How to Build a Peer Support Team in a Small Department
Learn how to build a peer support team in a small department, with practical tips for rural first responders, fire, EMS, and police. Discover right-sized peer support looks like.
Learn how to build a peer support team in a small department, with practical tips for rural first responders, fire, EMS, and police. Discover right-sized peer support looks like.
What do you say when you hear, “We’re too small for peer support”?
Many small departments struggle with the same question: “How can we start peer support when we’re already short on people and time?”
In this episode, we dive into how to build a peer support team in a small department, making it realistic and practical for rural first responders, fire, EMS, and police.
BY THE TIME YOU FINISH LISTENING, YOU’LL LEARN:
- What “right-sized” peer support looks like in a 20–50 person department
- How to pick the first 2–3 people for your team
- Simple policies you actually need for a small department
- How to partner with nearby agencies, chaplains, or EAP to extend your reach
- What to do in the first 90 days to ensure team effectiveness and longevity
Use this episode with your peer support team, leadership, or at your next shift meeting to start or improve peer support in your small department. Share it with other small agencies struggling with the same question.
Share this episode
https://www.survivingyourshift.com/53
Connect with Bart
Email: bart@survivingyourshift.com
LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/bartleger
Facebook Page: facebook.com/survivingyourshift
Website: www.survivingyourshift.com
Want to find out how I can help you build a peer support program in your organization or provide training? Schedule a no-obligation call or Zoom meeting with me here.
Let's learn to thrive, not just survive!
Speak:
Let me guess what you've heard in your department. "We're
Speak:
too small for a peer support team. We don't have the people.
Speak:
We don't have the time. We barely have enough staff to
Speak:
cover shifts, and you want to pull people off the truck or the
Speak:
unit for this?" If you're in a 20-50 person agency or a rural
Speak:
department where everybody wears three hats already, peer support
Speak:
can feel like a luxury item. Sometimes, the big city
Speak:
departments or big hospitals do. But here's the thing. The stress,
Speak:
the calls, the trauma, the staffing problems, they hit
Speak:
small departments just as hard, sometimes harder. Stay tuned to
Speak:
find out how to build a peer support team in a small
Speak:
department.
Interview:
Welcome to Surviving Your Shift, your go-to resource
Interview:
for building strong, peer support teams in high-stress
Interview:
professions. I'm your host, Bart Leger, board-certified in
Interview:
traumatic stress with over 25 years of experience supporting
Interview:
and training professionals in frontline and emergency roles.
Interview:
Whether you're looking to start a peer support team, learn new
Interview:
skills, or bring training to your organization, this show
Interview:
will equip you with practical tools to save lives and careers.
Speak:
In this episode of Surviving Your Shift, we're
Speak:
going to talk about how to build a peer support team in a small
Speak:
department in a way that's realistic, not a fantasy program
Speak:
with 20 people and a giant budget. I'm going to walk you
Speak:
through what right-sized peer support looks like when you've
Speak:
got maybe 20 to 50 people, and how to pick your two to three
Speak:
team members, what kind of simple policies you really need,
Speak:
how to partner with nearby agencies, chaplains, or EAP. and
Speak:
what to focus on in the first 90 days so the team actually
Speak:
survives and works. ever thought, I want peer support, but I have
Speak:
no idea how to start peer support in a small agency, this
Speak:
one's for you. I've worked with many small departments.
Speak:
I've worked with many small companies. I've worked with many
Speak:
small companies. I've worked with many small companies. I've
Speak:
worked with many small companies. I've worked with many small
Speak:
companies. I've worked with many small companies. I've worked
Speak:
with many small companies! I've worked with many small companies.
Speak:
companies. I've worked with many small companies. I've worked
Speak:
with many small companies. I've worked with many small companies.
