Zero 5 Podcast
I want to discuss the absolute most underrated skillset in church safety ministries. Without this skill even the most routine situations can fall apart. It is the most common sense skill, and yet, is the first skill that goes out the window when the stress levels rise. It receives very little if any attention, yet is THE most vital skill in mitigating an emergency situation. I’m talking about emergency communications. Your support through a paid subscription or a subscription free donation helps Zero 5 Safety Training continue to get content out. Please consider supporting us. Necessity The ability to communicate clearly as a safety team member is vital. Whether it’s talking with a church guest, or relaying emergency information you need to be able to get your message across in a way that is clearly understood. As a safety ministry, having a means of communicating amongst team members is a key piece of your security posture. How that looks varies greatly based on the size of your church and the locations of your security positions. If you have a very small church simple face to face communications may suffice as you may be able to set up your security positions in a manner where there is a clear line of sight between safety team members. However, if you cannot maintain the ability to coordinate the entirety of your team via face to face then radios or radio phone apps are a must. In order to best protect you church and serve your congregation you must be able to relay situational information to the entirety of the team in a manner that is clear, concise, and complete. Long winded descriptions, filler words like “uh” and “umm”, and incomplete information can take a routine response and turn it on its head in a hurry. Your team must also understand basic radio protocol, or else key information can be easily missed. Why Emergency Radio Comms Need To Be Trained In the natural world communication follows a cycle. The sender of a message formulates the message and relays it to the receiver. The receiver acknowledges that they have received and understand the message by providing feedback, and then the sender verifies that the message was received and understood. In interpersonal communications this typically looks like this: Person A: “Hey Person B, can you please go check and make sure the back door is locked?” Person B: “Sure, I can do that.” Person A: “Thank you!” This communication loop can be done via electronic message where the emailed communication goes from Person A and is addressed to Person B and the email chain goes between those two until the loop is closed. Anyone else that needs the information can be copied. It also happens face to face with non-verbal communication queues interspersed to add effect or clarify the communication and who it is between. The same goes for talking on the phone. The key that makes these forms of communications easy is because it is readily evident who the communications are to and from, and the loop is completed. Radio communications are very different. The radio is an open line where everyone is on the same channel and there is no non-verbal queues that can add clarity. Furthermore, radios can only communicate from A to B directly. If C tries to butt in or interrupt in completely blocks out what is being communicated between A and B if done simultaneously. On top of that, if A or B get long winded and tie up the radio line, and C has vital information they need to pass they can’t because the line is tied up. Can you start to get a picture of how this can cause an emergency situation to unravel? On top of those communication hurdles caused by the intricacies radio communications add the element of stress and sprinkle in the unreliability of technology. An SF instructor that I worked with in the military used to alway say, “The two things in life that will always fail you when you need them the most are technology and government.” Talking in a clear, concise, and complete manner is extremely difficult in emergency situations. There’s typically a lot happening, your adrenaline is up which means your ability to think clearly is fogged (if untrained), and you need to somehow paint a picture of an intricate situation in as few words as possible. The Importance of Training Like many skillsets, if you do not learn and train them in non-emergency settings, and then practice them in simulated emergency settings you absolutely will not know how to apply them in a real emergency. In the fire service we like to say that the situation goes as the first 5 minutes go. This means that if the emergency can be clearly communicated and the right assets be put in the right place with the right assignments from the get-go then the scene will run smoothly. If you start with a charlie-foxtrot it’s going to end up a charlie-foxtrot. You must have training sessions with your teams geared specifically for radio communications. Teach your team members proper radio etiquette, terminology, and closed loop communication processes. Whether you bring someone in to conduct it, or you have an experienced person on your team teach it make sure that it is a skill set that you regularly address; especially as you bring on newer members of your ministry. Conclusion Practice and discipline are what it takes to get good at communicating on the radio. Incorporate radio comms in your drills, in your day to day operations, and do hot-washes of every situation you have and discuss how your radio traffic contributed to a successful handling of the situation or made it more difficult. On my team radio comms are incorporated in almost every training we do. We also reinforce proper closed loop communication every time we come on duty through our radio checks. The goal is to make talking on a radio as habitual as talking on a phone or face to face. That way, if it hits the fan your team isn’t scrambling to figure out how and what to communicate over the radio. Shake those bugs out ahead of time so your comms are clean and clear when you need them. PROTECT HIS PEOPLE. GIVE HIM THE GLORY. Zero 5 Safety Training’s mission is to get tips and information on building strong church safety and security ministries to church leaders and safety team members everywhere. Please consider a subscription-free donation to help our mission. *Zero 5 Safety Training is not a non-profit and donations are not tax deductible.* Get full access to Zero 5 Safety Training's Substack at zero5safetytraining.substack.com/subscribe [https://zero5safetytraining.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
8 episoder
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