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Friday, January 29, 2021

Challenge #4: 2021 WFLDP Campaign

WFLDP 2021 campaign challenge and logo

Challenge #4: Leaders make their organizations better.

Read Report of the Leadership Task Report to the Training Working Team.
  • Review the 14 recommendations and evaluate if/how leadership development was implemented in your organization. Why or why not?
#fireleadership #2021WFLDPcampaign 

The NWCG Leadership Committee and the WLFDP


In January 2002, the Leadership Committee, chartered by the Training Working Team, began the process of implementing a Wildland Fire Leadership Development Program (WFLDP).

Thursday, January 28, 2021

IGNITE: An Understanding of Ourselves

 

firefighter eating dinner in solitude

Everything that irritates us about others can lead us to an understanding of ourselves. ♦ Carl Jung ♦

[Photo: Kyle Miller/Wyoming IHC]
#fireleadership



Wednesday, January 27, 2021

Leadership Environment

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Leadership is defined as the act of influencing people in order to achieve a result. The leadership environment is made up of those critical elements that a successful leader considers in planning for effective action.

Tuesday, January 26, 2021

Report of the Leadership Task Group to the TWT

Report of the Leadership Task Group to the Training Working Team - cover

Following the Wildfire Firefighter Safety Awareness Study, members of the National Wildfire Coordinating Group (NWCG) recognized a strategy is needed for improving the ability to develop new leaders in wildland fire management. 

In September 2000, the NWCG Training Working Team commissioned an interagency task group to analyze the existing wildland fire training curriculum for leadership content, identify alternatives, and make recommendations. In February 2001, that task group provided their report to the Training Working Team. The report contained 14 specific recommendations regarding leadership development for wildland fire agencies. 

Monday, January 25, 2021

IGNITE: Hearing is Listening - Listening is Hearing

Hearing is listening to what is said. 
Listening is hearing what isn't said.
♦ Simon Sinek ♦

Photo: Lassen IHC
www.fireleadership.gov


Saturday, January 23, 2021

Courage in the Face of Danger

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In the afternoon on July 28, 1939, a crew from the Paradise Valley Civilian Conservations Corps (CCC) camp arrived at the Rock Creek Fire, a 30-acre sagebrush fire in Humboldt County, on the northern border of Nevada. 

Friday, January 22, 2021

Week 3 Challenge: 2021 WFLDP Campaign

2021 WFLDP campaign logo and challenge

Week 3 Challenge(s): Leaders appreciate constructive criticism.
#2021WFLDPCampaign #sharpeningyourtools #fireleadership 

Thursday, January 21, 2021

IGNITE: Leadership is Not a Title

 

wildland fire sawyer

Leadership is not about a title or a designation. It’s about impact, influence and inspiration. ♦ Robin S. Sharma ♦

[Photo: Golden Eagles IHC]
#fireleadership

Wednesday, January 20, 2021

Wildland Fire—a High-Risk Operational Environment


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We are asked to make tough decisions under a compressed time frame, given limited information, in a complex and high-risk environment. This operational environment routinely brings together people, machinery, and the destructive energy of wildfire in the close, three-dimensional space of the fireground and its airspace. 

Tuesday, January 19, 2021

The Wildland Firefighter Safety Awareness Study

Credit: Geralt/Pixabay

The Wildland Firefighter Safety Awareness Study, otherwise known as the TriData Study, has had significant impacts on the wildland fire community since its phased release in the late '90s. Researchers queried approximately 1,000 firefighters and presented a four-phase study with:
  • 19 principles
  • 86 goals
  • 200 implementation strategies

Monday, January 18, 2021

IGNITE: Close Enough Yet Far Enough Away

firefighters with retardant drop in background

Leaders must be close enough to relate to others, but far enough ahead to motivate them. – John C. Maxwell

[Photo: Kari Greer/USFS]
#fireleadership

Saturday, January 16, 2021

Art of Leadership

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Leaders deeply affect people and organizations, both positively and negatively. Accidental leaders, who have little interest or enthusiasm for leadership responsibilities or self-improvement, can inhibit people’s growth and reduce the effectiveness of their organizations. 

Friday, January 15, 2021

Week 2 Challenge: 2021 WFLDP Campaign

2021 WFLDP Campaign logo and challenge

Week 2 Challenge(s): Leaders seek to understand.
#2021WFLDPCampaign #sharpenyourtools #humanfactors

Thursday, January 14, 2021

IGNITE: Student of Fire

firefighter and sun

When you care more about the past, the future will shine brighter. - The Daily Coach

[Photo: Tallac IHC]
#fireleadership

Wednesday, January 13, 2021

Bringing Order to Chaos

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National Incident Management Teams (IMTs) of the wildland fire service have gained a reputation for bringing order to chaos when disaster strikes. Whether organizing search teams for remnants of the Columbia shuttle or providing command and control for recovery teams at Ground Zero of the Twin Towers, these IMTs have set a powerful example of leadership in uncertain situations. 