Speak:
I've worked with many small companies. I've worked with many
Speak:
small companies. My business user may have worked with many
Speak:
small companies. I've worked with many small companies. I've
Speak:
worked with many small companies. I've worked with many small
Speak:
companies. I've worked with many small companies. You can't
Speak:
afford this. And here's what I told him. You can't afford not
Speak:
to. You don't need a big-city peer support team. You need a
Speak:
right-sized one for your department. If that's where you
Speak:
are, I get it. You're not sitting on extra people. And
Speak:
you're not swimming in money or time. But the good news is, you
Speak:
don't have to be. A peer support team in a small department is
Speak:
possible. And it can be really effective if you build it with
Speak:
the right expectations and the right structure.
Speak:
You can't do it. You can't solve all the problems. So
Speak:
let's break this down. First, what does right-sized peer
Speak:
support look like in a small department? Second, how to pick
Speak:
your first two to three people? Third, simple policies you
Speak:
actually need? And fourth, how to partner with nearby agencies,
Speak:
chaplains, or EAP to extend your reach? Fifth, what to do in the
Speak:
first 90 days to set yourself up for real effectiveness and
Speak:
longevity. When people hear peer support team, they often picture
Speak:
a big-city fire or police department with two dozen
Speak:
trained members, their own office, special shirts, and a
Speak:
whole system. Third, if you try to copy that with 25 people on
Speak:
your roster, you're going to get frustrated really fast. For a
Speak:
peer support team in a small department, you're aiming for
three things:
Simple, flexible, and sustainable. simple doesn't
three things:
mean you drown yourself in complicated procedures or long
three things:
chains of command. You need clear basics: who does what, how
three things:
people get help, and what you can and can't promise regarding
three things:
confidentiality. Flexible means your team members can wear
three things:
multiple hats. Your peer supporters might be officers,
three things:
medics, engineers, nurses, dispatchers, or supervisors. You
three things:
don't have the luxury of putting them in a special box. They do
three things:
peer support alongside their regular duties. Sustainable
three things:
means you build something you can actually maintain for years,
three things:
not just for three months, while you're excited. That means
three things:
accepting that your peer support team in a small department might
three things:
be two or three solid people, not eight or ten or more. It
three things:
also means you don't try to be a 24/7 hotline with only three
three things:
names on the roster.
Speak:
In a 20 to 50 person agency, or a little bit smaller,
Speak:
a little bit larger, it's really not the number that matters.
Speak:
Right-sized peer support might look like this: two or three
Speak:
trained peers, at least one of each gender if you can swing it,
Speak:
backed by a chaplain or a counselor, with simple ways to
Speak:
call them when needed. That alone can change the culture.
Speak:
This is one of the most important steps. Your first peer
Speak:
supporters are going to set the tone and reputation of the
Speak:
program. That's how you pick the first two to three people. In a
Speak:
small agency, everybody knows everybody's business. You can't
Speak:
get around it. So you don't just pick whoever raises their hand
Speak:
first. You look for people who already carry informal trust.
Speak:
Ask yourself a few questions. Who do people already go to when
Speak:
stuff hits the fan? Who can keep their mouth shut? And who has
Speak:
enough emotional maturity not to make everything about themselves?
Speak:
Who can sit with someone who's upset without panicking or
Speak:
trying to fix everything in five minutes? You're not looking for
Speak:
perfect people. You're looking for credible people. You also
Speak:
need at least one person who's not the center of every rumor
Speak:
storm. If someone is known as the Gossip Warehouse, they're
Speak:
not a good fit for peer support in a small department, or
Speak:
actually even in a large department. Even if they're a
Speak:
really good firefighter, deputy, or nurse, trust is everything.
Speak:
If possible, aim for diversity. That might be gender, role, or
Speak:
shift. For example, in a 30-person fire department, your
Speak:
first three could be: one senior firefighter or engineer that
Speak:
everyone respects, one newer member who relates well to the
Speak:
younger folk, and one officer who has a reputation for being
Speak:
fair and approachable. If you've got women on your roster, having
Speak:
at least one female peer supporter is huge for your
Speak:
credibility and also accessibility. In law
Speak:
enforcement, the same idea. Maybe one patrol deputy, one
Speak:
jailer, or corrections officer, and one supervisor, who everyone
Speak:
knows is reliable under pressure. In a small hospital or EMS
Speak:
service, maybe one ER nurse, one medic, and one charge nurse or
Speak:
supervisor. Once you've got those two or three people
Speak:
identified, talk with them one-on-one. Don't just assign
Speak:
them. Ask them, "Here's what we're trying to build and here's
Speak:
what it would mean. Is this something you're willing to be a
Speak:
part of?" You want them at least somewhat bought in and not just
Speak:
voluntold.
