Thursday, August 21, 2008
Leadership Development Web Site Builds Steam
Just ask any firefighter. Crew leaders and incident commanders make
the difference between success and failure on the fireground -- and
sometimes between life and death.
Recognizing the need for more leadership training to improve safety in
wildland fires, in November 2002 the National Wildfire Coordinating
Group launched www.fireleadership.gov as part
of its leadership development program.
“It’s kind of a one-stop shop for the whole leadership
effort,” said Tim Blake, the NWCG training project leader.
Just over a year since the Web site appeared, with prominent linking
from the highly trafficked National Interagency Fire Center Web site,
it’s getting robust response from the wildland fire community.
During the spring training season, 8,000 to 9,000 visitors a month log
in; even during the fire season an average of 5,000 to 6,000 a month
pay a visit, said Jim Cook, cochairman and coordinator of the training
project.
Feedback from users has been enthusiastic. “I just came across
this and am very excited about the site,” said one visitor who
identified himself as the fire manager of the Massachusetts Chapter of
the Nature Conservancy. “I run the Davis Fire Crew in California,
and one of the main problems that I see in most crews (including some
of ours) is that nobody has been trained as a leader. They gain the
skills on the fire line, but that takes years of practice, and they
need a better starting point. Just wanted you to know that you have a
great idea, and I am looking at it closer to see if it is something
that I can use with my crew leaders.”
The site is designed to educate leaders through three focal areas:
Training Courses (the curriculum), Leadership Toolbox (self
development) and Values and Principles, designed to strengthen personal
traits required of strong leaders. New content is added frequently,
said Cook. “Every month a new tool, sometimes several new tools
or references, are added to the Leadership Toolbox,” he
said.
The effort is not just for crew leaders and incident commanders.
“It’s designed for the entire wildland community,”
said Blake. “There’s something there for everyone –
from the entry-level firefighter to the incident commander that’s
been around for 30 years.”
Situational awareness, for example, is needed at every stage of a
firefighting career. “Situational awareness applies a bit
differently to a first-year firefighter than it does to an incident
commander,” said Blake. Their environments are different, but
they still need to go through the motions.”
For more information, visit www.fireleadership.gov.
Organizations that wish to post a link on their Web site to promote the
study of leadership issues may e-mail Jim Cook at jrcook@fs.fed.us.
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