Mayday Readiness and Response 201.01 B Flashcards
Definition of a Mayday Situation ?
Any situation where a firefighter is unable to safely exit the hazard zone or an event that cannot be resolved by that individual within 30 seconds
Definition of Mayday Readiness
Firefighter must adopt an attitude and preparation to look at every incident from the standpoint of “what if I or another firefighter gets in trouble” prior to the development of a bad scenario or outcome
The Standard defines mayday readiness as the ability to
“don, doff and manipulate the SCBA in zero visibility while wearing firefighting gloves.”
Individual firefighter responsibilities for Mayday prevention include the following:
- Maintaining SCBA proficiency
- Practicing individual air management (task level of M.P. 202.05C)
- Use and care personal protective equipment
- Portable radio proficiency and use
- Practiced crew communications
- Roving/replacement firefighter integration into crew
- Individual firefighters have to be responsible to ask if not initiated by Company Officer
GRAB LIVES stands for ?
G = Check Air Gauge R = Radio for Assistance A = Activate PASS Device B = Control Breathing, Conserve Air L = Stay Low I = Illuminate, Turn Flashlight On V = Make Loud Noises (Volume) E = Find An Exit S = Shield Your Airway (last ditch effort)
In the event of a Mayday situation, the ______ _____ will take responsibility of the resolution of the Mayday
situation
Sector Officer
It will be necessary for the ______ ______ to support the Mayday Sector Officer with appropriate
and adequate ________ to manage the Mayday at the same time reinforcing the surrounding geographical and/or functional sectors to continue the incident mitigation
- Incident Commander
- resources
Responding to the Mayday should happen from?
the inside out
The tactical benchmark for the end point of a Mayday is?
“Mayday resolved”
The critical points that have to be
confirmed prior to giving the benchmark of “Mayday resolved” is ?
- The individual(s) that are experiencing the Mayday situation are removed from the hazard zone
- All members involved in the rescue are accounted for and are out of the hazard zone
- All members working in all other sectors are accounted for
- The Incident Commander can give a PAR for the entire hazard zone