performance? What is your operational brand? Are you living up to your on-scene operational performance and brand? At what level of performance is your organization, shift, and crew currently performing? Are they competent, developing, or at peak performance? How do you move to the next level of performance and maintain peak performance? These are all topics we will examine, discuss and answer in class. 459 Sunday Only JIMMY HENDERSON Regional Chief Inspector, Missouri Division of Fire Safety JOHN NORMAN Deputy Assistant Chief (RET), Fire Department of the City of New York LIANNE JOHNSON Fire Inspector/Lead Public Education Specialist, Missouri Division of Fire Safety This class will include information concerning the diverse types of fire safety inspections conducted by an inspection unit, as well as information on the several codes or standards used to promote fire safety throughout the state. It will also include information that grants the inspection unit authority or jurisdiction to perform these inspections using state statutes, promulgated rules or nationally recognized standards. Additionally, there will be a discussion of public fire education assistance available from the fire marshal’s office. DFS CEUs 4-Inspector Saturday AM Only JOHN NORMAN Deputy Assistant Chief (RET), Fire Department of the City of New York Solar Panel Safety for Firefighters and Inspector ROGER A ELLISON Assistant Chief, Black Jack Fire Protection District PAUL RICHARDSON Fire Marshal, Pattonville Fire Protection District This class is a great introduction for firefighters interested in solar technology. There will be descriptions for different types of solar technologies, what they are made of and their variety of uses. Solar panel types and sizes, along with installation techniques will be discussed. There is an emphasis on the codes involved and code enforcement, firefighter safety, command considerations, and how and when solar panels are used. DFS CEUs 4-Inspector Fire and Rescue Training Institute NEW Succession Planning: What Will Your Legacy Be? Store Fires: Taxpayer and Strip Malls NEW Sunday Only The State Fire Safety Inspection Process 460 458 461 Fires in stores and other commercial occupancies are severe threats to firefighters. More firefighters are killed per alarm in commercial fires than in any other commonly encountered blaze. The reason many of these blazes end up being so destructive is often traceable to the fire department’s lack of preparedness. Fortunately, major store fires are not everyday occurrences, but as a consequence, many departments try to apply “house-fire tactics.” This class will highlight the differences between residential and commercial fires and provide instruction and tactics which have proven to be effective. Topics covered will include: store fire injury and deaths, construction deficiencies, tactical differences, hoseline selection, stretching and placement, gaining entry and exit, cockloft fires and roof operations, trusses and other lightweight roofs, cellar fires, parapet wall collapses, and other hidden dangers. The focus of the presentation is on the more common causes of firefighter deaths and injuries in these dangerous structures and offers useful tips on how to keep your firefighters from falling prey to these common dangers. We all serve for a relatively short term in the life span of an organization. A thirty to thirty-five year career is an opportunity to have an impact during that time frame. If done right, though, it is like picking supreme court justices, and your impact will continue for years after you are gone. During this presentation, we will explain why you need succession planning and how to improve your department’s leadership. Topics covered will include: management versus leadership, mentoring and leadership, establishing and maintaining credibility, the role of the three P’s, ways to improve your leadership, facing new assignments, giving orders, enforcing discipline, and developing leaders for tomorrow. We are all measured in part by how we mentor others and how we bring others along. All good bosses are teachers and are looking to help the unit and the organization. The mentoring process is a component of succession planning. Departments have to look deep into their organization beyond the obvious answers. You still need people who can make the long hallways, but we also need people to get involved in other aspects of the job, such as people to develop the training programs, as well as to come off the line and deliver them. 462 NEW Surviving a Confined Space Rescue JEFF HARDY Captain, St. Joseph Fire Department WILLIAM LAMAR Training Chief, St. Joseph Fire Department This presentation gives participants the needed information to identify a confined space rescue situation. It will be helpful to anyone that is new to this type of technical rescue. Topics will include safety, risk assessment, metering, and equipment selection. Attendees who have taken technician level courses will also benefit from this updated information. We will explain the changes involving NFPA and OSHA standards. You will leave class with response ideas from instructors who have responded to real world incidents. 