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A FirstNet Satellite Cell on Light Truck and Communications Vehicle sit in a parking lot during the response to the Marshall Fire in Boulder County, Colorado
The Fire Services Take: Spring 2022

The Fire Service Take with Gary McCarraher

FirstNet and the five E’s of community risk reduction

FirstNet is an important tool for firefighters as they battle a fire. Outside the blazes, the network can also enhance the fire service’s community risk reduction efforts. At the FirstNet Authority, we are engaging with the fire community on how FirstNet can support the “five E’s” of risk reduction: enforcement, engineering, education, emergency response, and economic incentives.
 

Risk reduction and the fire service

Community risk reduction efforts are the actions a community takes to reduce fire risks. These actions can include fire prevention, code compliance, public education, and risk management.

Fire departments are especially well-suited for risk reduction efforts because of their unique insights into the community. Firefighters see firsthand into people’s lives when they make calls to a home or business, conduct inspections, or host public events.  
 

Community risk reduction and FirstNet

FirstNet gives firefighters prioritized, secure, and interoperable communications, no matter what their task is. The five E’s are strategies of community risk reduction, and FirstNet can play an important role in each.  

1. Enforcement  

Enforcement identifies fire risks and non-compliance in a community.

One role of enforcement is conducting inspections to make sure buildings meet fire codes. I recently talked to a fire marshal in rural Washington state who said traveling to inspection sites takes an average of 45 minutes each way. FirstNet-enabled technology can make these inspections more efficient.

For example, remote video inspections can save on travel time, staff hours, and gas expense, especially in rural areas. The FirstNet network can provide reliable connectivity to livestream video during a remote inspection.

2. Engineering

Engineering promotes new fire safety technologies in a community.

Fire alarm technologies can be connected via FirstNet’s prioritized connection. Installing FirstNet-enabled alarm systems helps ensure that emergency signals are received in the monitoring center. FirstNet is especially helpful to fire alarm systems because of its reliability and security that help the network stay operational during catastrophic events.

3. Emergency response

Emergency response protects the community and the firefighters.

FirstNet is built for emergency response. The network has unique features designed to meet the demands of a first responders’ job. One example is FirstNet’s Z-axis capability that provides the vertical location of firefighters in multi-story buildings.

While every fire emergency is taxing and unpredictable, fires in multistory buildings increase risk. FirstNet’s Z-axis capability helps locate personnel quickly, efficiently, and without voice prompts. This helps to keep firefighters safe while they work to keep communities safe.

4. Education

Education makes the public aware of fire risks and how to mitigate them.

I served in fire administration for decades, and we relied heavily on data to assess our performance and make decisions. In those days, data was collected in the field using pen and paper and then analyzed later at the station.

Today, FirstNet-enabled technology allows staff to easily upload data in the field using a smartphone or tablet. For example, when staff go out into the community to educate the public about fire safety, they can scan a QR code linked to a form to capture feedback on the spot.

5. Economic incentives

Economic incentives encourage individuals and businesses to make choices that reduce fire risk.

Community risk reduction efforts might include an initiative to clean up distressed properties to prevent fires and injuries in abandoned buildings. Economic incentives can encourage property owners to either secure their property or face a fine.

While canvassing an area, staff can use FirstNet-enabled devices with field maps to track activity, share data, and keep real-time records of distressed properties. This centralizes the project’s work and reduces paperwork for staff.
 

Your experience

What are your experiences with the five E’s of community risk reduction? Have you used FirstNet to streamline your efforts? I’d love to hear from you. Send me an email or find me or my colleagues at these events:
Visit our Fire Services page

Inside FirstNet

The FirstNet Authority Board approved an investment to enhance in-building technologies – because public safety told us indoor coverage is a top priority. First responders can deploy these small cell technologies where they need it most: in police headquarters, fire stations, emergency communication centers, or field locations.
FirstNet supports public safety operations. Find out how the network benefits your discipline in our updated fact sheets for 9-1-1, emergency management, EMS, fire, and law enforcement. Also, check out our discipline webpages for more info.
Emergencies know no boundaries, a reality that first responders live every day. That’s why coverage is king for public-safety communications. In a decade of FirstNet, the network is bringing increased coverage, more deployables, and 5G to the places where public safety’s mission takes them.
Did you know? The FirstNet Authority hosts webinars on how to use FirstNet’s unique public safety features. Register for our next session on extended primary users about FirstNet for hospitals, utilities, clean-up crews, and other personnel critical to incident response. Bookmark FirstNet.gov/events for more.
Every spring, the FirstNet Authority celebrates public safety during recognition weeks honoring those who serve in emergency communications, the fire service, law enforcement, and EMS, as well as public servants and volunteers. Thank you, first responders, for keeping our communities safe!

Tech, Innovations, and Hot Topics in Fire Service

Read what we’ve been hearing from public safety in the field about trends and drivers for fire services and emergency communications.*

Columbia Fire & Rescue is one of the first agencies in Tennessee to use GPS traffic technology to get first responders to the scene faster. With the GPS technology, when firefighters activate emergency equipment in trucks, a signal is automatically sent to traffic signals along the route, which turns the light from red to green as the fire truck approaches.

Learn about the terminology used in Location-Based Services. This video defines concepts like location accuracy, integrated 3D location, and triggers. In consultation with public safety, the FirstNet Authority promotes an ecosystem of products and services that serve the unique needs of first responders. Location services are a priority within our Situational Awareness Roadmap domain. Learn more about how we plan to drive technology advancements at FirstNet.gov/Roadmap.

Watch the video 
Gary McCarraher is the FirstNet Authority Fire Services Subject Matter Expert. Learn more about Gary or email him with your questions.  
Top photo: As the Marshall Fire burned through Boulder County, it quickly became the most destructive fire in Colorado state history. The fire damaged critical infrastructure and commercial networks were congested, but responders were able to communicate with FirstNet deployable assets on site, including a compact rapid deployable that was able to traverse steep terrain and establish coverage quickly. 

*FirstNet Authority may provide hyperlinks for third-party, non-governmental websites in order to offer additional context and added value for our users. FirstNet Authority does not endorse any product or service and is not responsible, nor can it guarantee the validity or timeliness of the content on hyperlinks outside of the federal government. In addition, users may wish to review privacy notices on non-government sites since their information collection practices may differ from ours.

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