register

Friday, November 6, 2009

On-Call Assists

A hazmat incident generates multiple patients and shuts down a busy industrial area. A nighttime fire in a city hall causes substantial damage and disrupts city operations. A four-alarm fire in an apartment complex on the hottest day of the year taxes responders and leaves residents homeless. A presidential visit generates uncommon requirements for responders, planners and commanders. A climbing accident involving off-duty fire-district employees generates internal trauma, national media coverage, and extended demand for information for employees and reporters alike. What did these incidents have in common? All employed overhead teams from the principal responding agency, Tualatin ...

To continue reading this article, please register or login – it’s quick and free…

Member Login

Enter your email address below, and we'll email your password.

Are cookies enabled in your browser?

This site uses cookies and session data to keep track of your name and preferences while you're logged in. You cannot login without enabling cookies.

One Step Registration

Fill out the form below for instant access to the page you’ve requested.

Website members also receive access to our entire archive and may apply for a complimentary subscription to our print magazine.

All fields are required Personal Info
  Required Must be a valid email
  Required Passwords must match
  Required
  Required
  Required
  Required
  Required
  Required
  Required

Fire Chief Magazine


Submit the form for instant access to the page you've requested.

 

Read an exclusive interview with the former Director of the Department of Homeland Security as he discusses the perils facing our first responder community.

Recent Comments

Powered by Disqus

 

 

Resource Center

Events Advertise JobZone RSS
October 2009 FIRE CHIEF Cover

Featured Links