
Ellen Kicklighter
Beat That!
Firefighters from the Macon- Bibb Fire Department competed in the Georgia State Firefighters Competition Events this past month in Savannah Georgia. This event was part of the Ga. Association of Firefighters/Georgia Fire Chief’s Association Joint Conference that is held in August each year.
43-year old firefighter Ellen Kicklighter won First Place in the “Individual Rapid Dress” becoming the first female firefighter ever to win this Georgia State Firefighters Joint Conference event.
It took Kicklighter just 38 seconds to gear up and pack up, after which she put on that huge smile. Congratulations, Ellen!
“What if” Questions Are Sooo 90’s.
With his article September Training Prompt, Cut the blue wire – No! the red wire!, my good friend Bill Carey over at Backstep Firefighter addresses the point that this isn’t your father’s fire service anymore.
Building construction changes result in changes in fire behavior.
New automotive technology change the way we approach what used to be a “typical extrication.”
Smells of home-cooked meals wafting through our neighborhoods have been replaced- literally- by the small of meth cooking in multiple homes in the same block.
While the fire service continues its role as a front line responder, the fact of the matter is front lines continue to change. Questions that used to begin with “What do we do if…” now start quite a bit differently- “What will we do when…”
Take the lesson Bill offers us and apply it to your own agency. Begin the process of preparing for the new challenges that we face by answering the nagging basic question that keeps popping up: “What will we do when….”
Free Firefighter Podcasts- Load Up Your iPod!

Art Goodrich interviews Rob Schnepp and Steve Pasquale. Producers Rhett Flietz and John Mitchell are also pictured.
Speaking of not your father’s fire service, how about “not your daddy’s fire service radio podcasts!” I invite you to check out the newest of Firefighter Netcast’s programming from the floor at Fire Rescue International in Chicago last month.
Special guest Steven Pasquale (Sean Garrity) from TV’s Rescue Me was interviewed by Art Goodrich, and the Netcast team created their first video netcast of that interview regarding the roll-out of cyano kits.
Additionally, Fire-Rescue magazine Editor-in-Chief Tim Sendelbach hosted about a dozen high-quality interviews of nationally-recognized fire service leaders, fire chiefs, and keynote speakers on a wide range of timely topics important to firefighters, company officers, and fire chiefs across the nation.
Take a minute to check out the line-up over at Firefighter Netcast where you can download all of the past episodes. They are also available on iTunes.
Finally, please pause for a moment and pray for the swift recovery of a Bowie (Prince George’s County (MD) volunteer firefighter Patrick Ivey. Today, he will be undergoing the first of manu surgeries to his head for third degree burns he suffered when the helmet he had strapped on became dislodged by falling debris during an interior attack. He is in good spirits, let’s keep the vibe going…
Also, you may have heard about Forest Ranger Tech Don Lamb of the Kentucky Division of Forestry. While fighting a wildland fire yesterday, he was struck by a 10-foot burning log that had rolled off of a bluff down onto him. He was airlifted to the hospital unconscious from the blunt trauma and with blistering burns. Please keep your thoughts with him, his family, and friends as well.
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Building construction changes result in changes in fire behavior.


“If one of your firefighters gets into trouble, how are you going to get them out?”
“You won’t be the best at everything, but no one is.”
“Looking back on it, the things we talked about that weekend were shown to us as being “fresh” ideas ten and even twenty years later.”
“Since I don’t have a juicy “moment of Zen” for you, I will instead give you some things I have learned along the way from some great guys.”
The message is simple, yet it is often forgotten. I use it to reign myself in when tension is high and focus is required.



It’s been awhile since my last post, so shame on me. However you, the blog reader, has had no shortage of extremely interesting content from all the real bloggers out there. I’ve been reading right along with you, and am amazed daily with all that is out there for us firefighters and emergency responders. So I’m back today and already have another few ready to go. It happens like this- sometimes articles come spewing out like ash from an Icelandic volcano. So, without further ado, here’s my newest 360 Burn Size-Up of the Fire Webs:
If you are as interested in the leadership aspect of the fire service as I, you probably have already seen Mick Mayer’s new feature over at 
Helmet Cam and the Outside Vent Guy

As if the American English language hasn’t been assaulted enough by the Brits already, Mark Glencourse (
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