
Fire Engineering Podcast Network
138 episodes — Page 1 of 3
The Benefits of Firefighter Tracking and Indoor Mapping
What Are the Layers of Safety Culture?
Mark as 'Junk': Filtering Personal Spam
Are Affinity Groups Changing the Face of the Fire Service?
What You Need to Know About Building Data‑Driven After‑Action Reviews
Radios, Command, and LODD Lessons Learned
What Recent Research Is Pushing the Fire Service Forward?
Getting Real About Using AI and Other Nonoperational Behaviors
What Does a Season Change Mean for the Fire Service?
After-Action Reviews and Special Event Planning
Mergers and Consolidations: Uniting Departments for a Safer Future
The Difference Disciplined Training Can Make
Out of the Comfort Zone: The Power of Small-Scale Fire Conferences
Why Is Being 'We' Focused Better Than Being 'Me' Focused?
Why Incident Command Training Is So Important
FireLink and Captium: Full-Fleet Insights
What One New Executive Order Means for the Fire Service
In the Books: Episode #18: Pressure Proof: A Guide to Performing Under Stress
Is It Possible to Rebuild Firehouse Community?
SAM & SAM Boost: Automated Pump Control That Helps the Whole Fireground
Remembering a Dark Day: The Legacy of Kyle Wilson
Practical Advice and Training Methods from Two Jersey Guys
How to Turn FDIC Momentum into Real-World Change
Here's What Will Kill Your Relationship with the Fire Service
Response Management and Tech: The January 2025 D.C. Plane Crash
NERIS: What Do You Need to Know?
Eight Saves at 800 Casanova: Mastery of Command
What Does the Future of the Fire Service Look Like?
The Truth About Teamwork
Taking Back the Firehouse: Stop Waiting to Be Saved
A Pre-FDIC Chat: Ladder Tactics, Constructive Criticism, and Leadership
High-Rise Mayday: One Fire Chief's Account
FDIC 2026 Preview: Classes, Symposiums, and the Anniversary of 9/11
Leadership, Humility, and Patience with Nozzle Forward Founder Aaron Fields
Who’s Responsible When Firefighters Cross Into Mutual Aid?
The Blueprint to Modern Construction
Are You Staying Relevant?
FDIC 2026: NextGen Fire Rescue Tech Summit Preview
Ep 2263Training for the Worst Shift of Your Career
The most grueling fire of your career may not wait for you to have seniority. In fact, it can easily happen on a rookie’s second shift. Or first! So the fire service must handle health and safety training with the same urgency as it does for fireground operations. On this episode of The Training Officer, host Dave McGlynn sits down with seasoned fire chief and FDIC instructor Dennis Reilly to discuss the weight of cancer in the fire service, professional legacy, leadership roles, and FDIC. They also explore the obligation veterans have to mentor the next generation and why every minute of training is an investment in someone else's survival. This episode is brought to you by The Fire Store: https://thefirestore.com/ This episode is brought to you by Fire Facilities: https://www.firefacilities.com/
Ep 2262How to Achieve Tactical Excellence
What is the role of leadership? And how can it shape an "aggressive" fire service culture? On this episode of Tactical Impact, hosts Jason Hoevelmann and Jim Silvernail welcome Jamie Young and Joe Gragnani to the show. They explore how to move beyond clichés and how to build organizations that prioritize tactical excellence. They discuss the "Four Pillars" of departments: running calls, training to run calls, mastering tradecraft, and everything else. Young and Gragnani share how they transitioned a "storied" department toward a search-heavy, "victims until proven otherwise" mindset, supported by a significant investment in off-duty training and strong labor-management relationships. They explore why today's toxic fuel loads demand a smarter, more proactive breed of firefighter and firehouse culture. This episode is brought to you by The Fire Store: https://thefirestore.com/ This episode is brought to you by Fire Facilities: https://www.firefacilities.com/
Ep 2261How to Prioritize with RECEO
Jay Bonnifield, a captain with the Everett (WA) Fire Department, joins this episode of Hooks & Hoses to discuss how RECEO—Rescue, Exposures, Confinement, Extinguishment, and Overhaul—helps firefighters prioritize life-saving actions and navigate chaotic fire scenes effectively. He discusses the hierarchy of RECEO and how it helps inform decision making and situational awareness while enabling members to rapidly process chaotic scenes. Bonnifield also reviews practical training habits: 15‑minute daily tactical decision games, hot washes, and pattern recognition drills that accelerate rookie development and keep company officers empowered.
Ep 2260Why Leadership and Their Crews Need to Get on the Same Page
What's the significance of aligning leadership and crews in modern fire departments? On this episode of Tailboard Talk, hosts Jeff Wallin, Chris Rasmussen, and Craig Nelson welcome Kent Orvik and Andy Dingman, of the Fargo (ND) Fire Department. The panel discusses how firefighters who become chiefs keep the instincts of the engine room yet inherit a very different job: long timeframes, political constraints, and layers of oversight. They unpack why quick operational fixes don't translate to administrative problems, why training and wellness get squeezed by limited budgets, and why crews want plain answers. Together, they explore ways to align priorities so safety, staffing, and community service move forward together.