Speak:
And even in a small department peer support team
Speak:
setting, some training is non-negotiable. You can't just
Speak:
slap a title on somebody and turn them loose. Look for core
Speak:
training in peer support or crisis intervention. that might
Speak:
be CISM style training, basic peer support course, or even
Speak:
reputable online training if in-person is tough to get. You
Speak:
want them to understand listening skills,
Speak:
confidentiality limits, basic crisis reactions, and when to
Speak:
refer and how to do it. If you can't afford to send everybody
Speak:
off-site at first, don't be afraid to start small. Even if
Speak:
you can just send one person, it's a start. Remember, training
Speak:
is not a one and done. But at the beginning, get at least a
Speak:
solid starting point under their belt before you start
Speak:
advertising the peer support program to the whole agency.
Speak:
Next, come policies. I know policies sound boring, but
Speak:
this is where you protect your people and your program. For a
Speak:
small agency, your policies should be short and clear. Let
Speak:
me give you four core questions your policies need to answer.
Speak:
First, what is peer support here? What does it look like? Spell it
Speak:
out in plain language. Peer support in this department is
Speak:
confidential one-on-one or small group support provided by
Speak:
trained coworkers to help with work-related and personal stress.
Speak:
Second, how does someone reach the peer support team? Is there
Speak:
a dedicated phone, a shared email, a list of peer supporters
Speak:
posted on the wall, or do they go through the supervisor? In a
Speak:
small department with a peer support team, I like having a
Speak:
simple contact list with phone numbers so people can reach out
Speak:
directly if they want to. Third, what are the limits of
Speak:
confidentiality? You really need to be honest about this. Peer
Speak:
support is confidential within ethical and legal limits. If
Speak:
someone talks about plans to harm themselves, harm someone
Speak:
else, abuse, or something that triggers your duty to report,
Speak:
you can't promise total secrecy. Write that down clearly so your
Speak:
team members know where the line is.
Speak:
what's the activation process after a critical incident? In a
Speak:
big agency, there might be a formal activation through
Speak:
command staff.
Speak:
The on-duty supervisor notifies the peer support coordinator who
Speak:
decides whether a response is needed. Maybe one-on-one
Speak:
contacts followed by a defusing or a debriefing. Keep the policy
Speak:
short, two or three pages at most, even if that long. Use
Speak:
plain language and make sure your leadership signs off so
Speak:
your peer supporters have backing when they step into
Speak:
these conversations.
Speak:
What about partnering with nearby agencies? Here's one
Speak:
of the big secrets to making rural first responder wellness
Speak:
work. You don't do it alone. Now, we're going to try to get to the
Speak:
next day of the day of the day of foster care. We'll do it
Speak:
alone. When you start peer support in a small agency, you
Speak:
can multiply your impact by partnering with others. That
Speak:
might be the next town's fire department, the sheriff's office
Speak:
down the road, a regional EMS provider, a hospital, or your
Speak:
local faith community. Mutual aid isn't just for fires and
Speak:
mass casualty incidents. You can do mutual aid for peer support.
Speak:
You might have three trained people. The next department over
Speak:
might have three or four. That gives you a pool of six or seven
Speak:
to lean on when something big happens. Why does this matter?
Speak:
Because sometimes your people don't want to talk to someone in
Speak:
their own building. In a small town, talking to a peer in your
Speak:
own agency can feel risky because everyone's connected.
Speak:
Offering access to a peer from a neighboring agency gives some
Speak:
distance and still keeps it peer. Chaplains can also be a strong
Speak:
partner. A good chaplain who understands responder culture,
Speak:
respects boundaries, and doesn't push religion can be a huge
Speak:
asset. They can support your team, be available when the team
Speak:
gets overloaded, and help with referrals. And then there's EAP,
Speak:
the Employee Assistance Program. know a lot of you in small
Speak:
departments roll your eyes at EAP because you've had some bad
Speak:
experiences. But if you have one, it's worth building a
Speak:
relationship with them, learning which counselors get first
Speak:
responders, and working to make that system actually useful.
