Situation-Specific Procedures: Difference between revisions

From rangers
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
Line 58: Line 58:
* [[ICS III-Managing Developing Incidents]]
* [[ICS III-Managing Developing Incidents]]
* [[ICS IV-Organizational Structure]]
* [[ICS IV-Organizational Structure]]
<center>Continue on to the next page: [[Emergencies]]

Revision as of 23:28, 6 May 2017

If you are ever in doubt of how to handle a situation, you can contact Khaki.

Additional Pages in this section

Beyond the Rangers: other Firefly Cores & Resources (eg First Aid, Sanctuary, Fire Core)

Emergencies (Medical Emergency, Lost Child)

Other situation-specific procedures

Situations that Must Be Reported to Khaki

Firefly Rangers are entrusted with considerable flexibility in how they handle the situations they encounter at Firefly. Rangers are trained to rely on their own judgment and abilities and to escalate matters (generally Khaki and then the Officer of the Day) for assistance when appropriate. There are, however, situations which require Rangers report what they observe to Khaki immediately.

In general, Rangers should call in any emergency or incident immediately and should report any event as soon as is reasonably possible.

It is important to note that this policy only requires that a Ranger escalate required information to Khaki. Khaki will then follow up with appropriate actions, which may be as simple as noting the event in the shift log or may include further escalation. It is not the individual Dirt Ranger’s responsibility to contact Law Enforcement or Medical Supervisor.

The requirement to report is in place to ensure that the Firefly Board is aware of events that are critical to maintaining agreements we have in place with other departments and agencies, our internal reporting metrics, or legally required or advisable record keeping and reporting.

Examples of Must-Reports:

  • Lost or found child
  • Child or elder abuse
  • Domestic violence
  • Sexual assault
  • Non-consensual physical violence
  • Death
  • Medical emergencies
  • Psychiatric emergencies
  • Any situation that is likely to put a Ranger in harm’s way
  • Any situation that is likely to put a participant in non-consensual grave danger

All reports begin by calling Khaki on the radio. Use plain English to clearly explain what the situation is, and, if you know them, what resources you think you need. Khaki may send other resources as well, and may roll to your location for a face to face.

If you are not sure whether something falls into the above categories, go and and report what you see. Let Khaki figure out whether any follow up action is required.

Incident Command System (ICS) in brief

ICS is a way to manage emergencies and planned events in a swift, efficient, and effective manner.

When ICS is “activated”, a few things will happen:

  • There will always be an IC (Incident Commander) “in charge”--the person may change, but someone will be the IC
  • There is a “chain of command” of who to report to: everyone should only have to report to ONE person
  • Unless/until Khaki or the IC says otherwise, as a Ranger you STILL report to Khaki

If you are the first on-scene at an emergency, call it in to Khaki!

  • If Khaki initiates ICS, you may technically be the IC until someone else with more training arrives.
    • Use your judgement to keep the scene safe
    • Continue to update Khaki!
    • You may be asked switch over to the TAC1ICS radio channel
    • When the IC arrives (maybe Medical or the OOD), update them on what has happened and let them take command

Four rules

  • Be sober
  • Check with the IC
  • Know your role (check with Khaki!)
  • Don’t freelance

Other ICS resources:

Continue on to the next page: Emergencies