Fire Dept Profiles

Up North,

Buffalo, NY - The city of Buffalo is currently the 2nd largest city in the state of New York with a population of 261,000 people living in an area of around 40 square miles. Located in Erie County, NY, Buffalo is home to a professional ice hockey team, the Buffalo Sabers, and is served by an international airport, the Buffalo-Niagara International Airport. Located on the banks of Lake Erie, Buffalo is home to several high-rises, taxpayers, mixed-occupancy buildings, multiple large wood-frame multiple dwellings, some small single-family homes, many factories, warehouses, and industrial complexes, large apartment buildings, both brick and wood-frame, and 3-deckers. Several railroad lines and shipping lines run to or into the city.

The Buffalo Fire Department(BFD) is the 2nd largest fire department in the state of New York and currently operates out of 19 Fire Stations, located throughout the city, under the command of 4 Battalion Chiefs and 1 Division Chief per shift. The BFD operates 19 Engines, 9 Ladders, 1 Rescue, 1 Haz-Mat./Command Unit, 1 Collapse/Technical Rescue Unit, 1 Fireboat, 1 CBRNE Unit, 1 ATF Explosives Response Squad, 1 Arson Unit, 3 Mobile Air Units, 5 Spare Engines, 2 Spare Ladders, a1 Spare Rescue, s well as many other special and support units. The BFD responds to around 35,000 emergency calls annually, with some EMS duties. The BFD operates 4 shifts and has a paid staff of around 760 members. Each piece of frontline fire apparatus is staffed with a crew of 3-4. Each Battalion Chief and the Division Chief are staffed by a Chief and their aide. There is also 1 Safety Chief on duty 24/7, 365. The Buffalo Fire Department also operates 3 Fire Station Annexes to store Reserve Engines and Ladders, Traning Offices, and Support Vehicles.

Battalion 3

Engine 1, Ladder 2 - 132 Ellicott St. - Downtown
Engine 2, Division Chief(B56), Arson Unit - 376 Virginia St. - Lakeview
Engine 3, Battalion 3(B43), Haz-Mat./Command Unit - 609 Broadway St. - Johnson
Engine 32, Ladder 5 - 700 Seneca St. - Babcock
Fireboat Kotter - 155 Ohio St. - Downtown/1st Ward
Fire Headquarters/Maintenance Facility, Safety Chief(B41), Mobile Air Units(F7, F8, F9) - 398 Linden Ave. - Downtown/Waterfront
Fire Dispatch/Communications Division - 332 Ellicott St. - Downtown/Waterfront

Battalion 4

Engine 19 - 209 Forest Ave. - Black Rock
Engine 21, Ladder 6, Rescue 1, Collapse/Technical Rescue Unit - 1229 Jefferson Ave. - Masten Park
Engine 26 - 703 Tonawanda St. - Riverside
Engine 36, Ladder 13, Haz-Mat./Command Unit, Haz-Mat. Trailer - 860 Hertel Ave. - North Delaware
Engine 37, Ladder 4, Battalion 4(B44), CBRNE Unit - 500 Rhode Island St. - Grant Ferry

Battalion 6

Engine 4 - 939 Abbott Rd. - South Abbott
Engine 25, Ladder 10, Battalion 6(B46) - 517 Southside Pkwy. - Seneca
Engine 22 - 1528 Broadway St. - Emerson
Engine 28 - 1174 E. Lovejoy St. - Sloan
Engine 35, Ladder 15 - 1512 Clinton St. - Kaisertown

Battalion 7

Engine 23 - 3226 Bailey Ave. - Kensington
Engine 31, Ladder 14 - 2025 Bailey Ave. - Schiller Park
Engine 34, Ladder 7 - 2839 Main St. - LaSalle
Engine 33, ATF Explosives Response Squad - 1720 Fillmore Ave. - Hamlin Park
Engine 38, Battalion 7(B47) - 398 Linden Ave. - North Park
 
Bxboro said:
What are the busiest Buffalo Co's. ?
The top Engine, Engine 21, made 3,456 runs last year.

The top Ladder, Ladder 15, made 2,857 runs in 2011.

Other busy companies include Engine 37, Engine 23, Engine 22, Engine 1, Ladder 7, Ladder 6, Ladder 2, Ladder 14, and the Rescue. All made over 1,500 runs last year.
 
