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Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department

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Page 1: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

Chapter 7

Administration of the Fire Department

Page 2: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

Introduction

• The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources available

• Personnel must be properly led and supported in performing their functions

• Administrative staff perform their duties to ensure that the personnel of the department are trained, equipped, and supplied with the necessary support services

Page 3: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

PRINCIPLES OF COMMAND

• Are general guidelines

• Department should serve the needs of its jurisdiction

• Used in both emergency and non-emergency organizations

• Divided into six areas

Learning Objectives 1, 4, and 5

Six Principles and Chain of CommandFire Department Organizational Chart

Page 4: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

UNITY OF COMMAND

• Each person has one boss

• Everyone has a clear understanding of who is the supervisor

• NIMS is based on unity of command structure

• Violation of unity of command leads to confusion

Learning Objectives 1, 4, and 5

Six Principles and Chain of CommandFire Department Organizational Chart

Page 5: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

CHAIN OF COMMAND

• Formal path of communication though the organization

• Communication flows from top up and bottom down

• Cannot be violated unless extreme circumstances

Learning Objectives 1, 4, and 5

Six Principles and Chain of CommandFire Department Organizational Chart

Page 6: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

SPAN OF CONTROL

• Can effectively only supervise a certain number of personnel

• Effective span is considered three to seven

• Decisions dispersed through chain of command

• Prevents information overload

Learning Objectives 1, 4, and 5

Six Principles and Chain of CommandFire Department Organizational Chart

Page 7: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

DIVISION OF LABOR

• Work divided into specific areas

• Apply most appropriate resources

• Determine responsibility for completion

• Base on area, skill, and complexity

• Avoids duplication of effort

Learning Objectives 1, 4, and 5

Six Principles and Chain of CommandFire Department Organizational Chart

Page 8: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

DELEGATION OF AUTHORITY

• Manager must delegate authority to subordinates

• Supervisor must ensure proper training received

• Responsibility is still manager’s

• Person assuming responsibility must ensure the function is going to be performed

Learning Objectives 1, 4, and 5

Six Principles and Chain of CommandFire Department Organizational Chart

Page 9: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

EXCEPTION PRINCIPLE

• Person delegating authority wants to be informed of situations of major importance

• Certain situations arise that the supervisor needs to know about

• Personnel matters, major incidents, or incidents involving major expense to the department

Learning Objectives 1, 4, and 5

Six Principles and Chain of CommandFire Department Organizational Chart

Page 10: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

MANAGEMENT CYCLE

• Problem-solving process to accomplish goals and objectives

• Objectives must be specific,

measurable, attainable,

Realistic, and timely

Learning Objective 2

Six Components of the Management Cycle

Page 11: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

PLANNING

• Determining objectives and how to achieve them

• Requires the use of policies Course or method of action

• Procedures Particular way of accomplishing something

Learning Objective 2

Six Components of the Management Cycle

Page 12: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

ORGANIZING

• Done after planning

• Managers bring together essential resources

• Framework is chain of command and table of organization

• Manager determines if positions can be filled

Learning Objective 2

Six Components of the Management Cycle

Page 13: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

STAFFING

• The assignment of resources to the needs

• Determine adequate staffing

• Large departments may have rapid intervention teams

• Effective fire prevention requires enough personnel assigned to that function

Learning Objective 2

Six Components of the Management Cycle

Page 14: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

DIRECTING

• Guiding and supervising efforts

• Accomplished through: Rules Standard operating procedures Job descriptions Assigned duties

Learning Objective 2

Six Components of the Management Cycle

Page 15: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

CONTROLLING

• Determining if organization is working toward goals

• Discrepancies require corrective actions

• Largest control is the annual budget

• Financial officer will keep fire chief up to date on yearly budget

Learning Objective 2

Six Components of the Management Cycle

Page 16: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

EVALUATING

• Determining whether goals and objectives are being met

• Must be measurable and attainable

• Evaluation is both internal and external

• Must be carried out objectively

• Is an ongoing process

Learning Objective 2

Six Components of the Management Cycle

Page 17: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

FOUR BASIC METHODS

• Face to face Most likely to be understood

• Radio/telephone

• Written

• Electronic

Learning Objective 3

Four Methods of Communication

Page 18: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

FIRE DEPARTMENT TYPES

• Type depends on needs and resources

• Vary in size

• Increase in size, and increase in complexity

• More than 30,000 fire departments across the United States involving 1.2 million firefighters

Learning Objective 6

Identify Different Fire Department Types

Page 19: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

VOLUNTEER FIRE DEPARTMENTS

• First departments in the U.S.

• Preliminary first step in fire service

• Common paid position in a volunteer

department is a driver

• Not predetermined how many personnel

will arrive at the scene

Learning Objective 6

Identify Different Fire Department Types

Page 20: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

COMBINATION FIRE DEPARTMENT

• Large part of staff is paid

• Volunteers cover station when crew is on assignment

• Concept provides a force of reserves

• Reserves gain training

• Department gains personnel

Learning Objective 6

Identify Different Fire Department Types

Page 21: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

PUBLIC SAFETY DEPARTMENT

• Police and fire departments are under same department head

• Personnel are crosstrained

• Increasedproductivity

Learning Objective 6

Identify Different Fire Department Types

Page 22: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

CAREER FIRE DEPARTMENTS

• All personnel are paid a salary

• Too large to be performed by volunteers

• Jurisdiction has control over personnel

• Requires expert management Policies and goals

Learning Objective 6

Identify Different Fire Department Types

Page 23: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

INDUSTRIAL FIRE BRIGADES

• Manufacturing, refinery, or other location

• Personnel hired by the company

CONTRACT FIRE PROTECTION SERVICE

• Private-sector companies

• Service by contract or subscription

Learning Objective 6

Identify Different Fire Department Types

Page 24: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

LAYERS OF MANAGEMENT

• Deputy chief

• Battalion or district chief

• Company officer

Learning Objective 7

Ranks and Their General Responsibilities

Page 25: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

FIRE CHIEF ATTRIBUTES

• Educated in public or fire administration Advanced education, master’s degree preferred

• Ability to communicate

• Needs to be a diplomat Interpret wishes of governing body

Learning Objective 8Customer Service, One Department Concept,

Team Building, and Incident Effectiveness

Page 26: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

CUSTOMER SERVICE

• Public is the customer Customer’s needs must be met

ONE DEPARTMENT CONCEPT

• Standardization Same procedures throughout the jurisdiction

Learning Objective 8Customer Service, One Department Concept,

Team Building, and Incident Effectiveness

Page 27: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

TEAM BUILDING

• Willing to work together Each shift able to support the other

INCIDENT EFFECTIVENESS

• Ability to function quickly and efficiently

Learning Objective 8Customer Service, One Department Concept,

Team Building, and Incident Effectiveness

Page 28: Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department. Introduction The fire chief must balance the needs of the community and the department with the resources

Summary

• We have looked at the importance of administration at all levels in accomplishing the mission of the fire department

• Administration is made up of people performing according to widely accepted concepts and standards

• Depending on the size of the department and its needs, the organization of the administration can vary widely

• The most important point is that without the support of administrative staff, the line would not function