Tuesday, January 12, 2021

The 1995 Wildland Firefighters Human Factors Workshop



Following the South Canyon fire in 1994, fire leaders gathered together for the Wildland Firefighters Human Factors Workshop. The workshop theme was "Improving Wildland Firefighter Performance Under Stressful, Risky Conditions: Toward Better Decisions on the Fireline and More Resilient Organizations."

Monday, January 11, 2021

IGNITE: The Power of Silence

 

night sky
Nothing strengthens authority so much as silence. ♦ Leonardo da Vinci ♦

Photo: Kyle Miller/ Wyoming IHC
www.fireleadership.gov


Saturday, January 9, 2021

The Authority to Lead versus the Decision to Lead

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The authority to lead is established by law. Whether this authority is based on federal, state, or local law, we are legal agents exercising authority on behalf of our organizations. 

The ability to lead is a different matter; it is something that cannot be legislated. To be effective, leaders must earn the trust and respect of others. A leader’s journey is a perpetual cycle of acquiring, shaping, and honing the knowledge and skills of leadership. The leadership journey is never finished.

Once we commit to becoming leaders, our focus is no longer ourselves. Fire leaders assume the serious responsibility of putting others into harm’s way and for making decisions that profoundly affect citizens, communities, and natural resources.

Leadership is a tough choice. Leaders choose to sacrifice their own needs for those of their teams and organizations. They routinely face situations and make decisions that others criticize and second-guess. Leaders take risks and face challenges every day. 

So why do we choose to lead? We lead because leading is where we make a difference. 

Fire leaders bring order to chaos, improve our people’s lives, and strengthen our organizations. Leading enables us to leave a legacy for the leaders of the future so that they can take our places well prepared for the road ahead. 

These are the rewards of leadership. Their effects will be seen and felt long after our careers end. 

Friday, January 8, 2021

Challenge #1: 2021 WFLDP Campaign

2020 WFLDP challenge #1


Challenge(s) #1: Leaders are readers and students of fire.
#WFLDPCampaign2021 #strengthenyourtools #fireleadership #honorthroughlearning

Thursday, January 7, 2021

IGNITE: Your Greatest Project

firefigher hardhat and pack
“You are the greatest project you'll ever work on.” ~ Sonny Franco ~ 

[Photo credit: Justin Vernon]
#fireleadership

Wednesday, January 6, 2021

A Framework for Leadership

20th Anniversary & Campaign logo


Wildland fire is a phenomenon essential to nature’s design. But fire, whether caused by natural force or human beings, can also pose a threat to people and communities.

The ultimate purpose of the wildland fire service is to protect life, property, and natural resources while engaging the forces of nature. Most of us made a commitment to serve our communities, our states, or our nation. We willingly accepted this unique obligation to place ourselves at risk and to put the interests of others before our own.

Monday, January 4, 2021

A Catalyst for Change

Redding IHC at South Canyon Staff Ride 2014
(Redding IHC at South Canyon Staff Ride 2014; photo credit: Shane Olpin)

The 1994 fire season was a pivotal year in United States wildland fire operations. Thirty 38 wildland firefighters lost their lives in job-related activities. Fourteen of those deaths occurred on the South Canyon fire. This tragedy became a catalyst for change.

IGNITE: You Decide


burned tree
“You may not control all the events that happen to you, but you can decide not to be reduced by them.” ♦ Dr. Maya Angelou♦ 

[Photo: Kari Greer/USFS]
#fireleadership

Saturday, January 2, 2021

"Leading in the Wildland Fire Service"- Preface

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Leadership is the art of influencing people in order to achieve a result. The most essential element for success in the wildland fire service is good leadership. 

This book expresses the fundamental leadership concepts of the wildland fire service. It outlines the framework, values, and principles that guide wildland fire leaders in providing leadership across a broad range of missions. The concepts in this book are universal to every person in the wildland fire service—from first year employee to senior manager. 

This book serves interagency wildland fire service interests by:
  • Defining leadership in the wildland fire service.
  • Articulating a universal set of values and principles to guide the actions of leaders in the wildland fire service. 
  • Providing a concise reference for the wildland fire leadership development curriculum for use by both instructors and students. 
Leaders often face difficult problems to which there are no simple, clear cut, by-the-book solutions. In these situations, leaders must use their knowledge, skill, experience, education, values, and judgment to make decisions and to take or direct action—in short, to provide leadership.

This book does not state policy. It cannot provide black-and-white answers to the unlimited volume and variety of situations a leader will face. Instead this book simply outlines the broad concepts of leadership in the wildland fire service—fundamental concepts by which expectations of leaders may be established and performance of leaders may be judged. It is intended to make better leaders of us all. 

For these reasons, this book is structured around our leadership values and principles as a means of communicating what right looks like and illustrating effective leadership in action.