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The 6 Minutes for Safety Program

 

Have you ever wondered how or why
the 6 Minutes for Safety Program was formed?

 

In 1994, 34 wildland firefighters lost their lives in the line of duty. In July of that year on the South Canyon Fire, near Glenwood Springs, Colorado, the wildland fire community lost 14 of our own in a single incident. Following this deadly season, the Secretaries of Agriculture and Interior called on the wildland fire agencies to review the organizational and safety culture in the wildland fire program. The agencies chartered the Wildland Firefighter Safety Awareness Study (TriData Study) which proposed changes to enhance firefighter safety. Over the next decade, several of these recommendations were implemented including the establishment of the Wildland Fire Leadership Program, the Wildland Fire Lessons Learned Center, the formalization of the Wildland Fire Safety Annual Refresher (WFSTAR) program and the 6 Minutes for Safety Program (6MFS).

The 6MFS program began as a grassroots effort by a group of wildland firefighters to highlight the basic tenets of firefighter safety. Part of the value in these messages that remains today is that the topics and contents come from the field, for the field, to share lessons with other firefighters. In the early days, the 6MFS group established a calendar with topics for two-week periods and shared across the wildland fire community through emails. By 2000, a simple website was created to share these daily topics. Today, 6MFS is a subcommittee under the National Wildfire Coordinating Group (NWCG) Risk Management Committee comprised of members from the field representing each NWCG participating agency.

Why six minutes?

The name and short safety message style originated from organizational and operational risk management expert Gordon Graham, who used a 6-minute style to brief his staff on important information with messages that focused on the basics. A group of firefighters were inspired by one of Graham’s presentations at the Lookouts-Communication-Escape routes-Safety zones (LCES) conference in the late 90s. The backbone of this initiative was the basics: the 10 and 18s, and LCES. The audience was the boots on the ground, and the intent was for the messages to be “By the firefighter. For the firefighter.”

Any individual or crew can write their own or submit a 6MFS Daily Topic Suggestion, at any time.

Over the years, 6MFS has continued to evolve with the addition of new daily topics, the creation of ‘This Day in History,’ and the Wildland Firefighter Week of Remembrance. These additions provide an opportunity to take a deeper dive into incidents where powerful learning opportunities exist as well as to honor and remember the fallen as we discuss the lessons learned.

2024 marks the 30th anniversary of the 1994 fire season, the South Canyon Fire, and the origins of major cultural shifts in the wildland fire community to include the 6MFS program.

A special thank you to Kathy Komatz for carrying the torch for so many years and ensuring that every component of the program was created to support and inform the boots on the ground!

Discussion Questions:

  • Why is it important to discuss the 6MFS daily topic?
  • How do you incorporate the daily topic into day-to-day activities?
  • What are the different ways to access 6MFS in the field?
  • What other types of topics should be considered?
  • How do you submit feedback or suggest for a new topic?
     

Last Modified / Reviewed:

Have an idea or feedback?

Share it with the NWCG 6MFS Subcommittee.


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NWCG Latest Announcements

NWCG Equipment Technology Committee Releases Safety Warning: 25-001 Non-specification fire shelters

Date: January 15, 2025
Contact: Equipment Technology Committee

The Equipment Technology Committee (ETC) has released Safety Warning: 25-001 Non-specification fire shelters. Non-specification fire shelters claiming to meet Forest Service (FS) fire shelter specification 5100-606 were first found in February of 2023. As of September 2024, non-specification shelters are again being advertised and sold on the open market.

This Safety Warning outlines details and recommended procedures to purchase FS specification shelters made with materials and components that meet performance criteria and toxicity testing requirements outlined in FS Specification 5100-606. 

For additional information on identifying non-specification shelters, please view ETC Safety Warning 23-01.

References:

ETC Safety Warning 25-001: Non-specification fire shelters

NWCG Equipment Technology Committee

ETC Safety Warning 23-01

Paul Gleason Lead by Example Awards

Date: January 14, 2025
Contact: Leadership Committee

The NWCG Leadership Committee has awarded the 2023 Paul Gleason “Lead By Example” awards to individuals in the categories of Initiative and Innovation, Mentoring and Teamwork, and Motivation and Vision, as well as a Lifetime Achievement Award.

Congratulations to the awardees:

  • Sam Bowen, Superintendent of the Mark Twain Veteran Crew with the U.S. Forest Service.
  • Greg Titus, Zone Fire Management Officer for the St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge with U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
  • Renae Crippen, Manager of the Blue Mountain Interagency Dispatch Center with the U.S. Forest Service.
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References:

Paul Gleason Lead by Example Award

Wildland Fire Leadership Development Program

Interview with Paul Gleason

Updated NWCG Standards for Water Scooping Operations, PMS 518

Date: December 19, 2024
Contact: Water Scooper Operations Unit

The NWCG Standards for Water Scooping Operations, PMS 518 establishes the standards for dispatching, utilizing, and coordinating water scooping aircraft on interagency wildland fires. These standards should be used in conjunction with the NWCG Standards for Aerial Supervision (SAS), PMS 505, and any local, state, or geographic/regional water scooping plans.

References:

NWCG Standards for Water Scooping Operations, PMS 518

Updated NWCG Standards for Aerial Supervision, PMS 505

Date: December 19, 2024
Contact: Interagency Aerial Supervision Subcommittee

The Interagency Aerial Supervision Subcommittee has updated the NWCG Standards for Aerial Supervision, PMS 505. PMS 505 establishes standards for aerial supervision operations for national interagency wildland fire operations. 

References:

NWCG Standards for Aerial Supervision, PMS 505