Another FD up North,

Syracuse, NY - The city of Syracuse, NY is the 5th largest city in the state of New York, with a population of 145,100 living in an area of 26 square miles. I-81, I-90, I-690, and I-481 all run through the city, as does the Erie Canal. Located in Onondaga County, Syracuse is home to many universities and health care establishments, as well as high-rises, civic and government buildings, museums, educational buildings, mixed-occupancy buildings, large brick apartment buildings, large wood-frame occupied multiple dwellings, factories and warehouses, industrial complexes, and smaller single-family homes. The city of Syracuse also has an international airport, the Syracuse-Hancock International Airport

The Syracuse Fire Department(SFD) is the 4th largest fire department in the state of New York, and currently out of 12 Fire Stations, located throughout the city, under the command of 2 District Chiefs and a Deputy Chief per shift. The SFD operates 10 Engines, 5 Trucks, 1 Rescue, 1 Rescue Truck, 1 Special Operations Squad, 1 Technical Rescue Unit, 2 Haz-Mat. Units, 9 Mini Units(EMS/Mini-Pumpers), 4 ARFF Crash Units, 3 Spare Engines, 2 Spare Ladders, 1 Spare Rescue, s well as many other special and support units. The SFD responds to around 25,000 emergency calls annually, with some EMS duties. The SFD operates 4 shifts and has a paid staff of around 390 members. Each piece of frontline fire apparatus is staffed with a crew of 4. Each District Chief and the Deputy Chief are staffed by a Chief and their aide. The Syracuse Fire Department is also an ISO-rated Class 1 Fire Department, one of only 2 in the state of New York.

All but three Engine Companies in the SFD have squirt-configurations. Additionally, the Rescue Truck is a Truck Company that serves as Rescue 1's second piece.

South District

Rescue 1, Rescue Truck, Special Operations Squad 1, Rescue 3(Technical Rescue Unit) - 900 S. State St. - Downtown
Engine 3 - 808 Bellevue Ave. - South Side
Engine 5, Truck 3, Mini 5, Car 2(Deputy Chief), Haz-Mat. 1, Haz-Mat. 2 - 114 N. Geddes St. - West Side
Engine 6, Mini 6 -  601 S. West St. - Downtown
Engine 8, Truck 8, Mini 8, Car 3(South District Chief) - 2412 S. Salina St. - South Side
Engine 18, Mini 18 - 3714 Midland Ave. - Valley

North District

Engine 2, Truck 2, Mini 2 - 2300 Lodi St. - North Side/Lakefront
ARFF Units - 110 Obsevation Circle - Syracuse-Hancock International Airport
Engine 7, Mini 7 - 1039 E. Fayette St. - University
Engine 9, Truck 4, Mini 9, Car 4(North District Chief) - 400 Shuart Ave. - North Side
Engine 10, Truck 5, Mini 10 - 2030 E. Genesee St. - East Side
Engine 17, Mini 17 - 2317 Burnet Ave. - Eastwood
 
These guys were way ahead of their time, using a mini-pumper for small runs such as garbage or EMS runs, saves wear and tear on the rigs. Visited them in the early 80's great set of guys, pulled out a lot of rigs for me.GG ;D ;D
 
In Jersey along the Hudson.

Union City, Weehawken, Guttenberg, North Bergen, and West New York, NJ - In 1999, these 5 cities along the Hudson River in Hudson County, NJ agreed to combine their individual fire departments into 1 large fire department that would sever each community, to provide efficientcy and safety to the residents. The department that was formed is now known as the North Hudson Regional Fire and Rescue Department(NHRFRD). The NHRFRD currently protects a growing population of over 200,600 people living in a combined area of only 8 square miles.

The 3rd largest fire department in the state of New Jersey, the North Hudson Regional Fire and Rescue Department(NHRFRD), and currently out of 14 Fire Stations, located throughout the city, under the command of 3 Battalion Chiefs and a Deputy Chief per shift. The NHRFRD operates 6 Engines, 4 Trucks, 4 Squads, 1 Rescue, 2 Fireboats, 1 Special Operations Unit, 1 R.A.C.(Rehab. Unit), 1 Safety/Mask Service Unit, 1 Field Comm. Unit, 1 Decon. Unit, 1 Rescue Support Trailer, 4 Spare Engines, 4 Spare Ladders, 1 Spare Squad, 1 Spare Rescue, 1 Spare Battalion, as well as many other special and support units. The NHRFR responds to around 30,000 emergency calls annually, with some EMS duties. The NHRFRD operates 4 shifts and has a paid staff of around 270 members. Each piece of frontline fire apparatus is staffed with a crew of 4. Each Battalion Chief and the Deputy Chief are staffed by a Chief and their aide.

