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The Way of The Chief

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The chief who is resolute, brave, and strong is capable of leading fire companies into battle. The chief who is intelligent and visionary is capable of developing the department. Chiefs who are strong and brave, while possessing intelligence and vision, are capable of leading thousands.

We tend to think that one set of characteristics is independent of the other, when in fact, there are those who have learned to develop all of these qualities. Rhett Fleitz, over on Fire Critic, posed the question, “Who will be our new leaders in the fire service?” Who are tomorrow’s Brunos and Yvarras? Our Downeys and Dunns? The Brennans and the Brannigans? What did these people possess that we, perhaps, do not?

Maybe things like charisma, or an innate knowledge of what ideas stick and how to sell them to others? Or perhaps it is simply a passion for their ideas? Is it that they cared for others so much that they were/are compelled to share all of their riches, which in their cases were their vision of something better than the status quo?

If you look at my list, you’ll note that some of those names are no longer with us and some still are. While legends may grow after someone passes away, none of the individuals identified in my short list became legendary only after their demise. In fact, when they left us, they were very much in the leading edge. Those on the list who are still among us, although retired, are still sharing their passion with us today. They could easily have gone to hang out at the pool and sip Mimosas, but they still can be heard and seen, sharing their vision, and probably will up to the day they too leave us (hopefully nowhere near soon).

When you think about who these new visionaries are, do you say to yourself that they should be instruments of conveying today’s knowledge or are they those who share the idea of what it could be if we all apply ourselves? Because of today’s ability to reach out over the internet, I’d suggest there may be more “candidates” for those “positions”, simply because we were limited, in the early days of my career, to those who were able to come to me, or I to them. Now you can find an expert on every click of the mouse.

What constitutes the next leader of the fire service? Which qualities break someone out from the pack? You tell me. As far as I am concerned, we have lots of leaders now, and we have none. We should all be reaching out to exceed even what we perceive is our potential, understanding that the only limitations we possess are the ones we have given ourselves or gave permission to others to place on us. Until we can look past what is and look toward what can be, we will remain right here in our own existence. As Gandhi said, “Be the change you wish to see in the world.” If you want to be the next leader, it’s yours to reach out and grab.

Keep It Short

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Try not to cram EVERYTHING into one package.

The essentials, crammed efficiently into a manageable package. Think of it as "concentrated excellence".

I’m trying to determine what my readers want (and don’t want) in the way of improving FHZ. Unfortunately, I get intermittent feedback from you all, so I have to rely on hits to tell me where I am and am not. One thing I have noticed: when I have a short post, I get more hits, thus, these must be things you wish to read (or have time to).

In the spirit of continual improvement, I’ll post more often but shorter.  So I’m going to set a goal of saying what I have to say in less than (or close to) 700 words.  If it takes more than that, maybe it needs to be broken down into digestible chunks.  We’ll see how that works, but I have no desire to decrease the quality.  I’m looking to bring what YOU want to the blog but to stay within my niche.  We have plenty of bloggers on here to share their own particular specialties.  Until I get this straight, bear with me and let me know what it is you are interested in (knowing I am focusing on leadership and change issues and keeping things ethical and G to PG-lite).

As a result of the subject matter I deal with, it is pretty hard to keep things short; my goal is to frame social issues within our industry (and outside it) in a context we can all understand.  I tend to use a lot of examples and metaphorical discussions to do this, while encouraging visionary and innovative practices.  I’d say we want to re-invent the way we lead in emergency services, but we can’t even define emergency services on a daily basis.  So feel free to say your piece, tell me what you think we need right now.  Stay safe; know what is going on around you at all times and let’s all go home in the morning.

Fire/EMS Blog of the Year. Hmmm.

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webIMG_2025I’m flattered that we (okay, at FHZ, there’s  just me, actually) here at FHZ put up just enough smoke and mirrors that we were nominated over on The Fire Critic for Fire/EMS Blog of the Year.  While I am honored, I count myself as humbly fortunate to simply be on the same network as some of the heavy hitters in Fire/EMS blogdom and submit that if you haven’t taken the time yet, take a ride over to some of these other excellent blogs and give them a little of your feedback.

These folks work hard in their regular jobs then turn around and put something out there for you to read on a semi-regular basis.  I’m not even going to attempt the screw-up I pulled off a few months ago on Firefighter Nation and try to name a few of them, only to realize how many I left off (see guys, thought you’d catch me again).

We have stuff for the aspiring company officer, chief officer, or backstep firefighter, as well as for the paramedic and for the “ambulance driver”.  We can get hard news, we can get hard news as seen in the digital day room, and we can get even opinion and fiction all interspersed throughout one blog.  There are ratings of other blogs and sites, observations and links to others, and discussion of wildland firefighting, marketing your department, training, safety and leadership.  There is everything EMS from aimless tweeting to scenario based reading, stories of brotherhood no ocean could separate, and views of rural, suburban, and even urban EMS.

I have my own opinion as to which sites are deserving of this award, but I also pose that there are also many other sites out there that aren’t a member of FireEMSBlogs.com that are excellent as well.  Some I hope to see join us over here in the future (look down my own blogroll and check out some of those; the ones I’ve listed are pretty good, and there are even some others I haven’t added on yet).  Some are probably happy where they are.  And some of them are toiling away in relative obscurity, not because they aren’t very good, but because they just simply haven’t gotten the exposure yet.  They’re like nuggets of gold hidden in the mud, waiting to be panned out and shined up. I encourage you to take the advantage of reading the other blogs from my colleagues; they have some amazing stuff.  Let them know I sent you.

But while you’re at it, take some opportunities to look at the rest of the blogroll on some of these pages.  There are some up and coming bloggers who I think have the right ideas, they are witty, fresh, and entertaining.  Of course, some are not.  But my point is that there is a wealth of information and perspectives out there that we should all be looking at, to learn and to understand, in this new year. And while you’re at it, swing on by The Fire Critic, throw him some props, and give him your opinion on the Blog of The Year.  And as appreciative as I am for being considered, I think I’d rather you look hard at some of these other blogs and consider how much more they are deserving of such an honor, because they truly are “good stuff”.