Let me start by saying this question is based off the recent LE shootings, such as the 101. I am not trying to Monday morning QB the police's actions. I support cops, since I work so much along side them. I am sorry that some of you stood in the wrong line at the personnel dept.
So my fire agency has 2 sayings:
Drill as if your life depends on it, cause it does!
Practice like you play.
Our responses to actual structure fires are going down every year, as much many police officers can go a whole career without have to fire their weapon in defense. Yet we are constantly training on fire ground scenarios. usually 4-12 hours a month. Wearing all our gear running at full speed and throwing ladders, roof ventilations, hose evolutions and rescue situations. Most recently a lot of training on self rescue and firefighter survival. Always the scenario is done like real life in the dark. We often train to exhaustion and put firemen in situations to get the adrenaline going and kick in that "fight or flight" response. Our goal is to be prepared and eliminate the tunnel vision. then when the SHTF, you fall back to the basics and survive.
Maybe I am wrong in my comparison. I liken an officer doing quals at the range in a calm sterile environment as if we qualified a fireman by drawing a house and having him verbally describe how to put the fire out.
So my questions are:
1- How often does a officer use his weapon against a human, while standing still and shooting at a still target?
2- Are agencies modifying their firearms training to incorporate exhaustion, adrenaline and darkness.
3- Are agencies changing qualifications to include movement, run 100 yards then fire your weapon? Situations commonly faced in real scenarios.
Yes, I am aware the standards are to accommodate the lowest common denominator. So every agency has be able to allow some special people to pass.
I am not trying to start a bash thread, hence why I posted it here and not OT. I am just curious about firearms training that officers receive and if it is evolving?
So my fire agency has 2 sayings:
Drill as if your life depends on it, cause it does!
Practice like you play.
Our responses to actual structure fires are going down every year, as much many police officers can go a whole career without have to fire their weapon in defense. Yet we are constantly training on fire ground scenarios. usually 4-12 hours a month. Wearing all our gear running at full speed and throwing ladders, roof ventilations, hose evolutions and rescue situations. Most recently a lot of training on self rescue and firefighter survival. Always the scenario is done like real life in the dark. We often train to exhaustion and put firemen in situations to get the adrenaline going and kick in that "fight or flight" response. Our goal is to be prepared and eliminate the tunnel vision. then when the SHTF, you fall back to the basics and survive.
Maybe I am wrong in my comparison. I liken an officer doing quals at the range in a calm sterile environment as if we qualified a fireman by drawing a house and having him verbally describe how to put the fire out.
So my questions are:
1- How often does a officer use his weapon against a human, while standing still and shooting at a still target?
2- Are agencies modifying their firearms training to incorporate exhaustion, adrenaline and darkness.
3- Are agencies changing qualifications to include movement, run 100 yards then fire your weapon? Situations commonly faced in real scenarios.
Yes, I am aware the standards are to accommodate the lowest common denominator. So every agency has be able to allow some special people to pass.

I am not trying to start a bash thread, hence why I posted it here and not OT. I am just curious about firearms training that officers receive and if it is evolving?

-- Rifle, Pistol, Shotgun
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