The North Hudson Regional Fire Rescue Department has currently be suffering serious budget cuts and staffing problems since 2010. Since it's creation in 1999, the NHRFRD has lost 5 Engines, 1 Ladder, and 1 Squad due to budget cuts. This resulted in the closing of 7 Fire Stations. Also, 3 fire companies are browned out on a daily basis.

Battalion 1

Engine 1 - 917 Paterson Plank Rd. - North Bergen
Squad 2, Ladder 1, Battalion 1, R.A.C.(Rehab. Unit) - 1600 New York Ave. - Union City
Engine 3, Marine 1 - 1900 Willow Ave. - Weehawken
Engine 4, Deputy 1 - 541 29th St. - Union City

Battalion 2

Squad 1 - 4911 Broadway - West New York
Engine 5, Rescue 1, Battalion 2, Rescue 2(Special Operations Unit) - John F. Kennedy Blvd. W. & 43rd St. - Union City/North Bergen
Squad 7, Field Comm. Unit, Decon. Unit, Rescue Support Trailer -  11 Port Imperial Blvd. - West New York
Ladder 3 - 4610 Park Ave. - Weehawken

Battalion 3

Engine 9, Battalion 3 - 6237 John F. Kennedy Blvd. W. - North Bergen
Squad 10 - 6510 Hudson Ave. - West New York
Engine 13 - 7507 Hudson Ave. - North Bergen
Ladder 4 - 428 60th St. - West New York
Ladder 5 - 8311 Kennedy Blvd. - North Bergen
Safety 1(Safety/Mask Service Unit) - 6801 Madison St. - Guttenberg
 
fdny1075k said:
The North Hudson Regional Fire Rescue Department has currently be suffering serious budget cuts and staffing problems since 2010. Since it's creation in 1999, the NHRFRD has lost 5 Engines, 1 Ladder, and 1 Squad due to budget cuts. This resulted in the closing of 7 Fire Stations. Also, 3 fire companies are browned out on a daily basis.

  Emmett, once again, an Excellent job done on these profiles. As they say "you took the ball and ran with it".

  I remember going to these cities when they were all seperate depts. Some covered just one or two square miles of a densily populated area. And now reading of closing and browning out companies, I hate to think what it would have been like for some of these cities before they combined into one.

  And just another point of interest regarding the Northern Hudson Regional Dept. When Governor Wittman was leaving office, they asked her what was the toughest job she had during her career, and her answer was; trying to form all these seperate fire depts into one larger dept. I guess she had some role in it.

  Thanks again there "fdny1075k" for the job you do whether posting these profiles, or listing some of the jobs outside the FDNY. After meeting you, I'd like to tell the World that you are a "Credit to Your Generation". You're in college now and I sure hope you get your wish of becoming a firefighter.
 
nfd2004 said:
fdny1075k said:
The North Hudson Regional Fire Rescue Department has currently be suffering serious budget cuts and staffing problems since 2010. Since it's creation in 1999, the NHRFRD has lost 5 Engines, 1 Ladder, and 1 Squad due to budget cuts. This resulted in the closing of 7 Fire Stations. Also, 3 fire companies are browned out on a daily basis.

  Emmett, once again, an Excellent job done on these profiles. As they say "you took the ball and ran with it".

  I remember going to these cities when they were all seperate depts. Some covered just one or two square miles of a densily populated area. And now reading of closing and browning out companies, I hate to think what it would have been like for some of these cities before they combined into one.

  And just another point of interest regarding the Northern Hudson Regional Dept. When Governor Wittman was leaving office, they asked her what was the toughest job she had during her career, and her answer was; trying to form all these seperate fire depts into one larger dept. I guess she had some role in it.

  Thanks again there "fdny1075k" for the job you do whether posting these profiles, or listing some of the jobs outside the FDNY. After meeting you, I'd like to tell the World that you are a "Credit to Your Generation". You're in college now and I sure hope you get your wish of becoming a firefighter.
Thank you for those kind words Willy D. I really hope I can get on the job someday. For now, college is great!
 
Some upstate.

Rochester, NY - Located in Monroe County, NY, Rochester is currently the 3rd largest city in the state of New York, after Buffalo and NYC. Rochester currently has a population of 210,800 living in an area of 36 square miles. The Erie Canal, the Genesse River, I-390, I-490, and I-590 all run through the city. Rochester is home to many colleges and universities, civic and government buildings, many high-rises, numerous mixed-occupancy and commercial buildings, 3-deckers, large balloon-frame multiple dwellings, strip malls, big box stores, shopping malls, large old mills and factories, and smaller single family homes.