13 FOUR HOUR WORKSHOPS 465 463 Saturday Only Swiftwater and Flood Rescue: Awareness TOM COLLINS Fire Chief, Kirksville Fire Department This class is designed to provide participants with the necessary beforehand knowledge to safely conduct general waterbased operations and search and rescue calls specific to all environments involving water. Compliant with the awareness level and specified by NFPA 1670 Operations and Training for Technical Rescue Incidents, this class covers equipment, training, physical requirements, pre-plan preparation, public education materials, site safety, accountability, size-up, hazard assessment procedures, utilization of the incident command system, risk versus benefit analysis procedures, and identifies what is considered to be the legal common practice in this increasingly common and dangerous environment. Sunday Only NEW DFS CEUs 4-Instructor, 4-Inspector, 4-Investigator, 4-Hazmat Technician 14 NEW Working Fire Operations for Incident Commanders DAVID HALL Chief, Springfield Fire Department GREG MUNDY Assistant Chief (RET), Irmo Fire District, SC Most organizations have an employee who has pulled pranks or conducted themselves inappropriately or violated policies. Using a series of videos, case studies, frank conversation, and a little fun, this class will inform you how to utilize an incident command system decision-making format to build a foundation from which good personnel decisions can be made with confidence. This class is designed for company officers, chief officers, and those that aspire to attain those positions. This class will prepare participants to command modern building fires using effective and coordinated strategies and tactics. Participants will review broad objectives of engine and truck/support tactics. Discussions will cover common fireground challenges that affect safe and efficient command and control on small and large firefighting events. 466 NEW Use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles in Support of Fire, Rescue and Emergency Management Response AVAILABLE AS A WEBCAST See page 2 for description and classroom and webcast schedule. Taking Action Against Cancer in the Fire Service Multiple studies have demonstrated statistically higher rates of various types of cancers in firefighters compared to the general American population. In an effort to help address the alarming rate of cancer in the fire service, the Firefighter Cancer Support Network has published an industry white paper that provides useful information regarding the risks firefighters face during the course of their duties. It also offers practical tips for minimizing their exposure to cancer-causing substances. Sunday Only Taking Command of Your Personnel Issues 464 JEFF STRAWN Missouri Director, Firefighter Cancer Support Network 468 467 Saturday PM Only 469 NEW Zero to Hero: Fire Service Leadership Redefined LARRY CONLEY Captain, St. Louis Fire Department First responders receive technical training to neutralize fire in all its forms and the fundamentals are instilled in each of them. They are charged with bringing this knowledge and experience to effectively serve the community. To be most effective, they must also infuse this training with a new way of thinking and learn to practice principle centered thinking. This will support and strengthen the training they have learned and produce a department of honored professionals. Participants will learn from a combination of lecture and intense role play in class. This will challenge them to exercise the newly learned personal leadership EMPOWER model. In this safe environment, you will emerge with a redefined paradigm on leadership. Vehicle Technology and Incident Safety ALAN BRAUN Training Officer, Cole County Fire Protection District This workshop will take you through the safety aspects of a motor vehicle accident. Participants will discuss guidelines to follow from apparatus placement through the termination of the incident. Topics will include personnel safety, incident safety, vehicle airbag safety, hybrid vehicles, new car technology, and future concepts of the automotive industry. University of Missouri Extension EIGHT HOUR WORKSHOPS 801 Saturday Only 802 Saturday Only Apparatus Architect Purchasing Seminar Basic Amusement Ride Inspection MIKE WILBUR Lieutenant (RET), Fire Department of the City of New York JIMMY HENDERSON Regional Chief Inspector, Missouri Division of Fire Safety Purchasing a fire apparatus represents the single largest expenditure that many fire departments will make. Apparatuses have become very complex to specify and build due to rapid technological advances. These advances have left most departments ill-equipped to make knowledgeable, informed decisions when specifying new apparatus. If your sales person has little or no experience, the outcome of your project could be doomed. Knowledge is power and this class will provide you with logical, knowledge based information to help avoid the pitfalls that many have encountered. If buying a new apparatus is out of the question, we will also discuss the positives and negatives associated with buying used apparatuses and whether or not to rehab used or existing apparatuses. This class is for anyone that plays any part in fire apparatus purchasing, fire apparatus sales, fire apparatus manufacturing or fleet management and maintenance. It serves to educate present and future generations that are saddled with the