foresterab
Full Member
- Reaction score
- 316
- Points
- 760
Interesting discussion on what is involved with secondary credentials. I've been on wildfires where the out of province resource beside me offers to deal with bear issues...because that's part of their day job but not mine...or oil spills or wiring (journeyman electrician who did a career change). Like the army these are not tracked skills but there are some things I think we do right...especially out of province when credentials are not the same.
Deploy on a wildfire and you go as X role - incident commander, fire fighter, helicopter coordinator?...it's the role the host agency ordered but the agency representative/liaison officer also has copies of all your training and certification records so if you need to move from position X to Y they can authorize the change. Keep in mind that position change might also entail very different workloads, qualifications and payment rates as per the pre-arranged agreements. So it's a positive on that front...
Unfortunately things like languages are rarely tracked well. Africans, Polish, Dene, Cree, French, German, Russian...pick a language skill set and they've come up. Last summer I really could have used a Chinese and Nepalese speaker. In many cases it's not a fully fluent person as per federal government standards but someone that knows enough to break the ice and communicate the language issue which can sometimes mean using a 3rd language to communicate - iZulu speaker using Afrikans to translate so we can understand it in English in one case.
Secondary skills such as trades are often not known at all and skill sets people have come exposed at the most unusual times. Locked the keys in the truck...put a pack of smokes on the truck, announce the problem, and go for a coffee. When you return the truck is unlocked but nobody knows how . Many professionals are there to get the job done and will volunteer their experience if asked as long as a person treats it as a true emergency situation and not a case of "Joe the plumber...you're in charge of toilets instead of driving your tank". The electrician example I found out at 1am when the individual complained of cold showers and no water and then reset the heater units so he could be clean for the next days operations. An electrician was called in the next day to ensure all was correct and my emergency fixer never touched a another tool that deployment.
Deploy on a wildfire and you go as X role - incident commander, fire fighter, helicopter coordinator?...it's the role the host agency ordered but the agency representative/liaison officer also has copies of all your training and certification records so if you need to move from position X to Y they can authorize the change. Keep in mind that position change might also entail very different workloads, qualifications and payment rates as per the pre-arranged agreements. So it's a positive on that front...
Unfortunately things like languages are rarely tracked well. Africans, Polish, Dene, Cree, French, German, Russian...pick a language skill set and they've come up. Last summer I really could have used a Chinese and Nepalese speaker. In many cases it's not a fully fluent person as per federal government standards but someone that knows enough to break the ice and communicate the language issue which can sometimes mean using a 3rd language to communicate - iZulu speaker using Afrikans to translate so we can understand it in English in one case.
Secondary skills such as trades are often not known at all and skill sets people have come exposed at the most unusual times. Locked the keys in the truck...put a pack of smokes on the truck, announce the problem, and go for a coffee. When you return the truck is unlocked but nobody knows how . Many professionals are there to get the job done and will volunteer their experience if asked as long as a person treats it as a true emergency situation and not a case of "Joe the plumber...you're in charge of toilets instead of driving your tank". The electrician example I found out at 1am when the individual complained of cold showers and no water and then reset the heater units so he could be clean for the next days operations. An electrician was called in the next day to ensure all was correct and my emergency fixer never touched a another tool that deployment.