Skip to main content

Fire Effects Monitor

Position Description

Introduction

This position works within the Incident Management team on an incident level or at a local level for the Incident agency.

Duties

  • Reviews agency procedures, policies and regulations for wildland and/or prescribed fire through conversations with the supervisor and/or reading of appropriate manuals and handbooks;
  • Monitors, obtains, and records fire behavior data throughout the fire management operation. Recons burn unit area and plots the burn unit area on maps.
  • Monitors, obtains, and records weather data.
  • Monitors and documents burn patterns, fuel loadings and consumption, burn severity, plant mortality, scorch height, depth of burn, hydrophobicity, air quality, water quality, historic property related to fire treatment objectives.
  • Anticipates, characterizes, and reports the range of variability of effect due to changes in fire behavior.
  • Reports atmospheric characteristics that influence fire whirls, winds associated with thunderstorm cells and their effect on fire and wind speed changes and direction.
  • Monitors and records smoke management information. Maintains communication with the National Weather Service, weather observers and lookouts. Identifies smoke characteristics and recognizes and reports emission problems.
  • Collects and records environmental data. Collects appropriate fuel, soil, and vegetation samples for moisture analysis. Observes and records land and vegetation data that influences fire behavior.
  • Advises supervisor on monitoring progress and results, equipment problems, and safety of assigned personnel Advises on appropriate mitigating actions such as posting of lookouts, and identification of safety zones and escape routes.
  • Records fire movement; e.g., by taking photographs, recording growth on maps, calculating percentage of burn spread.
  • Compiles observed fire behavior and effects, information and data. Compares observed fire behavior and effects with that planned and anticipated. Completes a narrative report at the end of the wildland fire incident or prescribed burn that depicts how well the objectives were met.

Position Knowledge and/or Requirements

  • General knowledge of fire behavior, weather, and mapping.
  • Knowledge of the Incident Command System in order to provide advice and counsel for successful fire monitoring.
  • Skill in oral and written communication in order to provide direction and interpretation of policy, procedures and guidelines to supervisors and crew members.
  • Appropriate training for successful performance in this position may be met in part by the Wildland and Prescribed Fire Qualification Guide 310-1.

Supervisory Controls

This position reports to either the Long Term Fire Analyst (LTAN), the Fire Use manager (FUM1), or the Prescribed Fire Burn Boss. The supervisor defines objectives, priorities, and deadlines, and assists with unusual situations that do not have clear precedents or do not conform to established policies, practices, or procedures.

The incumbent plans and carries out the successive steps and handles problems and deviations in accord with instructions, policies, previous training, and accepted practices.

Completed work is usually evaluated for technical soundness and conformity to policy and requirements. Methods used by the incumbent are not usually reviewed in detail.

Guidelines                                    

Specific and detailed guidelines can be found in the Fire Line Handbook and the Incident Pocket Response Guide. For prescribed burns, written burn plans are also available. Although specific and detailed, there are generally some gaps in specificity.

The incumbent must use seasoned judgment developed through training and experience to properly and effectively advise superiors.

Complexity

The position plays a critical role not only in monitoring, recording and identifying components of a plan, but it also interprets instructions and plans independently in order to provide advisory and consultative services to fire management. The various choices available require the incumbent to recognize the choices and decide appropriately. The incumbent must recognize problems and use seasoned judgment to determine and advise on the appropriate approach.

Scope and Effect

The work involves gathering data to measure fire behavior and to evaluate the effectiveness of the implemented prescribed burn plan. It involves treating a wide variety of conventional problems and situations in conformance with established criteria.
Recommendations and advice provided by the incumbent affect local incident operations processes.

Personal Contacts

The incumbent’s contacts are primarily with local fire personnel, working closely with the Fire Use Manager, Prescribed Fire Burn Boss, the Fire Management Officer, and/or the Agency administrator.

Purpose Of Contacts

The purpose of contacts is to advise local management on the fire status and the behavior of wildland fires or prescribed fire. Contacts require the incumbent to analyze fire behavior and to recommend changes that improve efficiencies.

Physical Demands

The work generally requires moderate physical exertion. Field work requires exposure to various extreme weather conditions. Twelve to fourteen hour shifts for up to fourteen consecutive days may be required during fire season.

Work Environment

The work is performed primarily in the field, mainly on un-level ground. Conditions are generally hot, Travel is required.

NWCG Latest Announcements

WFSTAR 2025 Core Component Module Package and 2024 Fire Year in Review Now Available

Date: March 14, 2025
Questions?  Please contact:
Joe Schindel at mschindel@blm.gov
 

The 2025 Core Component Module Package for RT-130, Wildland Fire Safety Training Annual Refresher (WFSTAR) and the 2024 Fire Year in Review are now available on the NWCG website. The 2025 Core Component Module Package provides all content needed to deliver RT-130.

References:

2025 Core Component Module Package

2024 Fire Year in Review Module

NEW! NWCG Wildland Urban Interface Mitigation Field Guide, PMS 053

Date: March 12, 2025
Contact: Wildland Urban Interface Mitigation Committee

The NWCG Wildland Urban Interface Mitigation Field Guide, PMS 053 provides mitigation practitioners at all experience levels with recommendations on the most effective and efficient ways to accomplish mitigation work in communities at risk to wildfire damage or destruction. The content in this guide was written in coordination with the NWCG Standards for Mitigation in the Wildland Urban Interface, PMS 052.

References:

NWCG Wildland Urban Interface Mitigation Field Guide, PMS 053 

Updated, NWCG Standards for Wildland Fire Module Operations, PMS 430

Date: March 11, 2025
Contact: Fire Use Subcommittee
Wildland Fire Module Unit

The NWCG Standards for Wildland Fire Module Operations, PMS 430 standardizes procedures and expectations for Wildland Fire Modules (WFMs). These standards are to be used by staff, supervisors, specialists, and technicians for planning, administering, and conducting WFM operations. These standards will also be used as a measure of WFM qualifications, capabilities, and expected performance, for both Type 1 and Type 2 WFMs.

References:

NWCG Standards for Wildland Fire Module Operations, PMS 430

NEW! NWCG Standards for Airtanker Operations, PMS 514

Date: March 7, 2025
Contact: National Interagency Aviation Committee

The NWCG Standards for Airtanker Operations, PMS 514 establishes the standards for dispatching, utilizing, and coordinating airtankers on interagency wildland fires. These standards should be used in conjunction with the NWCG Standards for Aerial Supervision (SAS), PMS 505, NWCG Standards for Airtanker Base Operations (SABO), PMS 508, and any applicable agency plans.

References:

NWCG Standards for Airtanker Operations, PMS 514