Knowledge (XXG)

Australasian Inter-Service Incident Management System

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126:. He brought back the NIMS documentation and developed a Victorian version, which became known as the Large Fire Organisation (LFO). Importantly, the LFO was designed to be scalable; from Level 1 for simple local incidents, through to Level 3 for complex multi-agency and campaign bushfires. Brian Potter, Chief of the CFA (1985-91), also visited the US and became an enthusiastic supporter of NIMS, the LFO, and later, AIIMS. 134:
that time, including 20 helicopters and 16 fixed-wing aircraft from the FCV, Australian Defence Force and NSCA.  The LFO was given a thorough test run at these fires. Later Chief Fire Officers, Barry Johnston (1987-90), Rod Incoll (1990-96) and Garry Morgan (1996-2005) maintained the momentum for changes to command-and-control arrangements at large bushfires in Victoria.
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Unity of Command refers to the need for each individual to only have one leader and there is a clear hierarchy to ensure consistent management of an emergency. Along with span of control this allows for a flexible, scalable and manageable structure that can be tailored for the unique requirements of
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to be filled by a separate individual as other people filling the other roles which come under each functional area (e.g. welfare, catering etc.) as a single person would not be able to handle the logistics, operations, planning etc. all by themselves as would be expected of the single-story fire (at
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By the summer of 1984-85 the LFO was being progressively adopted, with dedicated Incident Management Teams (IMTs) complete with Incident Controllers, Operations, Planning and Logistics units identified and trained within the new Conservation, Forests, and Lands (CFL) Regions. CFL replaced the Forests
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As no two incidents are the same, the structure needed to meet the demands of various incidents must also vary to adapt to the situation. The ability to scale the structure to combine different roles for smaller incidents and then separate out the AIIMS functions as the incident grows or changes is
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To ensure all incident personnel are working towards one set of objectives, the Incident Controller, in consultation with the Incident Management Team, determines the desired outcomes of the incident. These are communicated to all involved. At any point in time, an incident can have only one set of
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AIIMS was jointly adopted by the CFA and CFL in 1991 with the intent of bringing emergency services together under one control system with common terminology, A Multi-Agency Incident Management Agreement was signed by the Chief Officers of the CFA and CFL on 14 November 1997 to give more detail on
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Athol Hodgson was appointed CFL’s first Chief Fire Officer (1984-87) and was a strong advocate of the LFO. The fires of January 1985 in the alps near Mt Buffalo were the first major test for the newly formed department. It was also the largest deployment of firefighting aircraft in Australia up to
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Span of control is a concept that relates to the number of groups or individuals that can be successfully supervised by one person. During emergency incidents, the environment in which supervision is required can rapidly change and become dangerous if not managed effectively. Up to five reporting
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Where span of control is exceeded, the supervising officer should consider delegating responsibility to others. Conversely, where the span of control is lower or the tasks are fewer (for example in a de-escalating incident), the supervisor may reassume responsibility or reorganise delegation to
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For every incident, an Incident Controller is appointed who is ultimately responsible and accountable for all of the five functions. Depending on the size and complexity of an incident, the Incident Controller may elect to delegate one or more of the functions of planning, public information,
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were responsible for fires on private land and operated independently on separate radio frequencies under a group structure. Cross agency issues sometimes arose within the “Marginal Mile”; so FCV and CFA liaison officers were often appointed in the event of large or complex bushfires.
