Washington Administrative Code (Last Updated: November 23, 2016) |
Title 296. Labor and Industries, Department of |
Chapter 296-305. Safety standards for firefighters. |
Section 296-305-05000. Incident management.
Latest version.
- (1) The fire department shall establish an incident management system (IMS) consistent with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security National Incident Management System (NIMS) with written guidelines applying to all members involved in emergency operations.(a) All members involved in emergency operations shall be trained in the IMS system.(b) Personnel shall be trained and qualified by their department in the incident command system (ICS) that meets the requirements of NIMS prior to taking a role at an emergency scene.(c) The incident management system shall be applied to drills, exercises, and other situations that involve hazards similar to those encountered at actual emergency incidents and to simulated incidents that are conducted for training and familiarization purposes.(2) At all emergency incidents, the incident commander shall be responsible for the overall safety of all members and all activities occurring at the scene.(3) All emergency incidents shall be managed by an ICS; the incident commander shall establish an organization with sufficient supervisory personnel to control the position and function of all members operating at the scene and to ensure that safety requirements are satisfied.(4) At all emergency incidents, the incident commander shall have the responsibility to:(a) Assume and confirm command and take an effective fixed physical command position.(b) Perform situation evaluation that includes risk assessment.(c) Initiate, maintain, and control incident communication.(d) Develop an overall strategy and incident action plan.(e) Develop an effective ICS organization by managing resources, maintaining an effective span of control, and maintaining direct supervision over the entire incident by creating geographical and/or functional area supervisors as appropriate for the scope and size of the incident.(f) Review, evaluate, and revise the incident action plan as required.(g) Continue, transfer, and terminate command.(5) The fire department shall develop a risk management policy including rules of engagement that can be used by the incident commander in the development of incident strategies. The risk management policy should include direction and guidance to the incident commander in formulating incident planning relating to the level of risk that may be undertaken in any given incident to save lives and property in as safe a manner as dictated by the situation.(6) The fire department shall establish an accountability system: Written procedures and guidelines for tracking all members operating at emergency incidents.(7) The incident commander shall provide for control of access to hazardous areas of the incident scene. Procedures shall identify methods for identification of hazardous areas and communication of necessary protective equipment and other protective measures necessary to operate in the hazardous area.(a) Control zones shall be established at emergency incidents.(b) The perimeters of the control zones shall be designated by the incident commander and communicated to all members.(c) If the perimeters of the control zones change during the course of the incident, these changes shall be communicated to all members on the scene.(d) Hazard control zones shall be designated as hot, warm, cold and exclusion zones.(e) All members shall wear the PPE (SCBA, flash hood, etc.) appropriate for the risks that might be encountered while in the hot zone.(f) All members operating within the hot zone shall have an assigned task.(g) No unauthorized personnel shall enter an exclusion zone that was designated due to the presence of imminent hazard(s) or the need to protect evidence.(8) Firefighters operating in a hot zone shall operate in teams of two or more regardless of rank or assignment. Members of these teams shall be in constant communication with each other through touch, visual, or voice means in order to provide assistance in case of emergency.(9) The fire department shall provide personnel for the rescue of members operating at emergency incidents as the need arises.(10) The fire department shall develop and maintain written guidelines for the safety of members at incidents that involve violence, unrest, or civil disturbance. Such situations may include, but not be limited to, riots, fights, violent crimes, drug related situations, family disturbances, deranged individuals, and people interfering with fire department operations.(11) When members are operating at an emergency incident and their assignment places them in potential conflict with motor vehicle traffic, all reasonable efforts shall be made to protect the members.Note:Chapters 6H and 6I of the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices, 2003 edition revision 1, provides information on how to set up traffic control zones during emergency operations on different types of roadways. This information can be accessed for free at the following link: http://mutcd.fhwa.dot.gov/pdfs/2003r1/pdf-index.htm.(12) Responders shall not manipulate equipment that they have not been trained or equipped to use.(13) In the event a firefighter becomes lost, trapped, seriously injured, has a medical emergency, has exhausted their breathing air, or finds themselves in any other form of life threatening situation they shall immediately call for help, using the nationally adopted term "Mayday" to declare that an emergency situation now exists. The fire department shall specifically establish and routinely practice standard procedures for managing a Mayday situation.(14) Emergency scene communications.(a) Incident radio communication shall use clear text terminology.(b) Incident communication shall use the phrase "emergency traffic" as the standard alert for all units operating on the scene to clear the air.(c) The fire department shall specifically establish and routinely practice standard procedures for managing an "emergency traffic" situation.Note:The fire department communication center should start an incident clock when the first arriving unit is on scene of a working structure fire or when conditions appear to be time sensitive or dangerous. The dispatch center should notify the incident commander, at an interval established by their policy or procedure, until incident stabilization is achieved.