The Rochester Fire Department(RFD) is the 3rd largest fire department in the state of New York and currenty operates out of 15 Fire Stations, located throughout the city, under the command of 3 Battalion Chiefs and a Deputy Chief per shift. The RFD operates 13 Engines, 6 Trucks, 1 Rescue, 2 Haz-Mat. Units, 1 Salvage Unit(The Rochester Protectives, similar to the NY Fire Patrol), as well as many other special and support units. The RFD responds to around 40,000 emergency calls annually, with EMS duties. The RFD operates 4 shifts and has a paid staff of around 500 members. Each piece of frontline fire apparatus is staffed with a crew of 4. Each Battalion Chief and the Deputy Chief are staffed by a Chief and their aide.

Battalion 1

Engine 6, Truck 6 - 1207 N. Clinton Ave. - Upper Falls
Engine 10, Truck 2 - 1477 Dewey Ave. - Maplewood
Engine 16, Battalion 1 - 704 Hudson Ave. - North Marketview Heights
Engine 18 - 740 Goodman St. N. - Homestead Heights
Engine 19 - 4090 Lake Ave. - Charlotte

Battalion 2

Engine 3 - 1051 Emerson St. - Lyell-Otis
Engine 5 - 450 Lyell Ave. - Edgerton
Engine 7 - 873 Genesee St. - 19th Ward
Engine 13, Truck 10, Battalion 2 - 272 Allen St. - Brown Square
Truck 5 - 57 Gardiner Ave. - Dutchtown

Battalion 3

Engine 1, Battalion 3 - 315 Monroe Ave. - Park Avenue
Engine 8, Truck 3 - 1261 South Ave. - Strong
Engine 12 - 160 Wisconsin St. - Beechwood
Engine 17, Rescue 11, Deputy Chief, Haz-Mat. 1, Haz-Mat. 2, Salvage Unit(Rochester Protectives) - 185 N. Chestnut St. - Downtown
Truck 4 - 977 University Ave. - Atlantic-University

Albany, NY - The state capital of New York, Albany is located in Albany County, NY and has a current population of over 98,000 people, living in 21 square miles, making it the 6th largest city in the state of New York. The Hudson River, I-87, I-90, and I-787 all run through the city, which is home to many high-rises, civic and government centers, the state capital building, many mixed-occupancy buildings, large apartment buildings, numerous single and multi-family wood-frame dwellings, taxpayers, factories and warehouses, industrial complexes, and smaller single-family homes.

The Albany Fire Department(AFD) currenty operates out of 8 Fire Stations, located throughout the city, under the command of 2 Battalion Chiefs per shift. The AFD operates 8 Engines, 4 Trucks, 1 Rescue Squad, 3 Paramedic Rescue Units, 1 Fireboat, 1 Haz-Mat. Unit, 1 Rehab./Command Unit, 1 Mobile Air Unit, 3 Spare Engines, 2 Spare Trucks, as well as many other special and support units. The AFD responds to around 18,000 emergency calls annually, with EMS duties. The AFD operates 4 shifts and has a paid staff of around 245 members. Each piece of frontline fire apparatus is staffed with a crew of 4. Each Battalion Chief are staffed by a Chief and their aide.

Battalion 1

Engine 1, Rescue 1 - Western Ave. & Washington Ave. - Downtown/Washington Park
Engine 2, Truck 2, Rescue Squad, Rescue 2, Car 1(Chief of Department), Car 2(Assistant Chief), Car 3(Deputy Chief), Car 4(Deputy Chief) - N. Manning Blvd. & Lark Dr. - Arbor Hill
Engine 5, Truck 1, Car 7(Battalion 1) - S. Pearl St. & Morton Ave. - South End
Engine 9, Truck 4, Rescue 9 - Delaware Ave. & Marshall St. - Delaware Ave.

Battalion 2

Engine 4 - 223 Washington Ave. Ext. - Dunes
Engine 7 - Clinton Ave. & Ontario St. - West Hill
Engine 10, Truck 3, Car 8(Battalion 2) - Brevator St. & Washington Ave. - Melrose
Engine 11 - New Scotland Ave. & Maplewood St. - New Scotland
 
Recently I had the opportunity to visit "mack" in Virginia. He is a volunteer firefighter assigned to Fairfax County Station 10 in Bailey Heights. In that firehouse is a BLS Ambulance (I was told there are only a few BLS Ambulances in the County). There is a Medic Ambulance, an Engine and a Truck. The manning for the Engine and Truck is an officer and three firefighters. All Engines have a firefighter who is also a paramedic and they carry all the advanced life support equipment needed to begin advanced care.