awesome responsibility of purchasing a new or used fire apparatus that must serve their jurisdictions for many years to come. A purchasing methodology will be presented that will reduce the cost and time required to develop the right specification for your organization. LARRY WATSON Deputy Chief of the Elevator Safety Unit, Missouri Division of Fire Safety This class provides the basic principles for conducting spot inspections of amusement rides. The fundamentals of blocking, wire rope inspection, and correct use of fasteners, along with maintenance documentation will be discussed. In addition, the class will explain the scope of the State of Missouri regulations relating to amusement rides including permitting, inspection, and the requirements of accident investigation. DFS CEUs 8-Inspector 803 Saturday Only Certified Fire and Ambulance District Board Training MONTE OLSEN Missouri Association of Fire Protection Districts This workshop will provide the necessary training and education required for newly appointed fire and ambulance district board members under Missouri state law. The Missouri Association of Fire Protection Districts has developed the curriculum used in this class to assist new board members in understanding legal liabilities and personal obligations of their position. Topics include: authority of the board, responsibilities, rules, laws of elected boards, elections, and how to preside at a meeting. 804 Saturday Only Fireground Support Operations in the 21st Century FRED MALVEN Assistant Chief for Special Operations, Nevada Community Fire Department, IA GREG MUNDY Assistant Chief (RET), Irmo Fire District, SC This session is intended to renew “truck company” thinking in departments of all types and sizes, whether they operate a ladder truck or not. It will review the concept of support operations and how to put them to work at the local level. It will address the individual fire support functions acronym known as LOVERS PLUS: laddering, overhaul, ventilation, entry, rescue including interior search methods, and salvage; power supply, lighting, utility and environmental control, and special local requirements. We will cover the pros and cons of these various options. Throughout the discussion, emphasis will be given to the rationale and reasons for selecting specific options, not just how to perform them, and how changing responsibilities, resources and constraints have affected the delivery of support operations in the 21st century fire service. 805 Saturday Only NEW Simulated Incident Management for First Arriving Officer MARK CANNON Training Chief, Joplin Fire Department MICHAEL J NOVAK Battalion Chief, Branson Fire and Rescue Officers first arriving on single and multifamily residential structure fires are faced with many challenges and often fewer resources than needed for full incident mitigation. This class is designed to refresh students on primary incident management skills, while providing the opportunity for hands-on, simulated application. Topics covered will include command and control, incident organization, size-up, communications, personnel accountability and incident benchmarking. Computer simulations will be utilized to emphasize the topics discussed. Fire and Rescue Training Institute 15 TWELVE HOUR COURSES 101 103 Incident Command for High-Rise Operations NIMS: Incident Command System for the Fire Service STEVE HOLTMEIER Captain, Jefferson City Fire Department GARY W GRAF JR Battalion Chief, Pacific Fire Department This course is designed to assist emergency response officers who have the responsibility of managing high-rise incidents. This includes organizing resources, developing strategies, and managing tactical operations to protect life and to minimize damage during an incident. Participants attending should have a working knowledge of basic incident command system organization, a working knowledge of strategy and tactics for structural firefighting, knowledge of building construction and an understanding of the type of building systems that exist in high-rise buildings. This course meets the needs of emergency response personnel with the responsibilities to implement and/or function within a departmental Incident Command System (ICS). This program addresses the need for incident management systems, an overview of the structure and expandable nature of ICS, an understanding of the command skills needed by departmental officers to effectively use ICS guidelines, an overview of the National Incident Management System and scenario practice on how to apply ICS. In addition, resource information will be provided for setting up and implementing an ICS. EMS CEUs 12-Non-Core 102 POST 2-hrs Legal, 5-hrs Technical, 5-hrs Skill, 4-hrs Interpersonal Leadership III for Fire and EMS: Strategies For Supervisory Success RONALD THOMPSON Fire Chief, Grand Fire Protection District, CO This course provides the company officer with the basic leadership skills and tools to perform effectively in the fire service environment. It covers when and how to go about delegating to subordinates, assessing personal leadership styles through situational leadership, disciplining subordinates and applying coaching and motivating techniques for the company officer. Qualifies for the MU FRTI Fire Officer Certificate Program. This certificate