Speak:
that's where you can find your peer support team to work. Your
Speak:
peer support team then becomes a bridge. Let's talk here, and if
Speak:
you need more, here's a counselor we've vetted.
Speak:
That's your extended team.
Speak:
So let's say you've identified your first 2-3 people,
Speak:
got them some basic training, and put together some policies.
Speak:
Now what? The first 90 days are about three things:
Speak:
Communication, practice, and small wins. On communication,
Speak:
you need to tell your people what peer support is, who's on
Speak:
it, and how to use it. That might be a short presentation at
Speak:
Roll Call, a flyer on the bulletin board, and an email
Speak:
from leadership backing the program. Just keep it simple and
Speak:
honest. Don't oversell. You might say something like, "We've
Speak:
started a small peer support team. These folks have had basic
Speak:
training and listening and crisis support. They're
Speak:
available if you want to talk after a tough call or about
Speak:
ongoing stress. This is voluntary. This is not therapy.
Speak:
And here's how you reach them." Also, mention the
Speak:
confidentiality limits so you don't surprise anyone later.
Speak:
When it comes to practice, your new peer supporters need reps,
Speak:
just like in the gym. Not in the middle of a massive critical
Speak:
incident at first. Start with lower-stakes situations. That
Speak:
might be checking in with someone after a rough domestic
Speak:
call, touching base with a medic after a code, or just having
Speak:
some internal one-on-one conversations in the day. You
Speak:
want your peer supporters to get comfortable asking open-ended
Speak:
questions, listening, and avoiding becoming fixers. You
Speak:
can even do some simple role-plays in training or during
Speak:
downtime. If it feels cheesy at first, I know, but it will build
Speak:
some confidence as they practice. On small wins, look for one or
Speak:
two situations in the first few months where the team can show
Speak:
its value. Maybe it's an informal check-in after a bad
Speak:
wreck everyone ran. Maybe it's one person who reached out
Speak:
during a divorce or a burnout period. Maybe it's one person
Speak:
who reached out during a while.
Speak:
Maybe it's one person who reached out during a while.
Speak:
Maybe it's one person who reached out during a while.
Speak:
Maybe it's one person who reached out during a while.
Speak:
Maybe it's one person who reached out during a while.
Speak:
Maybe it's one person who reached out during a while.
Speak:
Maybe it's one person who reached out during a while.
Speak:
Maybe it's one person who reached out during a while. Or
Speak:
it was one person who reached out during a while.
Speak:
Maybe it was one person who reached out during a while.
Speak:
It was one person who reached out during a while. It was one
Speak:
person who reached out during a while. And there was one person
Speak:
who reached out during a while. And one person who reached out
Speak:
during a while. And one person who reached out during a while.
Speak:
And one person who reached out in a while.
Speak:
And was one person who reached out during a while. And was one
Speak:
person who reached out in a while. And was one person who
Speak:
reached out during a while. And was one person who reached out
Speak:
during a while. And was one person who reached out during a
Speak:
while. And was one person who reached out into a while. And
Speak:
was one person who reached out during a while. And was one
Speak:
person who reached out during a while. Or right after shift
Speak:
change. You're not always carving out a special three-hour
Speak:
block. You're weaving it into your existing flow. Also, peer
Speak:
support doesn't always mean big formal debriefings. In many
Speak:
small agencies. The most effective peer support work
Speak:
happens in a corner of the bay. Two chairs in an office. Or
Speak:
walking around the parking lot. And be clear with leadership.
Speak:
We're not asking to shut down operations for a day. We're
Speak:
asking for the ability to have these conversations when they're
Speak:
needed. And for occasional training to keep skills sharp.
Speak:
When they say, we don't have people or time. You can say,
Speak:
we're going to design this so it respects those limits. But we're
Speak:
not going to ignore mental health and hope it goes away.
