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particular discipline — if there is a location big enough to house everyone at one time or in smaller <br />groups in different locations at different times. Either way the training on that topic would be equal <br />throughout the group. <br />One of the possible obstacles of the training group could be finding a common day and time to conduct <br />drills. Right now each department has their own system that is working for their daytime firefighters and <br />their nighttime firefighters. This was a "known" when they joined the department. For example: Oak <br />Grove holds drills, meetings and work details on Wednesday evening for "nights" and Monday morning <br />for"days". Having to move your day and time could cause problems for some firefighters like — work <br />issues, day care, other obligations with church, sports, and other volunteer activities etc., etc., etc. <br />5. Standardized SOG's <br />SOG's refer to Standard Operating Guidelines, which is a set of guidelines used by each fire department <br />to determine how a task or situation should be handled. Every department has differing guidelines <br />which makes operations with other departments somewhat challenging. <br />For example: Department A has red helmets for probationary firefighters and yellow helmets for <br />seasoned firefighters. Department B however, considers yellow helmets a probationary firefighter and a <br />red helmet signifies an officer. <br />Standardizing Operational guidelines across municipal boarders is a valuable tool to improve <br />interoperability and overall operational safety. <br />The Anoka County Fire Protection Council has recently formed a standards committee who are tasked <br />with creating standardized operational guidelines on a county wide basis. The goal is to get all <br />departments in Anoka County on the same page regarding SOG's so that errors and compromised safety <br />can be avoided. <br />A shared service agreement will help further standardize operational guidelines between local stations <br />and personal where specialized SOG's are needed given a unique community risk that will keep <br />firefighters and the community safe. <br />6. Standardization of Equipment <br />Currently there is differing equipment from city to city of equipment in use. If the Joint Fire Service <br />structure were to happen, standardizing some of the equipment may take time and be costly. One <br />primary example is in the use of Self Contained Breathing Apparatus or SCBA. These are the air units <br />that fire personal wear when entering a hazardous environment. Currently Oak Grove and Bethel use <br />the Scott brand SCBA. Ramsey uses a MSA brand and St Francis uses a Dragger brand SCBA. If the cities <br />were to form a Joint Fire Service Area, one brand would need to be identified and utilized. Along these <br />lines, even simple items would need to conform. Everything from hand line nozzles, fire hose sizes, <br />helmets and colors, the fire gear we wear and even our department uniforms would need to be <br />11 <br />