program provides the knowledge and responsibilities for current or aspiring company officers. Qualifies for college credit based on the American Council on Education (ACE) Credit Recommendation Service. DFS CEUs 12-Instructor SCHOLARSHIP Volunteer Firefighters and Volunteer Fire Officers Philip Sayer, the founder of the Galt Fire Department, dedicated his time and resources to the improvement of funding and training for volunteer fire departments nationwide. During his fire service career, he was Missouri’s representative to the National Volunteer Fire Council. While serving as a member of the executive board of the NVFC, he sat on numerous committees that shaped the standards used to evaluate fire departments and officer requirements. He was instrumental in the Fire ACT grants and keeping them funded. He also served as FFAM’s Legislative Committee Chairman and was credited with helping to pass a state law which created the Fire Safety Education/Advisory Commission. Phil chaired the commission until he passed away on December 14, 2007. 16 104 Strategy and Tactics for Initial Company Operations RICK ANDERSON Assistant Chief, (RET), Kirksville Fire Department This course is designed to develop the management skills needed by company officers to accomplish assigned tactics at structure fires. Topics include: the purpose and use of the Communications Model and the Quick Access Prefire Plan, implementation of the Command Sequence, how to select the appropriate strategic mode based upon consideration of risk/benefit and available resources, the six steps required to implement the Tactical Action Model, how to determine the appropriate strategy and tactics, and how to operate within an appropriate Incident Command System at a fire in a single-family dwelling. Phil Sayer Memorial Scholarship Fund Phil Sayer Memorial Scholarship Fund Applications Available at www.mufrti.org This scholarship provides volunteer firefighters and fire officers the opportunity to further their skills and education to attend Winter Fire School, held in Columbia, Missouri, February 5th – 7th, 2016. The Fire Safety Education/Advisory Commission and the Division of Fire Safety have designated state fire training funds to support scholarships for Winter Fire School. Each awarded scholarship will include up to 12 hours of course tuition. In addition, the University of Missouri Extension, Fire and Rescue Training Institute is offering lodging to scholarship recipients residing beyond a 50 mile radius of Columbia, Missouri. University of Missouri Extension GENERAL INFORMATION Location Tuition Confirmation Winter Fire School courses and workshops will be conducted on the University of Missouri Columbia campus. The Equipment Exposition will be located in the Columbia Expo Center at the Holiday Inn Executive Center, February 5, 2016, from 12 noon– 9:00 p.m. (See page 19 for more information). Preregistration is required for the 2016 Winter Fire School. Accepted payment methods include department purchase order, letter of billing authorization on official letterhead, personal check made payable to University of Missouri, and VISA, MasterCard, American Express or Discover credit cards. Participants who register online will receive an electronic confirmation immediately upon processing registration request. All participants will receive a letter of confirmation and class tickets via regular mail. Check personal and class information carefully. If all information is correct, bring your letter to the fire school and report directly to your scheduled class. If there are any errors, contact the MU Conference Office as soon as possible. If you have not received confirmation within two (2) weeks of registering for the fire school, please contact the MU Conference Office at 573-882-8320 or 866-682-6663. Class Selection Participants of the 2016 Winter Fire School may select any one (1) 12-hour course or any three (3) 4-hour workshops or any one (1) 8-hour workshop and any one (1) 4-hour workshop. We will make every effort to enroll you in your first choice selection(s). However, in the event that your primary choice(s) is full, please choose alternate selections for each course or workshop selected. Changes in class selection must be made immediately upon receipt of confirmation and are subject to availability. Course numbers are located on the Conference at a Glance page. The 12 hour courses are the 100 level classes, 8 hour workshops are 800 level classes and the four hour workshops are the 400 level classes. Age Disclaimer Individuals under the age of 16 may not participate in the Winter Fire School. Those 16 to 17 years of age may participate with a written statement of responsibility by an accompanying adult member of the sponsoring organization who will participate in the same class(es). This must be filed with our office prior to the school. Contact MU FRTI for more information. Americans with Disabilities If you have any special needs as addressed by the Americans with Disabilities Act, please contact the Fire and Rescue Training Institute at 1-800-869-3476 immediately. Reasonable efforts will be made to accommodate your needs. Dress Code It is each student’s responsibility to use good judgment in selecting attire that projects a professional image while remaining appropriate for climate differences