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Significantly, in 1986, the Victorian Emergency Management Act provided for a single controller to be appointed for each joint CFA/CFL bushfire. Later in 1988 the Australian Association of Rural Fire Authorities adopted the principals embodied in LFO and NIMS.
242:(DELWP) where they state "the use of the AIIMS system promotes effective joint operations through the use of common structures and terminology" when they collaborate with other agencies using AIIMS to manage public land emergencies (e.g. floods, fires etc.). 197:
Functional management dictates that there can only be one Incident Controller managing an incident at any one time. Delegation of the functions results in an Incident Management Team of up to five people and enables span of control to be maintained.
392: 61:, and is based on the principles of management by objectives, functional management, common terminology and limits to the span of control. AIIMS is a trademark of AFAC and the material in the AIIMS manual and training materials is copyright of 252:
As with any system it is not without its criticisms, mainly stemming from when people should delegate (i.e. scale the system) from a single incident controller to an IC plus Operations Officer, or when to involve planning. As demonstrated by
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The control system of AIIMS is based on a structure of delegation with five functional areas: Control, Planning, Public Information, Operations and Logistics. This guarantees that all vital management and information functions are performed.
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The way in which AIIMS is "scalable" is that it does not require the full-scale response to every incident – it allows for the build-up of resources and response activity. For example, a single-story house does not require an
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or the 2010-2011 Queensland floods, improvements needed to be made around who is responsible for intelligence, inter-service communication etc. Whether these have been overcome by the promotion of
142: 37:) is the nationally recognised system of incident management for the nation's fire and emergency service agencies. Organisational principles and structure are used to manage 239: 189:
Logistics - The acquisition and provision of human and physical resources, facilities, services and materials to support achievement of incident objectives. (Coloured Blue)
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The LFO became the forerunner of the Australasian Inter-Service Incident Management System (AIIMS) which was adopted nationally in the early 1990s under newly formed
249:, where they used an AIIMS-like system called the Biosecurity Incident Management System (BIMS) to manage the incident. Like AIIMS, BIMS is a derivative of NIIMS. 110:. And after the fires there were major changes in how the Forests Commission approached large fire suppression and control on State forest and National Parks. The 201:
The Public Information Unit was added the AIIMS 3rd edition (2011) as a result of recommendations from the 2009 Black Saturday Bushfires Royal Commission.
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Public Information - Provision of warnings, information and advice to the public and liaison with the media and affected communities. (Coloured Brown)
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groups or individuals is considered to be desirable, as this maintains a supervisor’s ability to effectively task, monitor and evaluate performance.
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Planning - The collection and analysis of information and the development of plans for the resolution of an incident. (Coloured Yellow)
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The operation, training and slow uptake of AIIMS were some of the key issues at the Coronial Inquest into the deaths of five
393:"Report of the Investigation and Inquests into a Wildfire and the Deaths of Five Firefighters at Linton on 2 December 1998" 148:
joint firefighting arrangements, although it took many years to make the full transition to other agencies and interstate.
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had begun experimenting with new fire control arrangements from the mid-1970s based on shared experiences with the
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Operations - The tasking and application of resources to achieve resolution of an incident. (Coloured Red)
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Control - The management of all activities necessary for the resolution of an incident. (Coloured White)
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may become clear as debriefs from the 2019-2020 summer fires take place across Australia.
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The 1982-83 Victorian Bushfire Season. Including Ash Wednesday – 16 February 1983