Ep 2259The Fireground Blueprint, Part I
Host Christopher Naum's two-part series for BuildingsonFire takes a closeup look at building literacy and reshaping decision making on the fireground. This episode explores the operational framework that links building era, construction, occupancy, and functional domains. Naum discusses tactics, safety, and command. He gets into the importance of the first 20 minutes of an incident, the predictability of building performance, and moving beyond surface familiarity to applied architectural and engineering knowledge.
Ep 2258The Truth About Teamwork
Inside a firehouse, teamwork isn’t part of a slogan—it’s the difference between control and chaos. For this episode of Women in Fire, host Lisa Baker and guests Heather Mozdean, Paige Colwell, and Kim Phillips get candid about what teamwork actually looks like. They move past textbook definitions and into the reality: coordinating ventilation with interior crews, trusting the person next to you to read conditions the same way, and knowing one freelancer can unravel an entire operation in seconds. They also take a look at station life, where unresolved tension, uneven effort, and poor communication quietly erode performance long before a call comes in. This discussion presents an honest conversation about training gaps, ego, leadership responsibility, and the difficulty of building cohesion across personalities and ranks. This episode features: Lisa Baker, Southwest Trustee, Women in Fire (host). Paige Colwell, battalion chief, Forsyth County (GA) Fire Department. Heather Mozdean, deputy chief, Fremont (CA) Fire Department. Kim Phillips, district chief, Houston (TX) Fire Department.
Ep 2257Humpday Hangout: The Evolving Fireground
On this week's Humpday Hangout, Frank Ricci and Josh Miller talk to guests P.J. Norwood and Sean Gray about The Evolving Fireground: Research-Based Tactics, which they cowrote. They discuss why transitional attacks and ventilation must be coordinated with hoseline placement, argue for early water application from outside to improve interior conditions, and reframe “search” and “door control” to prioritize survivor access and firefighter safety. Later in the episode, the show welcomes former Navy SEAL Chris Shea of the North Haven (CT) Fire Department and discuss his decision to run for Congress.
Ep 2256Ways to Modernize Incident Command
Command Show host Anthony Kastros and guest Rick Nelson, Chief of the Reading (MA) Fire Department, discuss how a small New England fire department modernized incident command to close the tactical gap. They unpack NIOSH 5 failure points and show how decentralized leadership, mutual-aid run cards, and tactical supervisors improve accountability, reduce radio traffic, and improve outcomes. The conversation covers regional collaboration across New England, practical benchmarks for tactical communications, and Reading’s next steps. Kastros and Nelson also talk about technology and how leaders empower lieutenants to lead during mutual‑aid responses. This podcast is brought to you by Tablet Command. www.tabletcommand.com/get-started-lp
Ep 2255Secrets of Success for the Next Generation
How often do you think about leaving the fire department better than you found it and setting the next generation up for success? In this episode of Talkin' Tactics, hosts David Polikoff and Sam Villani welcome Frank Ricci, a retired battalion chief from the New Haven (CT) Fire Department to talk about these important topics. They discuss recruitment and academy culture, why early leadership training matters, and how realistic, stressful drills build the muscle memory crews need on the fireground. The discussion contrasts career and volunteer models, suggests swap programs and targeted on‑apparatus mentoring, and stresses paced promotions so officers learn every job. The panel also examines day-to-day credibility, with a focus on doing the "small" tasks, setting clear expectations, and holding candid post‑incident debriefs.
Ep 2254What We Can Learn from Fatality Reports
On this episode of The Backstep Boys hosts Ron Kanterman and Tom Aurnhammer discuss firefighter line‑of‑duty reports and the hard lessons that persist: breakdowns in incident command, poor communication, accountability gaps, and the ongoing danger of modern building construction and synthetic fuels. They trace the origin and purpose of the national firefighter fatality investigation program, how free, nonpunitive reports are structured, and why they’re essential training tools for recruits and veterans. The conversation also touches on firefighting history, an upcoming book compiling major U.S. and international conflagrations, and the human cost behind statistics. They also talk about the unseen workload of incident management teams who support families after tragedies.
Ep 2251In The Books: Infection Control Policies and Procedures for Community Paramedicine and MIH, 2nd edition
Katherine West joins us to discuss the expertise behind her newly updated Infection Control Policies for Community Paramedicine and MIH, 2nd Edition. With decades of experience, West explains the differences between emergent care and home‑care practices, offering practical, evidence‑based guidance. She highlights challenges such as healthcare‑associated infections, inconsistent training, and the expanding role of EMS in home environments. In our conversation, she shares insights that help CP/MIH programs strengthen safety, support diverse community‑care models, and better protect both patients and providers as EMS roles continue to expand. Link: https://fireengineeringbooks.com/books/infection-control-policies-and-procedures-for-community-paramedicine-and-mih-2nd-edition/?utm_source=youtube.com&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=in_the_books&utm_content=infection_control_policies_and_procedures_for_community_paramedicine_and_mih_2nd_edition
Ep 2253Understanding the Fight to Keep Good People
If you teach, lead, or want to grow the talent in your department, give this conversation between Billy Hux and Bobby Drake a listen. The Point of Origin hosts unpack the lone‑chief challenge, stressing trust, training, and emotional intelligence as the antidotes to isolation. They also offer tactical reminders about audience engagement, workload balance, and using conferences to find allies and solutions.