  All of Fairfax County units are assigned the 400 series numbers. In Station 10 where mack volunteers is "Ambulance 410", "Medic 410", "Engine 410", and "Truck 410". In Station 34 is Engine 434 and Haz Mat 434. Station 18 might have Engine 418, Rescue 418 (Heavy Rescue), and Battalion 418. Arlington County which borders Fairfax Station 10 is assigned the 200 series. (As an example...Engine 201, Truck 208, Battalion 211, Rescue 213 etc.). Prince William County had the 500 series, and I believe Arlington City had the 100s.

  As a volunteer firefighter there, mack is assigned to the firehouse every eight nights. When he reports in, the commanding officer assigns him where to go. Mack is held to the same standards as the career firefighters. In fact he was required to take the physical from the dept doctor and wasn't able to ride for three weeks until he took it. And by the way, mack passed it and was told by the doctor that he is the oldest member in the dept.

  Station 10 is the busiest firehouse in the county. In fact, while I was there for a period of about two hours, there were five calls where somebody went out the door and  made a run. The first due area is a mixture of just about everything. They have single family homes, some small factories, two and three story townhouses, and even a few high rise apartment buildings of about 25 stories each. The people in the neighborhood is an entire mix of various countries and races. I would guess on a hot summer night, the streets might get a little tough.

  Because Station 10 borders Arlington County, many times they respond with Arlington County as first due. Mack pointed out that you may get an engine from Arlington  and the rest from Fairfax. In fact he says sometimes the Arlington Company actually gets in there first. I was told of a rope rescue in one of those high rise apartment buildings. Even though the buildings are in Fairfax County, it was an Arlington County Firefighter that had made that rope rescue of a civilian on the floor below. Arlington County units can usually get to these buildings at the same time as Fairfax or even before.

  I really like the area from a fire dept stand point. I was very impressed with Fairfax Station 10 and the number of times somebody had to turn out on a run. I was also impressed with the first due response area. It reminded me of parts of Queens. I hope to visit the area again. And I would really like to thank mack for taking the time to show me around. Mack is really into the fire dept and he knows his stuff.

  He also grew up in Brooklyn and rode the very busy Coney island companies as a young guy, with his father who was on the job. He's got plenty of FDNY War Stories to tell also. I was pretty impressed with the ones he told me.

 
 
It's been awhile since this thread has been discussed. If there's any new updates, can we get them posted.

  Bridgeport, Ct recently did away with the Safety Officers (Safety 1) position for nights, holidays, and weekends out of the Central Ave Firehouse. They were using Captains and Lts on overtime for this. Instead as I understand it, of the two on duty Battalions, the second due Battalion Chief becomes the Safety Officer. I think Yonkers now does the same thing. That position is held until one of the off duty members of the Training Divison arrives (Training 1, 2, 3, etc).

  I believe in Providence, RI they use an Engine Co as a Safety Company, along with a Ladder Co for FAST on a working fire.

  "FDNY1075k", correct me if I'm wrong. And by the way, you still do an EXCELLENT job on rundowns from various cities. Thanks Emmett.
 
Virginia and the South:

The Alexandria, VA Fire Department currently protects a city similar to the size of Bridgeport, CT, with a population of 145,000 living in 15 square miles of land. The AFD operates out of 9 Fire Stations in 2 Battalions, and operate 8 Engines(including a Rescue Engine), 3 Trucks, 1 Rescue Squad, 5 Medic Ambulances, 1 Haz-Mat. Unit, 1 Haz-Mat. Support Unit w/Trailer, 1 Light & Air Unit, 3 Fireboats, 1 Safety Unit, 1 EMS Commander, 1 Battalion Aide Unit, and 1 Marine Operations Support Unit. The AFD plans to add a 10th Fire Station/Training Facility in the city's West End that will house an Engine and a Medic Ambulance.

According to their website, the AFD has 273 employees, including 1 Chief of Department, 3 Assistant Chiefs, 1 Division Chief, 10 Battalion Chiefs, 24 Captains, 19 Lieutenants, 113 Firefighters, 59 ALS Paramedics, 10 EMS Supervisors, and 1 EMS Operations Supervisor. The AFD responded to 18,120 fire and EMS calls in 2011.

