the whole issue of fatigue management is one that is bigger than just drivers. Its about how we plan to use Strike Teams on the fireground, and how we plan to use and change over people AND still allow them to do the things that they need to do in their other lives (you know the ones that get in the way of us responding).
Work the guys on your appliance from 1800 till 0600 next day on a Strike team to Blahsville and how many of them are really fit to go to work next day? How many do? Similarly....work all night (or even just be at work all night if u are lucky to have a 14hr paid sleep somewhere cosy) and then get a job first thing in the morning. Are you fit to respond. Of course the text book answer is that we would all put our hands on our heart and say "oh but its his responsibility to manage his fatigue....and he shouldnt respond", but we all know theres a hundred reasons why he/she will - and they are all real and valid, not textbook ones.
For my part....we make our Fireground shifts too long. Instead of 10-12 hrs which has become the expected norm....we should be aiming at 6-8 tops - get in....work hard, go home. No need to feed them with extensive logistic requirements....no gathering of the clan at staging points so that it looks like a family gathering of the McDonalds, and spending your time chatting to all those long lost people u met 35 Strike teams ago. Sometimes Staging looks like a B&S venue.....which but for a minor abbreviated diminutive of the word and, is closer to the truth than we may care to acknowledge.
Theres a downside of course....means we need an extra shift of people.....but, thats what planning is for. I would have thought that we could just about pre-plan a response to most Group areas for 2,3,4,or 10 Strike Teams in 3 shifts....so that when the big one happens....u know ur Brigade is likely to have to find people for XXX shifts. Guys (or even girls, who probably do it better anyway) can plan, let bosses or partners know whats happeneing and make arrangements. More importantly....being out for 6-8 hrs is much less likely to impact heavily on the work-response balance. Perfect in every situation?....absolutley not....better in some?, yep, so its an improvement
So fatigue management is much more an issue than just your driver getting you home safely (which i must remember the next time everyone else in the truck is snoring on our way home from an overnight adventure). As an aside, SAAS is going through the same issues, with a lot of discussion and problem solving to address the issue for those Vol crews that get responded a lot throughout the night, and usually head down to town as a result. If they dont get it right....people wont go on the roster because it affects there abiolity to work the next day.......CFS will have the same issue if we dont sort it properly.