and classroom activities. Acceptable attire at the fire school is business casual or official department uniform. Fire and Rescue Training Institute Total Hours 4 8 12 Fee After 1/11/16 $85 $115 $170 $210 Note: Your expenditure for this conference may qualify you for a Lifetime Learning federal tax credit. Please consult with your tax adviser on how this new credit may benefit you. Webcast Webcast requirements include: high speed internet connection and Windows Media Player. Fees will consist of a per class single user fee, or a per class site fee that covers up to 10 seats. All registered participants will receive certificates. Users Fee Per Class Single $50 Department Site $250 Billing and Refunds Invoices will not be sent to individuals. Organizations may be billed for fees if the registration form is accompanied by a purchase order or authorization letter signed by an organization administrator on official letterhead. Billing for all registered participants will be done regardless of attendance. Full refunds will be honored upon written request received on or prior to January 11, 2016. Cancellations after January 11, 2016 will be charged a $50.00 processing fee. No refunds given after January 19, 2016. Customer Service If you need assistance at the fire school you may stop by the Service Desk during the following times: Friday, February 5, 12:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. at the Holiday Inn Executive Center. Saturday, February 6, 6:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. on MU Campus at the Arts and Science Building or the Strickland Building. Sunday, February 7, 7:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. on MU Campus at the Arts and Science Building or the Strickland Building. Questions Questions regarding Winter Fire School registration contact: MU Conference Office 573-882-8320 or 866-682-6663 Fax 573-882-1953 Email: [email protected] Other Questions Contact: MU Fire and Rescue Training Institute 800-869-3476 or 573-882-4735 fax 574-882-0678 email: [email protected] 17 LODGING Detailed Map Online: www.mufrti.org 763 11 PROVIDENCE 70 9 STADIUM Equipment Exposition BROADW AY 2 70 12 15 STA DIU M 10 6 13 Baymont Inn and Suites 801 N Keene St 573-449-4422 baymontinns.com Candlewood Suites 1 $79 2 1400 Creekwood Parkway 573-256-0200 ihg.com $89 Courtyard by Marriott K 3 $110 3301 LeMone Industrial Blvd 573-443-8000 marriott.com Fairfield Inn and Suites 1115 Woodland Springs Ct 573-886-8888 marriott.com Hampton Inn 3410 Clark Ln 573-886-9392 hamptoninn.com 18 4 $83 5 $83 5 4 CLARK LN 1 8 63 14 WFS Classes If reservations are not made 30 days prior to fire school you may not get the discounted rate. All Hotels Meet The Hotel and Motel Fire Safety Act of 1990. 7 3 Hampton Inn and Suites 1225 Fellow’s Place Blvd 573-214-2222 hamptoninn.com Hilton Garden Inn 3300 Vandiver Dr 573-814-5464 hiltongardenin.com Holiday Inn 163 915 Port Way 573-474-4444 ihg.com 6 $129 7 $119 8 $84 Holiday Inn Executive Center 9 $108 Lodging arrangements are the responsibility of the individual participant. The following facilities have been designated as official hotels of the fire school. The rates listed are discounted. To receive these rates you must make reservations at least 30 days prior to fire school and indicate you are attending the Winter Fire School. Rates are flat unless noted. All facilities have smoke detectors in sleeping rooms per local ordinance. Quality Inn 1612 N Providence Rd 573-449-2491 choicehotels.com Ramada Inn 901 Conley Rd 573-443-4141 ramada.com 11 $65 12 $54 Stoney Creek Inn 13 Suburban Extended Stay 14 2601 S Providence Rd $99City 32 miles To Jefferson 573-442-6400 63 To Lake of the Ozarks 74 mile stoneycreekinn.com $55 HOST HOTEL 3100 Wingate Ct 573-817-0525 choicehotels.com Holiday Inn Express & Suites 10 The Broadway 15 2200 I-70 Drive SW 573-445-8531 ihg.com 1402 Cinnamon Hill Ln 573-442-8034 ihg.com $129 1111 E Broadway $139 573-875-7000 thebroadwaycolumbia.doubletree.com University of Missouri Extension EQUIPMENT EXPOSITION Holiday Inn Executive Center Columbia Expo Center 2200 I-70 Drive SW, Columbia Missouri FREE ADMISSION Once again this year, a broad range of exhibitors displaying a spectrum of emergency services products will be on hand. The equipment exposition has developed a reputation for an opportunity to be informed about equipment on the cutting edge of technology to assist in the performance of your job! FEBRUARY 5, 2016 NOON — 9:00 PM Fire and Rescue Training Institute 19 STAFF MU FRTI OFFICE REGIONAL TRAINING COORDINATORS The MU Fire and Rescue Training Institute staff welcomes everyone to Winter Fire School. We can be reached individually by e-mail or by phone at (800) 869-3476. Ten regional training coordinators for MU FRTI are located throughout the state to assist with scheduling trainings. The state is divided into nine geographic areas, following the Highway Patrol Troop Regions. Please contact your regional coordinator directly or MU FRTI’s office at (800) 869-3476 if you would like to have MU FRTI deliver a course at your department. DAVID HEDRICK Director [email protected] KEVIN ZUMWALT Associate Director [email protected] MARK LEE Aircraft Rescue Firefighting Specialist [email protected] CONNE BURNHAM Emergency Management Specialist [email protected] GAIL