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Today’s Relationship Between Industrial and Municipal Fire Departments. Today’s Environment. No fire department, industrial or otherwise, can continue to operate today in isolation
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Today’s Relationship BetweenIndustrial and Municipal Fire Departments
Today’s Environment • No fire department, industrial or otherwise, can continue to operate today in isolation • Industrial and municipal departments enjoy a strong relationship that allows them to work together for successful outcomes to emergencies in both the public and private sectors
History • Years ago there wasn’t much interaction between industrial and municipal fire departments • Industrial departments tended to keep to themselves • Much of the refining industry had an opinion that the municipal departments didn’t have the knowledge or equipment needed to help fight flammable liquid and gas fires
Recent Past • During the 1980’s and beyond, increased effort was made to establish a better working relationship with the municipal fire departments
Relationship Building • Provided site tours and orientation • Emergency response organization • General plant layout • Plant hazards • Firefighting equipment • Staging locations • PPE requirements • Communication equipment
Relationship Building Cont. • Began conducting joint training exercises • On-site training • Off-site training • Share information • Learn about each other’s capabilities • Build trust and friendships
Mutual Aid Purpose • Provide assistance to those who need aid during emergencies • No organization can have everything needed for all types of emergencies • Incidents sometimes too large for one department to handle
Area Mutual Aid • Petrochemical Mutual Aid Organization (PMAO) • An emergency response cooperative of oil, chemical and related companies • Available to local fire departments upon request • Municipal Mutual Aid from local Fire Dept’s
PMAO Mission • The primary purpose is to provide assistance to any member requiring aid during an emergency situation
PMAO Assistance • Expertise in certain types of emergency response • Specialized equipment including large volume pumpers, large delivery devices, extinguishing agents (firefighting foam), hazardous material response equipment, rescue equipment, and atmospheric monitoring equipment
PMAO Member Companies • Chevron • Dow Chemical • Phillips 66 • Shell • Tesoro • Valero
Additional PMAO Members • Contra Costa County Health Services /Hazardous Materials • Fire Departments • Contra Costa County Fire, Rodeo-Hercules, Richmond, San Ramon, Benicia, Federal Fire (Concord Naval Weapons Station) • OES Organizations • United States Coast Guard • Emergency Medical Services (AMR) • Nustar, and Rhodia
Agenda Monthly Meeting • Maintain Group Coordination • Discuss Actual Responses • Lessons Learned/Future Improvements Drills and Tours are each conducted 2 times per year at a minimum
PMAO Responses • Duke Energy Tank Fire • 1989 Earthquake Tank Ruptures • Tank Fires • Process Unit Fires • Hazardous Material Incidents • Pipeline Fires • Gasoline Tank Truck Rollovers • Steel Mill Fire • Big “O” Tire Store Fire • Auto Wrecking Facility Fire
Local Industrial/Municipal FD Current Activities • Tours • Training/Drills • On-Site • Off-Site • Emergency Response • Contributions • Community Advisory Panel (CAP)
Local Industrial/Municipal FD Current Activities Cont. • Attend local ER Agency meetings • Training Officers • Executive Chiefs Meetings • West County Joint Operations • PMAO • Committee Participation • Standardized Emergency Management System (SEMS) Development • USAR Regional Team Development
Local Industrial/Municipal FD Current Activities Cont. • Oral board for hiring new firefighters • Firefighter of the Year Award Ceremony • Chief Officer Installation Ceremony • Retirement Functions • Fire Department Open House • Christmas toy give-away program • Host firefighter recruit academies at on-site fire training grounds
Texas A&M Fire Training Drill at Phillips 66 with RHFD E-75
Engine 7 Tesoro Joint Training Exercise
Contra Costa County Fire E-9 At Joint Exercise
Summary • Today industry and municipal fire departments enjoy a very strong relationship • Firefighters benefit by seeing familiar faces they can trust • Industry and municipal departments benefit by being prepared for “whatever comes their way” • Company increases its public relations efforts by being a good neighbor • Overall it represents a real and significant value to the community