Heat
Water/Fire/Sun
Travel/Activity
ORM Examples
What's going on?
100

What is the most severe heat illness?

Heat Stroke

100

Should you leave a fire unattended?

No

100

What is happening if a driver only got 3 hours of sleep and is drifting within their lane?

Fatigue

100

What should you do if you notice a cadet working outside in full sun without water.

Provide water / rest / mitigate heat risk

100

A cadet is sweating a lot, looks tired, and says they have a headache after standing in the sun.

Early heat exhaustion / heat stress

200
How do you treat heat stroke?

Call 911 and move victim to a cooler place

200

Should somebody not focused/drunk/high operate a boat?

Never

200

What is it called when a driver checks tire pressure, fuel level, and weather before a long trip to a CAP event.

Proper pre-trip inspection

200

What is wrong with it when a team doesn't check weather before an activity?

Missing hazard identification, should have checked before hand to make sure it is safe

200

A cadet keeps yawning, staring off, and reacts slowly during a long van ride.

Driver/passenger fatigue setting in

300

What is heat exhaustion caused from?

Fluid and salt loss

300

Summer brings ____ fires

More

300

What should you do if during travel, a thunderstorm begins with heavy rain and low visibility.

Slow down / pull over / delay travel if unsafe

300

What is going and what should you do if a cadet says “I’m fine” but is sweating heavily, slow to respond, and dizzy.

Stop activity / heat illness response

300

A cadet forgets their water bottle and says, “I’ll just grab some later,” then proceeds to work outside for 2 hours.

Dehydration risk developing / poor preparation

400

What temperature does the body need to be at or above to get heat stroke?

104 degrees fahrenheit

400
Is being a good swimmer effective enough in emergency situations

Not at all, you must always be prepared with flotation devices

400

What should you do if a driver has been awake for 18+ hours but insists they are “used to it.”

Do not allow driving / fatigue risk too high

400

You identify heat, fatigue, and driving as risks for a mission but decide to continue without changes.

Poor ORM / unacceptable risk not mitigated / should stop and try to avoid risks

400

A cadet in a hot environment stops sweating, becomes confused, and is slow to respond—but still insists on continuing activity.

Heat stroke progression with impaired judgment (medical emergency developing)

500

What are 3 symptoms of heat stroke

3 of the following: High heart rate, hot skin, dry skin, rapid breathing, shallow breathing, vomiting

500

What are 3 things that excessive sun exposure can cause?

3 of the following: Skin cancer, sunburn, eye damage, Immune system damage

500

What should you do if a team is scheduled for an activity, but severe storms with lightning are forecast for the entire time block.

Delay/cancel/modify activity due to weather risk

500

You adjust schedule, add water breaks, rotate duties, and assign a safety monitor.

Proper risk mitigation / ORM correctly applied / safe response and approach to activity

500

During a SAREX, multiple cadets begin making small mistakes (missed steps, confusion in comms, slower reactions) but none report feeling “bad enough” to stop.

Group-level fatigue/heat stress affecting performance (systemic risk escalation)