HAGANS-REYNOLDS Field Extension Specialist [email protected] ERIN MCGRUDER Curriculum Specialist [email protected] RYAN RASCHER Special Operations Coordinator [email protected] TRACY GRAY Conferences and Special Projects Assistant [email protected] WILLIAM JOHNSON Military Programs Coordinator [email protected] DAFFANY HOOD Fiscal Manager [email protected] KAREN PALMER Office Support Assistant [email protected] TIM HARTZ Instructional Support Associate [email protected] JULIE BACKUES Fiscal Office Assistant [email protected] STACY CRAIG Office Support Assistant [email protected] TRAVIS JOHNSON Multimedia Specialist [email protected] REGION A REGION E MIKE BOOTH (816) 716-8096 [email protected] MARTY SCHUESSLER (573) 270-8003 [email protected] REGION B REGION F ROBERT CREED (660) 651-0371 [email protected] CLINT HAYS (573) 230-5721 [email protected] REGION C REGION G MIKE CHERRY (314) 565-0139 [email protected] ROY D SIMS (417) 280-6882 [email protected] JEFF BROOMBAUGH (314) 223-5694 [email protected] REGION H REGION D KELLY DAVIS (417) 818-5060 [email protected] ANGIE JONES (660) 582-9596 [email protected] REGION I ROBERT WOODY (573) 512-0055 [email protected] REGIONAL TRAINING REGIONS MAP GET UPDATE S ANYWHERE! mufrti.org www. Interactive Map Online: www.mufrti.org 20 University of Missouri Extension REGISTRATION — WEBCAST SINGLE USER METHOD OF PAYMENT ________________________________________ ______/_______/______ c FEMA SID or c Drivers License Number Date of Birth ________________________________________ ______/_______/______ Credit Card Number Expiration Date (required to issue University of Missouri CEU’s) c Mastercard c Visa c Discover c American Express The FEMA Student Identification (SID) number is a unique number generated by FEMA. It is our goal for your FEMA SID to serve as your personal identification number instead of your Social Security Number (SSN). You can obtain more details and sign up for a FEMA SID here: https://cdp.dhs.gov/femasid/ _______________________________________________________________ Print Name On Credit Card _______________________________________________________________ First Name MI Last Name _______________________________________________________________ Authorized Signature _______________________________________________________________ Home Mailing Address _______________________________________________________________ Organization _______________________________________________________________ City State Zip Code c Female c Male c Career c Volunteer _______________________________________________________________ Day Phone Evening Phone _______________________________________________________________ E-mail Address (required) _______________________________________________________________ Organization _______________________________________________________________ Rank/Title Webcast Times c $50 Hoarder Homes: Piles of Hazards for Firefighters Saturday 8:00 a.m. - Noon c $50 Modern Fire Behavior: Tactics Have Changed, Have You? Saturday 1:30 - 5:30 p.m. c $50 Use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles in Support of Fire.... Sunday 8:00 a.m. - Noon $ _____ TOTAL - $50 per person, per class, includes certificate. Detailed information on webcast access will be provided via e-mail at time of confirmation. REGISTRATION METHODS 1. Online @ www.mufrti.org (credit cards only please.) 2. Phone: (866) 682-6663 or (573) 882-8320 _______________________________________________________________ Mailing Address for Receipt (if different from registrant) _______________________________________________________________ City State Zip Code c Check: (enclosed made payable to University of Missouri. Fed ID #43-600-3859) c Purchase Order or Letter of Billing Authorization enclosed (Must enclose hard copy for billing purpose). Please include phone and address. For Office Use Only Customer ID#_____________________ C#126373 Receipt__________________________ DEPARTMENT SITE LICENSE _______________________________________________________________ Department Name/Organization _______________________________________________________________ Address _______________________________________________________________ City State Zip Code _______________________________________________________________ Contact Name Rank/Title _______________________________________________________________ Contact Phone Evening Phone _______________________________________________________________ Contact E-mail Address (required) Have all information on the registration form available to expedite the process. Hours are 8:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday, except holidays. (credit cards only please.) 3. Fax: (573) 882-1953 Include your completed registration form with purchase order, billing authorization, or credit card number. (No checks please.) 4.Mail: Mail your completed form with payment to: 2016 Winter Fire School Registration MU Conference Office University of MO-Columbia 348 Hearnes Center Webcast Cancellation Policy: Columbia, MO 65211 No refunds will be given after January 19, 2016. Fire and Rescue Training Institute Webcast Times c $250 Hoarder Homes: Piles of Hazards for Firefighters Saturday 8:00 a.m. - Noon c $250 Modern Fire Behavior: Tactics Have Changed, Have You? Saturday 1:30 - 5:30 p.m. c $250 Use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles in Support of Fire.... Sunday 8:00 a.m. - Noon $ ______ TOTAL - $250 per class, covers up to 10 seats per class, includes certificates. Remaining names will be entered online during site login on the day of the webcast. Detailed information on webcast access will be provided via e-mail at time of confirmation. 