Speak:
And what do we do about keeping the team healthy and out
Speak:
of trouble? In a small department, if your peer
Speak:
supporters make a big mistake, everyone knows it. So you want
Speak:
to help them avoid common pitfalls. Don't let peer
Speak:
supporters turn into fix everything people. They're not
Speak:
therapists. They don't need to solve marriages, cure addictions
Speak:
or handle every crisis alone. They listen, support, and they
Speak:
help connect people to more help when it's needed. Number two.
Speak:
Hold them accountable for confidentiality. If a peer
Speak:
supporters start sharing details from conversations as gossip or
Speak:
as entertainment, that's a problem. You may need to coach
Speak:
them or even remove them from the team if they can't tighten
Speak:
it up. Your peer support team in a small department lives or dies
Speak:
on trust. And number four. Step one. Watch for burnout in your
Speak:
peer supporters. Because the program is small, the same
Speak:
people can get called again and again. Make sure they have
Speak:
someone to talk to. Maybe it's a chaplain or an outside
Speak:
consultant. So they don't carry all of this alone. And then
Speak:
number four. Keep giving them some version of continuing
Speak:
education.
Speak:
Or listening to episodes like this together and discussing how
Speak:
to apply them.
Speak:
What about measuring success? All agencies usually
Speak:
don't have a wellness analyst tracking everything in Excel.
Speak:
That's okay. You can still have a sense of whether your first
Speak:
responder wellness efforts are working. Look for signs like,
Speak:
Are people actually reaching out to the peer support team? Are
Speak:
your peer supporters staying engaged and not overwhelmed? Do
Speak:
you hear fewer comments like suck it up and move on? And more
Speak:
like, If you need to talk, we've got folks for that. You can also
Speak:
do a simple anonymous survey once or twice a year. A couple
Speak:
of quick questions like, Do you know who's on the peer support
Speak:
team? Would you feel comfortable reaching out if you needed to?
Speak:
That alone can guide you. Your goal is not perfection. Your
Speak:
goal is moving the needle. If, over time, you see more use,
Speak:
more trust, and fewer people slipping through the cracks,
Speak:
that's success. Here's what I want you to do with this. If
Speak:
you're in a small or rural agency, and if you've been on
Speak:
the fence about peer support, start by identifying your first
Speak:
2 to 3 people. Not 10, not a big dream list, just 2 or 3 names of
Speak:
people who already carry trust. then write those names down.
Speak:
Schedule a conversation with them and with your Chief,
Speak:
Sheriff, Director, or leadership, and ask, Can we build a small
Speak:
peer support team around these folks? Use some of what you've
Speak:
heard here to talk about simple policies, basic training, and
Speak:
partnerships. If you're already in leadership, bring this
Speak:
episode to your next officers meeting or administrative
Speak:
meeting. Ask, What would a realistic fire, EMS, or police
Speak:
support setup look like for us? Or, whatever discipline you find
Speak:
yourself in. Who do we already have on our roster that we could
Speak:
trust with this? And if you feel overwhelmed trying to put all
Speak:
this together by yourself, that's okay. You don't have to
Speak:
have it all figured out today. Take the next right step. Pick
Speak:
your people. Get them some training. Start small. And grow
Speak:
as you're able. If you'd like some help getting your peer
Speak:
support team off the ground, get in touch with me. You can either
Speak:
email me at Bart at survivingyourshift.com. Or,
Speak:
schedule a free consultation call at
Speak:
survivingyourshift.com/consultation . I'm here to I hope you'll be
Speak:
able to help. If you know another small department that
Speak:
keeps saying we can't do peer support, we're too small, then
Speak:
share this episode with them. Sometimes, hearing that there's
Speak:
a way to do this on a small scale is all they need to get
Speak:
moving. Thanks for spending this time with me on Surviving Your
Speak:
Shift. You don't need a big budget or a huge roster to care
Speak:
for your people. You just need a few trusted folks, some basic
Speak:
structure, and the willingness to start. Your small agency is
Speak:
worth that effort. Take care of yourself, take care of your crew,
Speak:
and I'll see you next time on Surviving Your Shift.