A new online course to equip locals with the skills and knowledge to better protect themselves, their land and their assets from bushfires, is now available through TAFE NSW.
The TAFE NSW Course in Basic Wildfire Awareness is the minimum qualification for personnel who support firefighters on the frontline, including police, ambulance officers, wildlife carers, media liaison personnel, first aid officers, utility company employees and campground hosts.
The one-week online course comes on the back of the catastrophic Black Summer bushfires, which killed 33 people, destroyed more than 3,000 homes, tore through more than 17 million hectares of land, and cost the Australian economy more than $100B.
TAFE NSW National Centre for Emergency Management Studies Team Leader, Christine Schlegel, said the accredited course would play an important role in ensuring that support workers on the frontline were armed with the skills and knowledge to help protect firefighters and communities.
“Australia has been through the most devastating bushfire season in our history and there has never been a more critical time to ensure that those that support firefighters have the best knowledge and skills available,” Schlegel said.
“This qualification will equip users with the practical knowledge they need to identify key risks and take the necessary precautions to keep themselves and others safe.”
Regardless of where they are located, course users will complete five hours of online course work and attend a one-hour Microsoft Teams meeting between teachers and participants to encourage networking and collaboration.
Units offered include safe work practices; locating and travelling to a wildfire; wildfire behavior; wildfire suppression and equipment; and communications and briefings.
The course, developed in conjunction with the Australian Fire and Emergency Services Authorities Council, will be delivered by emergency services veteran, Darryl Bailey, a training advisor with NSW SES and firefighter for more than a decade with Fire and Rescue NSW.
Source:
Press release, Oct 2
Sarah Lievore, TAFE NSW