21 REGISTRATION — WINTER FIRE SCHOOL REGISTRATION INFORMATION METHOD OF`PAYMENT ________________________________________ ______/_______/______ c FEMA SID or c Drivers License Number Date of Birth ________________________________________ ______/_______/______ Credit Card Number Expiration Date (required to issue University of Missouri CEU’s) c Mastercard The FEMA Student Identification (SID) number is a unique number generated by FEMA. It is our goal for your FEMA SID to serve as your personal identification number instead of your Social Security Number (SSN). You can obtain more details and sign up for a FEMA SID here: https://cdp.dhs.gov/femasid/ _______________________________________________________________ First Name MI _______________________________________________________________ Last Name _______________________________________________________________ Home Mailing Address _______________________________________________________________ City State Zip Code c Female c Male c Career c Volunteer c Visa _______________________________________________________________ Organization _______________________________________________________________ Rank/Title r Is this your first time at Winter Fire School? (If yes, mark box) Emergency contact name__________________________________________ c American Express _______________________________________________________________ Print Name On Credit Card _______________________________________________________________ Authorized Signature _______________________________________________________________ Organization _______________________________________________________________ Mailing Address for Receipt (if different from registrant) _______________________________________________________________ City State Zip Code c Check: (enclosed made payable to University of Missouri. Fed ID #43-600-3859) c Purchase Order or Letter of Billing Authorization enclosed (Must enclose hard copy for billing purpose). Please include phone and address. _______________________________________________________________ Day Phone Evening Phone _______________________________________________________________ E-mail Address (required) c Discover REGISTRATION METHODS 1. Online @ www.mufrti.org (credit cards only please.) 2. Phone: (866) 682-6663 or (573) 882-8320 Have all information on the registration form available to expedite the process. Hours are 8:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday, except holidays. (credit cards only please.) 3. Fax: (573) 882-1953 Include your completed registration form with purchase order, billing authorization, or credit card number. (No checks please.) 4.Mail: Emergency contact number________________________________________ Mail your completed form with payment to: r Minor (16-17 years old) 2016 Winter Fire School Registration MU Conference Office University of MO-Columbia 348 Hearnes Center Columbia, MO 65211 Adult attending with Minor________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________ Cancellations after January 11, 2016 will be charged a $50 processing fee. No refunds will be given after January 19, 2016. * By registering you are agreeing to allow any photos taken of you during Winter Fire School by MU FRTI to be used in future web and printed publications. 1st Choice Course # 2nd Choice Course # Number of Classes Attending February 5-7, 2016 FEE FEE After 01/11/16 Complete Only One of the Following Rows, Filling in All 1st and 2nd Choice Class Numbers and Selecting Appropriate Check Boxes. One - Four Hour Workshop — r Saturday Only r Sunday Only 1. _______ 1. _______ 1. _______ 1. _______ 2. _______ 2. _______ 1. _______ 1. _______ 2. _______ 2. _______ 3. _______ 3. _______ 1. _______ 1. _______ One - Eight Hour Workshop — Saturday Only 1. _______ 1. _______ 2. _______ 2. _______ One - Eight Hour Workshop — Saturday Only One - Four Hour Workshop — Sunday Only 1. _______ 1. _______ One - Twelve Hour Course 1. _______ 1. _______ For Office Use Only • r $85 r $115 r $170 r $210 Two - Four Hour Workshops — r Saturday Only r Saturday and Sunday Three - Four Hour Workshops Certified Fire and Ambulance District Board Training r MAFPD Member If you wish to take a 4 Hour Workshop with this class, STOP and complete the appropriate row above for; One Eight Hour and One Four Hour Workshop. C#126373 • Customer ID#________________________ r Not a Member • r $75 r $125 r $105 r $155 Receipt________________________ 10 Things I Should Have Known as a Company Officer — NEW 402 Advanced Airway Management and Trauma Techniques 403 Alternative Fuel Vehicles and Motor Vehicle Collisions 801 Apparatus Architect Purchasing Seminar 404 The Art of Reading Buildings 405 Attack From the Burned Side 802 Basic Amusement Ride Inspection 406 Before the Front Door — NEW 407 The Best Seat in the House, Incident Safety and the Driver/Operator 408 Blink: Critical Fireground Decision Making 409 Building Classification: Know What You Are Looking At — NEW 410 