Move-up and Cover Stations. A Cover Crew Guide should be available at each station and contain enough information to allow an outside resource to effectively operate in that facility. Address that there may be times when cooperators are involved in emergency operations and unable to provide mutual aid. In this case other cooperators may be contacted for assistance. Responding and requesting parties should identify any mileage limitations from mutual boundaries where “mutual aid” is either pay or non-pay status. Also, for some fire departments, the mileage issue may not be one of initial attack “mutual aid,” but of mutual assistance. In this situation, you may have the option to make it part of this agreement or identify it as a situation where the request would be made to the agency having jurisdiction, which would then dispatch the fire department.
Appears in 2 contracts
Samples: California Cooperative Fire Management Agreement, California Cooperative Fire Management Agreement
Move-up and Cover Stations. A Cover Crew Guide should be available at each station and contain enough information to allow an outside resource to effectively operate in that facility. Address that there may be times when cooperators are involved in emergency operations and unable to provide mutual aid. In this case other cooperators may be contacted for assistance. Responding and requesting parties should identify any mileage limitations from mutual boundaries where “mutual aid” is either pay or non-pay status. Also, for some fire departments, the mileage issue may not be one of initial attack “mutual aid,” but of mutual assistance. In this situation, you may have the option to make it part of this agreement or identify it as a situation where the request would be made to the agency having jurisdiction, which would then dispatch the fire department.
Appears in 2 contracts
Samples: Cooperative Wildland Fire Management Agreement, California Cooperative Fire Management Agreement
Move-up and Cover Stations. A Cover Crew Guide should be available at each station and contain enough information to allow an outside resource to effectively operate in that facility. Address that there may be times when cooperators are involved in emergency operations and unable to provide mutual aid. In this case other cooperators may be contacted for assistance. Responding and requesting parties should identify any mileage limitations from mutual boundaries where “mutual aid” is either pay or non-pay status. Also, for some fire departments, the mileage issue may not be one of initial attack “mutual aid,” but of mutual assistance. In this situation, you may have the option to make it part of this agreement or identify it as a situation where the request would be made to the agency having jurisdiction, which would then dispatch thendispatch the fire department.
Appears in 2 contracts
Samples: Master Cooperative Wildland Fire Management Agreement, Cooperative Wildland Fire Management and Stafford Act Response Agreement
Move-up and Cover Stations. A Cover Crew Guide should be available at each station and contain enough information to allow an outside resource to effectively operate in that facility. • Address that there may be times when cooperators are involved in emergency operations and unable to provide mutual aid. In this case other cooperators may be contacted for assistance. • Responding and requesting parties should identify any mileage limitations from mutual boundaries where “mutual aid” is either pay or non-pay status. Also, for some fire departments, the mileage issue may not be one of initial attack “mutual aid,” but of mutual assistance. In this situation, you may have the option to make it part of this agreement or identify it as a situation where the request would be made to the agency having jurisdiction, which would then dispatch the fire department.
Appears in 1 contract
Move-up and Cover Stations. A Cover Crew Guide should be available at each station and contain enough information to allow an outside resource to effectively operate in that facility. · Address that there may be times when cooperators are involved in emergency operations and unable to provide mutual aid. In this case other cooperators may be contacted for assistance. · Responding and requesting parties should identify any mileage limitations from mutual boundaries where “mutual aid” is either pay or non-pay status. Also, for some fire departments, the mileage issue may not be one of initial attack “mutual aid,” but of mutual assistance. In this situation, you may have the option to make it part of this agreement or identify it as a situation where the request would be made to the agency having jurisdiction, which would then dispatch the fire department.
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Master Cooperative Wildland Fire Management Agreement