The problem addressed by this research is the lack of a comprehensive risk reduction plan in place for the City of Vista to address incidents resulting in injury, death and property loss. The purpose of this project was to develop a community risk reduction program for the City of Vista to reduce injury, death and property loss.
"This curriculum provides a theoretical framework for the understanding of the ethical, sociological, organizational, political, and legal components of community risk reduction, and a methodology for the development of a comprehensive community risk reduction plan"--
Public Fire Education Planning: A Five-Step Process describes a systematic approach to designing, implementing, and evaluating community safety education programs. This manual will help those of you who are new to community safety education understand some of the basic concepts about how to get started with an organization's community safety education programs. It also will assist you with some hints and techniques on a variety of topics, such as methods for locating partners to assist with community education or techniques for locating resources for your safety programs.
Defines and discusses risk management, a new idea in fire service even though it has been informally applied for years. Ten chapters address topics such as the nature of loss, processes and methods, the safety committee, incident investigation, managing risks and emergency operations, quality management, and sexual harassment in the fire service. Two appendices provide case law studies and common departmental loss exposures. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
The recommendation of the research was that fire departments serving smaller cities should have strong community risk management programs to properly serve their citizens.
There are four key steps to the development of a risk management plan: risk identification, risk evaluation, risk control, and implementation and monitoring. The development of a risk management plan by either a professional risk manager or by the fire chief executive was recommended. Whether the risk management plan is produced internally or externally of the organization, a good plan will reduce the injuries and losses experienced by the fire department and improve productivity.
Risk management is one of the most important but frequently ignored fireground management skills. The volunteer fire service is particularly vulnerable because of a lack of understanding and training in a risk management system, why we need it, how it works, and how to use it. What are some risk reduction strategies? How do you identify risks and dangers and how they affect firefighters? How do you control those risks and limit danger to firefighters? How often have firefighters taken unnecessary risks? Firefighting is a dangerous job, but risks need to be measured against the capabilities of the responding firefighters. Do their capabilities match the immediate needs of the size-up? What about your personal capabilities? Are you truly prepared? "Joe Nedder knows risk, safety, and firefighting and brings clarity to often diametrically opposing objectives. Joe writes with clarity and insight gained from real-world experience and skin in the game. Managing Risk in the Volunteer Fire Department is a must-read for every firefighter, career or volunteer!" —Chief Bobby Halton, editorial director, Clarion Fire Rescue Group, and educational director, FDIC International "Everything you want to know about managing risk in your volunteer department is here in this new book by Joe Nedder, who dedicated his fire service career to providing better training for volunteer fire departments. He understands the specialized needs of departments big and small and tailors his teaching to encompass departments across North America." —Diane Rothschild, executive editor, Fire Engineering, and conference director, FDIC International