Common use of Extended Attack/Major Incidents Clause in Contracts

Extended Attack/Major Incidents. For long‐term air operations, more than one aerial supervision aircraft should be assigned for rotation to assure adequate crew rest and continuous coverage. For large or complex operations multiple aerial supervision platforms (ATGS, Aerial Supervision Module, Lead Plane, Helicopter Coordinator, etc.) can be utilized to maintain an appropriate span of control and aerial supervision oversight in support of the incident objectives.

Appears in 5 contracts

Samples: Share Agreement, Operating Plan Agreement, Washington Statewide

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Extended Attack/Major Incidents. For long‐term long-term air operations, more than one aerial supervision aircraft should be assigned for rotation to assure adequate crew rest and continuous coverage. For large or complex operations multiple aerial supervision platforms (ATGS, Aerial Supervision Module, Lead Plane, Helicopter Coordinator, etc.) can be utilized to maintain an appropriate span of control and aerial supervision oversight in support of the incident objectives.

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: Operating Plan Agreement

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Extended Attack/Major Incidents. For long‐term air operations, more than one aerial supervision aircraft and ATGS should be assigned for rotation to assure adequate crew rest and continuous coverage. For large or complex operations multiple operations, a second aerial supervision platforms (ATGS, Aerial Supervision Module, aircraft or a Lead Plane, Helicopter Coordinator, etc.) /Plane can be utilized as the Air tanker Coordinator, to maintain an appropriate span of control and aerial supervision oversight in support of the incident objectives.

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: www.fs.usda.gov

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