I am searching for anecdotal tales from those of you who have attended the LCAS course at IFTC. Last year three lads from the lower cat airports I do work for were sent on an LCAS Initial program. All passed but their first hand feedback to me about the course content has been questionable, one claiming that over the entire week he never had the opportunity to take command of a crew at an incident scenario. Raising the question of how he was assessed as having shown acquisition of new skills.
Another made an allegation without supporting evidence, that during the written exam on the final day of the course, one of the instructors was wandering around the room quietly giving candidates answers to questions they were struggling with. I re-affirm this is what I have been told by the individual concerned and have no secondary opinion or evidence to support it.
The relevance of the course for lower category operators has been questionable for many years and steadily improving in my opinion, the items of question being the scale of some of the practical scenarios, the training rigs used in comparison to Cat 1/2 aircraft dimensions, and of course the equipment and appliances being deployed, hardly in keeping with the nationwide fleet of Land Rover chassis/TACR type vehicles stationed at lower cat aerodrome's. This has been improved by the introduction of the smaller GA type aircraft rig and provision of a Perren unit of limited media capacity.
On a previous year a colleague of mine who attended the same program was staggered that the first couple of hours on the fireground were spent showing three people how to deploy/make-up layflat hose and how to operate a branch? It seems that they had absolutely no previous fire service experience at all, extremely questionable you may say, but if you look at IFTC's website today it still states that pre-attendance requirements for the LCAS initial course include the statement; "Previous fire experience, whilst desirable, is not a prerequisite for this programme". Generally low cat airports don't have big budgets, especially for fire crew training, so shelling out to send an individual on this course is a major outlay of funds, to then find that some of it was wasted while raw recruits permitted on the same course learn to do basic functions as mentioned above is concerning. And then to consider that five days later those same people could be back on their home aerodrome in charge of a minimum 3 or even 2 person crew engaging in a life critical incident armed with the basics required of the unit according to the specifications in CAP 168, i.e. not much media and not much equipment, save for the specified screw-drivers and such like (where the hell ICAO identified a set of screwdrivers as applicable crash/fire equipment for low cat I'll never understand).
So come on give us your experiences and opinions of the LCAS or even its predecessor the Low Cat JO, and for the record I'm not looking to knock any individual or organisation, but I am keen on getting involved with making suggestions to the authority to improve the situation and need as much information, good or bad, as possible.