Engine 201, Boat 201 - 317 Prince St. - Old Town
Medic 202, Safety 201 - 213 E. Windsor Ave. - Del Ray
Engine 203, Tower 203, EMS 232 -  2801 Cameron Mills Rd. - Beverly Hills
Engine 204, Truck 204, Battalion 211, Boat 204, Boat 214, Marine Operations Team Support Unit 204 - 900 2nd St. - Old Town
Engine 205, Medic 205, Battalion Aide 205 - 1210 Cameron St. - Old Town
Rescue Engine 206, Rescue Squad 206 - 4609 Seminary Rd. - Seminary Hill
Engine 207, Medic 207, Light & Air Unit 207 - 3301 Duke St. - Taylor Run
Engine 208, Truck 208, Medic 208 - 175 N. Paxton St. - Landmark
Engine 209, Haz-Mat. Unit 202, Haz-Mat. Support Unit 202, Haz-Mat. Trailer - 2800 Main Line Blvd., Del Ray
 
Philadelphia, PA - The largest city in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, the 5th most populated city in the United States, and one of the nation's oldest cities, Philadelphia currently has a population of 1,547,607 people living in an area of 135.1 square miles of land. Philadelphia was founded in 1682 and incorporated as a city in 1701. It served as our nation's capital during the Revolutionary War and was the location of both the signing of the Declaration of Independence in 1776 and the Constitution in 1787. Currently, the city is home to many highways, large bridges, numerous high-rise commercial and residential buildings, many brick rowhouses, museums, historical buildings, financial institutions, warehouses and factories, mixed-occupancy buildings, government buildings, large transportation hubs, an elevated railroad line, a streetcar system, many large public parks, universities, and vast neighborhoods of smaller private homes.

The Philadelphia Fire Department(PFD) is the largest fire department in the state of Pennsylvania and is also one of the oldest fire departments in the U.S. In 1736, the Union Fire Company was formed by Ben Franklin and 134 years later, in 1870, a paid, professional fire department was established. Currently, the PFD operates out of 61 Fire Stations, located throughout the city in 11 Battalions, organized into 2 Divisions, under the command of 2 Deputy Division Chiefs. The Philadelphia Fire Department also operates 56 Engine Companies, 27 Ladder Companies, 2 Squad Companies, 1 Rescue Company, 37 ALS Medic Ambulances, 13 BLS Medic Ambulances, 3 Fireboats, and numerous special, support, spare, and reserve units. The PFD responded to 435,064 emergency calls in 2011. Of that number, 229,709 were EMS-related incidents. The Philadelphia Fire Department currently has over 2,200 members.

Division 1 (South Division)

Battalion 1 (South Philadelphia)

Ladder 5, Medic 35, Battalion 1 - 711 S. Broad St. - Center City South
Engine 10, Medic 27, ES 4 - 1357 S. 12th St. - Passyunk Square
Deluge 24, Medic 14 - 1200 S. 20th St. - Point Breeze
Pipeline 49, Medic 11 - 2600 S. 13th St. - Southeast
Engine 53, Ladder 27, Medic 43B - 414 Snyder Ave. - Moyamensing
Foam 60, Ladder 19, Medic 37, Haz-Mat. 1, Haz-Mat. 2, Chemical Unit 1 - 2301 S. 24th St. - Grays Ferry/Wilson Park

Battalion 3 (North Philadelphia)

Engine 13, Medic 50B, Air Unit 1 - 1541 Parrish St. - Fairmount
Engine 27, Medic 13, Battalion 3 - 1901 W. Oxford St. - North Central
Engine 29, Rescue 1, Medic 15, Rescue 1A, Collapse Unit 1 - 400 W. Girard Ave. - Northern Liberties
Pipeline 34, Medic 36 - 1301 N. 28th St. - Brewerytown
Engine 45, Ladder 14, Medic 25 - 2401 N. 26th St. - Northwest

Battalion 4 (Center City Philadelphia)

Pipeline 3, Advanced Quick Response Unit 1 - 200 Washington Ave. - Queens Village
Snorkel 2, Medic 44B, Battalion 4, Air Unit 2 - 101 N. 4th St. - Old City/Center City East
Engine 11, Medic 21 - 601 South St. - Society Hill
Pipeline 20, Ladder 23, Medic 1 - 133 N. 10th St. - Chinatown/Center City East
Squrt 43, Ladder 9, Medic 7, ES 3 - 2108 Market St. - Financial District/Center City West

Battalion 7 (Southwest Philadelphia)

Pipeline 40, Ladder 4, Medic 19 - 6438 Woodland Ave. - Southwest
Squad 47, Medic 40, Deputy 1, Squad 47A - 3023 Grays Ferry Ave. - Grays Ferry
Water Tower 57, Medic 9B - 5559 Chestnut St. - Walnut Hill
Engine 68, Ladder 13, Medic 3, Battalion 7 - 801 S. 52nd St. - Abbotsford
Quint 69, Grass Fighter Unit 1 - 8201 Tinicum Ave. - Southwest
Engine 78, Medic 30, ES 12, ARFF Crash Rescue Units - Philadelphia International Airport - Southwest