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During 1984, Kevin Monk from the FCV’s Fire Protection Branch travelled on a
26: 331: 312: 222:(i.e. control room) with six people managing the incident; however, the 143:
Australasian Fire and Emergency Service Authorities Council (AFAC).
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objectives and one Incident Action Plan for achieving objectives.
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This scalability is also demonstrated by AIIMS being used by
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Australasian Inter-Service Incident Management System
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Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning
45:(e.g. floods, storms, cyclones etc.) utilising the 214:contract the structure to fit the tasks required. 365:. State Library of Victoria: Self. p. 213. 245:Its uses also extended to the management of the 57:in 1983 as a derivative of the United States’ 8: 391:STATE CORONER’S OFFICE of VICTORIA (1999). 49:approach. AIIMS was first developed by the 124:National Incident Management System (NIMS) 122:to California to study the United States 304: 73:AIIMS is based on five key principles: 7: 386: 384: 382: 356: 354: 352: 350: 348: 346: 283:one of the key advantages of AIIMS. 14: 450:Emergency management in Australia 100:Forests Commission Victoria (FCV) 51:Forests Commission Victoria (FCV) 293:Emergency Management Australia 231:least in the first instance). 1: 112:Country Fire Authority (CFA) 224:2010–2011 Queensland floods 466: 194:operations and logistics. 153:CFA firefighters at Linton 18: 16:Incident management system 130:Commission in mid 1983. 255:Black Saturday bushfires 159:Management by objectives 77:Management by objectives 220:Incident Control Centre 108:Ash Wednesday bushfires 55:Ash Wednesday Bushfires 21:Incident Command System 361:McHugh, Peter (2022). 337:July 25, 2012, at the 318:July 25, 2012, at the 330:AFAC KnowledgeWeb - 311:AFAC KnowledgeWeb - 168:Functional management 80:Functional management 120:Churchill Fellowship 445:Incident management 263:Public Information 155:in December 1998. 372:978-0-6450631-3-4 238:agencies such as 104:US Forest Service 457: 429: 424: 418: 417: 406: 400: 399: 397: 388: 377: 376: 358: 341: 328: 322: 309: 269:Unity of Command 228:functional areas 89:Unity of command 41:and other large 465: 464: 460: 459: 458: 456: 455: 454: 435: 434: 433: 432: 425: 421: 408: 407: 403: 395: 390: 389: 380: 373: 360: 359: 344: 339:Wayback Machine 329: 325: 320:Wayback Machine 310: 306: 301: 289: 280: 271: 207: 205:Span of control 170: 161: 96: 83:Span of control 71: 53:in wake of the 23: 17: 12: 11: 5: 463: 461: 453: 452: 447: 437: 436: 431: 430: 419: 414:ffm.vic.gov.au 401: 378: 371: 342: 323: 303: 302: 300: 297: 296: 295: 288: 285: 279: 276: 270: 267: 206: 203: 191: 190: 187: 184: 181: 178: 169: 166: 160: 157: 95: 92: 91: 90: 87: 84: 81: 78: 70: 67: 19:Main article: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 462: 451: 448: 446: 443: 442: 440: 428: 423: 420: 415: 411: 405: 402: 394: 387: 385: 383: 379: 374: 368: 364: 357: 355: 353: 351: 349: 347: 343: 340: 336: 333: 327: 324: 321: 317: 314: 308: 305: 298: 294: 291: 290: 286: 284: 277: 275: 274:an incident. 268: 266: 264: 260: 256: 250: 248: 247:locust plague 243: 241: 237: 232: 229: 226:required all 225: 221: 215: 211: 204: 202: 199: 195: 188: 185: 182: 179: 176: 175: 174: 167: 165: 158: 156: 154: 149: 145: 144: 139: 135: 131: 127: 125: 121: 116: 113: 109: 105: 101: 93: 88: 85: 82: 79: 76: 75: 74: 68: 66: 64: 60: 56: 52: 48: 44: 40: 36: 32: 28: 22: 427:Weekly Times 422: 413: 404: 362: 326: 307: 281: 272: 262: 259:Intelligence 258: 251: 246: 244: 235: 233: 227: 219: 216: 212: 208: 200: 196: 192: 171: 162: 150: 146: 140: 136: 132: 128: 117: 97: 72: 47:all agencies 46: 34: 30: 24: 278:Flexibility 86:Flexibility 43:emergencies 439:Categories 299:References 69:Principles 39:bushfires 27:Australia 335:Archived 316:Archived 287:See also 94:History 410:"Home" 369:  29:, the 396:(PDF) 332:AIIMS 313:AIIMS 236:other 35:AIIMS 367:ISBN 261:and 98:The 63:AFAC 59:NIMS 25:In 441:: 412:. 381:^ 345:^ 65:. 416:. 398:. 375:. 33:(

Index

Incident Command System
Australia
bushfires
emergencies
Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)
Ash Wednesday Bushfires
NIMS
AFAC
Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)
US Forest Service
Ash Wednesday bushfires
Country Fire Authority (CFA)
Churchill Fellowship
National Incident Management System (NIMS)
Australasian Fire and Emergency Service Authorities Council (AFAC).
CFA firefighters at Linton
2010–2011 Queensland floods
Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning
Black Saturday bushfires
Emergency Management Australia
AIIMS
Archived
Wayback Machine
AIIMS
Archived
Wayback Machine



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