Building Construction and Fire Behavior for the Street Smart Firefighter — NEW 803 Certified Fire and Ambulance District Board Training 411 Character Counts — NEW 412 Command Presence 413 Commanding the Fire Service — NEW 414 Converted Dwelling Fires — NEW 415 Decision Making: First Arriving 416 Emergency Medical Technical Refresher: Pediatric 417 Ethics in the Firehouse: A Paradox — NEW 418 Fire and Life Safety Education: A Firefighter’s Perspective — NEW 419 Fire Code Options and Resources in Missouri — NEW 420 Fire Operations During Civil Unrest — NEW 421 Firefighter Friendly Thermal Imaging 422 Firefighter Line of Duty Deaths and Injury – Why? — NEW 423 Fireground Decision Making for Operational Consistency — NEW 804 Fireground Support Operations in the 21st Century 424 Firehouse Law: Five Legal Concepts for Current and Future Leaders — NEW 425 Forcible Entry: Gaining Access and Egress — NEW 426 From Overhaul to Fireball: Lessons Learned — NEW 427 Funeral Basics for Honor Guard — NEW 428 Gallons Per Second 429 Getting There Safely: Improving Apparatus Response and Roadway Operations Safety 430 Guide for Structural Firefighting — NEW 431 Hoarder Homes: Piles of Hazards for Firefighters — WEBCAST – SAT AM 432 How Building Construction Has Changed: What You Need to Know — NEW 433 Hybrid and Electric Vehicles: What Emergency Responders Need to Know 434 Hybrid and Green Buildings: Not as Simple as Type 1, 2, and 3 Anymore — NEW 435 Ice Rescue Awareness 101 Incident Command for High-Rise Operations 436 Integrated Care Solutions — NEW 437 ISO Public Protection Classification: FSRS Update Overview of Changes 438 It’s Not Just About Hooks and Hoses — NEW 439 Juggling Hats: The Multiple Responsibilities of Managing a Volunteer Department 440 Keys to Effective Public Relations — NEW 441 Large Vehicle Rescue: Awareness 102 Leadership III for Fire and EMS: Strategies For Supervisory Success 442 Leadership Principles for the Fire Officer 443 Making Training Count 444 Managing a Mass Casualty Incident: Tour Bus — NEW 445 Medical Buffet: Emergency Medical Technician Refresher 446 Modern Fire Behavior: Tactics Have Changed, Have You? — NEW — WEBCAST – SAT PM 103 NIMS: Incident Command System for the Fire Service 447 Now You Are the Training Officer: Building Your “Instructor’s Tool Kit” — NEW 448 Nuggets for the Leader and Mentor: Train ‘em to Take Your Place — NEW 449 Operations and Placement of Apparatus 450 Organizational Destiny Rests with You: The Role of Succession Planning — NEW 451 Public Relations for the Fire Service — NEW 452 Preparing for New Building Hazards Facing the Fire Service 453 Reading Smoke 2016: Tactical Solutions 454 Resilient or Brittle Firefighters and Their Organizations — NEW 455 Responding to Natural Gas Emergencies — NEW 456 Safety Tips for Emergency Responders: Rail Safety — NEW 805 Simulated Incident Management for First Arriving Officer — NEW 457 Small Departments: Growing Beyond the Single Line Mentality — NEW 458 Solar Panel Safety for Firefighters and Inspector — NEW 104 Strategy and Tactics for Initial Company Operations 459 The State Fire Safety Inspection Process 460 Store Fires: Taxpayer and Strip Malls 461 Succession Planning: What Will Your Legacy Be? — NEW 462 Surviving a Confined Space Rescue — NEW 463 l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l Taking Action Against Cancer in the Fire Service l l 465 Taking Command of Your Personnel Issues — NEW 466 Use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles in Support of Fire, Rescue.... — NEW — WEBCAST – SUN AM l 467 Vehicle Technology and Incident Safety l l 468 Working Fire Operations for Incident Commanders — NEW 469 Zero to Hero: Fire Service Leadership Redefined — NEW l l l l l « 5 « « « l l « 5 « « 5 « « 5 « « 6 6 Training « « « « « « « « « « « « 6 « « « « « « « « « « « « « « « « 7 « « 15 « 6 « « 6 « 7 7 « « « « 7 « « « « « « « « « « « 8 « « 8 « « 7 « « 8 « « 8 « 2 « « « « « « « « « « « « « « « « « 9 9 « « « « « « « « « « 9 « « 9 « « « « 10 « « 10 « « « « « « 10 « « « « « « « 10 « « « « « « « « « 10 « « 11 « « « « « « « « « « « 2 « « « 11 « « « « « « « « « 11 « 11 « « « « 11 « « 12 « « « « « « « « « « « 12 « 12 « 12 « « « « « « 13 « 13 « « « 13 « « « « « « « « « « « « « « « « « « « 14 « 14 l l 14 « « 2 « « « « « « « « « « « « « « « 14 « 14 « « « « 14 « « 13 « « « « 13 « « « 12 l l l « « 6 16 l l « « 12 l l Suppression Tech Rescue Haz Mat EMS « « 13 464 EMA « 16 l Swiftwater and Flood Rescue: Awareness « « 10 l l l l l « « 15 l l « 5 16 l l l l Company Officer Administration POST CEUs Investigator CEUs Instructor CEUs Inspector CEUs Haz Mat CEUs EMS CEUs ACE Credit 5 16 l l l l l l l l l « « 11 l l l l « « 9 l l l l « « « 4 9 l l l l « 8 l l l l « 4 6 l l l l l l l l l « 15 l l « 4 l l l l l l « « 15 l l l l l l l « « 4 l l « « 15 l l l l l « 4 4 l l l FRTI - Fire Officer 4 l l Page Number SUN AM SAT PM Course/Workshop 401 Day/Time Offered SAT AM Course Number CONFERENCE at a GLANCE « « « Fire and Rescue Training Institute 1110 S. College Ave, Room 232 Columbia, MO 65211-3410 MARK YOUR 2016 CALENDAR FIRE SERVICE LEADERSHIP ENHANCEMENT PROGRAM UMMER FIRE SCHOOL AND MIDWEST S WILDFIRE TRAINING ACADEMY MISSOURI EMERGENCY SERVICES INSTRUCTOR CONFERENCE Columbia January 20-21 February 17-18 March 16-17 Jefferson City Lake of the Ozarks June 8-12 November 4-6