Battalion 11 (University City/Mantua/West Philadelphia)

Pipeline 5, Ladder Tower 6, Battalion 11 - 4221 Market St. - University City
Engine 16, Medic 26, Mass Casualty Unit 1 - 1517 Belmont Ave. - Belmont
Deluge 41, Ladder 24, Medic 23 - 1201 N. 61st St. - Hadington
Engine 44, Medic 34, ES 11 - 3420 Haverford Ave. - Mantua
Engine 54, Medic 41B - 1913 N. 63rd St. - Overbrook

Division 2 (North Division)

Battalion 2 (Near Northwest Philadelphia)

Engine 51, Ladder 29, Medic 18, Battalion 2 - 5931 Old York Rd. - Fern Rock
Pipeline 61, Medic 29 - 5334 Rising Sun Ave. - Olney
Engine 63 - 1210 Oak Ln. - Oak Lane
Engine 64 - 6000 Rising Sun Ave. - Crescentville
Squad 72, Medic 24, Squad 72A - 1127 W. Louden St. - Logan
Engine 73, Medic 33, ES 10 - 7515 Ogontz Ave. - Cedarbrook

Battalion 8 (North Philadelphia)

Engine 2, Ladder 3, Medic 31 - 2426 N. 2nd St. - Kensignton
Pipeline 50, Ladder 12, Medic 22, Battalion 8 - 1325 W. Cambria St. - Glenwood
Squrt 55, Ladder Tower 22, Medic 39 - 4000 N. Front St. - Hunting Park
Deluge 59, Ladder 18, Medic 4B - 2207 W. Hunting Park Ave. - Rising Sun
Engine 35, Ladder 25, Medic 16 - 4208 Ridge Ave. - East Falls

Battalion 9 (Germantown/Manayunk/Far Northwest Philadelphia)

Squrt 9, Ladder 21, Medic 10 - 6900 Germantown Ave. - Germantown
Engine 12 - 4447 Main St. - Manayunk
Pipeline 19, Ladder 8, Medic 28, Battalion 9 - 300 E. Chelten Ave. - Germantown
Engine 37 - 101 W. Highland Ave. - Mt. Airy
Ladder 30, Medic 5 - 6630 Ridge Ave. - Roxborough/Manayunk
Engine 66 - 7720 Ridge Ave. - Andorra

Battalion 10 (Kensignton/Northeast Philadelphia)

Ladder 16, Medic 46B, ES 5 - 2601 Belgrade St. - Kensignton
Engine 7, Ladder 10, Medic 2, Battalion 10, Field Comm. Unit 1 - 3798 Kensington Ave. - Northeast
Engine 25, Medic 8B - 2931 Boudinot St. - North Kensignton
Pipeline 28, Medic 45B, Decon. Unit 1 - 2520 E. Ontario St. - Port Richmond
Foam 33, Foam Tender 1 - 4750 Richmond St. - Bridesburg

Battalion 12 (Tacony/Wissinoming/Near Northeast Philadelphia)

Ladder 15, Medic 47B - 1652 Foulkrod St. - Frankford
Engine 36, Ladder 20, Medic 17 - 7818 Frankford Ave. - Holmesburg/Tacony
Water Tower 38 - 4933 Magee Ave. - Tacony
Pipeline 52, Medic 32 - 4501 Van Kirk St. - Wissinoming
Engine 56, Medic 48B - 832 Rhawn St. - Fox Chase
Engine 70, Medic 42B, Deputy 2 - 4800 Langdon St. - Frankford
Engine 71, Snorkel 28, Medic 12, Battalion 12 - 1900 Cottman Ave. - Castor

Battalion 13 (Far Northeast Philadelphia)

Foam 18, Medic 38 - 8205 Roosevelt Blvd. - Northeast
Engine 22, Ladder 31, Medic 20 - 3270 Comly Rd. - Modena Park
Engine 46, Medic 49B, Battalion 13, Marine 46A, Grass Fighter Unit 3 - 9197 Frankford Ave. - Torresdale
Engine 58 - 812 Hendrix St. - Somerton
Pipeline 62, Ladder 34, Medic 6 - 9845 Bustleton Ave. - Krewstown/Northeast Philadelphia Airport
 
Some Florida

Miami, FL - The city of Miami currently has a population of over 419,700 people living in just over 35.7 square miles of land. Miami is currently the 2nd largest city in Florida, after Jacksonville, and has one of the largest metropolitan areas, population wise, in the country. Settled in 1825, Miami is located in Miami-Dade County and is home to numerous highways and transportation hubs, multiple high-rises located along the Atlantic Ocean, large warehouses and factories along the industrialized Miami River, entertainment venues, financial institutions, and many smaller, single-family homes.

The Miami Fire Rescue Department(MFRD) was established in 1898 and is an ISO Class 1 rated fire department. The MFD currently operates out of 14 Fire Stations, including 2 EMS Stations, located throughout the city in 2 Districts, under the command of 2 District Chiefs and 1 Deputy Chief per shift. The MFD also operates 12 Engine Companies (including 1 Foam Engine), 3 Aerial Companies, 2 Quint Companies, 24 Rescue Ambulances (14 ALS and 10 BLS), 1 Haz-Mat. Unit, 3 Decon. Units, 1 Fireboat, 1 Dive Team Unit, 1 Technical Rescue Team Unit, 2 Air Supply Units, 1 Rehab. Unit, and numerous other special, support, and reserve units. The Miami Fire Rescue Department currently responds to approximately 90,000 emergency calls annually.

District 1 (Central)

District 2 (North District)

Foam 1, Aerial 1, Rescue 1, Rescue 21, Deputy 1, District 1, Haz-Mat. 1, Air Truck 1, Air Van 1, Rescue 51(Spare) - 144 N.E. 5th St. - Downtown Miami
Engine 2, Rescue 2, Rescue 22, Decon. 2, Engine 52(Spare) - 1901 N. Miami Ave. - Midtown Miami
Engine 3, Rescue 3, Rescue 53(Spare) - 1103 N.W. 7th St. - West Miami
Engine 4, Aerial 4, Rescue 4, Rescue 24, Car 74(EMS Supervisor), Rescue 54(Spare) - 1105 S.W. 2nd Ave. - Brickell

District 2 (North)

Engine 5, Aerial 5, Rescue 5, Rescue 25, Dive Team 5, Engine 55(Spare), Aerial 52(Spare) - 1200 N.W. 20th St. - West Miami
Engine 6, Rescue 6, Rescue 26, District 2, Technical Rescue Team 6, Engine 56(Spare) - 701 N.W. 36th St. - Buena Vista
Engine 9, Quint 9, Rescue 9, Rescue 29, Quint 59(Spare), - 69 N.E. 62nd St. - Upper West Side
Engine 12, Rescue 12, Rescue 30, Command Unit, Decon. 12, Engine 512(Spare) - 1455 N.W. 46th St. - Hadley Park
Rescue 13 - 8260 N.E. 2nd Ave. - North Miami

District 3 (South)

Engine 7, Rescue 7, Rescue 27, District 3, Decon. 7, Engine 57(Spare), Rescue 57(Spare) - 314 Beacom Blvd. - West Flagler
Engine 8, Quint 8, Rescue 8, Rescue 28, Rehab. 8, Rescue 58(Spare) - 2975 Oak Ave. - Coconut Grove
Engine 10, Rescue 10, Rescue 20, Rescue 510(Spare) - 4101 N.W. 7th St. - Flagler
Engine 11, Rescue 11 - 5920 W. Flagler St. - Mission Esperanza
Rescue 14 - 2111 S.W. 19th St. - Corals Way
 
California

San Francisco, CA - The city and county of San Francisco currently has a population of 837,400 people living in 47 square miles of land. Founded in 1776 and incorporated in 1850, San Francisco is known for it's many hills, architecture, tourist destinations, the Golden Gate and the Bay Bridges, the unique climate, cablecars, and earthquakes. The city is home to many wood-frame commercial and residential buildings pacted close together in a tight, urban environment, as well as large commercial and government buildings, high-rises, warehouses, museums, historic locales, and smaller homes.

The San Francisco Fire Department(SFFD) was established 16 years after the city was incorporated, in 1866, and currently has over 1,700 uniformed and civilian members. The SFFD currently operates out of 47 Fire Stations, including an EMS Station, Fireboat Station, and 3 Airport Stations, located throughout the city in 9 Battalions, organized into 2 Divisions, with each Division being commanded by an Assistant Chief. The San Francisco Fire Department also operates 45 Engine Companies (including 2 Airport Engines), 20 Truck Companies (including 1 Airport Truck), 2 Rescue Squad Companies, 17 ALS Medic Ambulances, 2 Fireboats, 3 Rescue Boats, 3 Light Rescue Units, 1 Haz-Mat. Unit, 1 CO2 (Purple K) Unit, 2 Decon. Units, 1 Mobile Command Unit, 2 Coastal Rescue Units, 1 CBRNE/USAR Unit, 2 Multi-Casualty Units, 4 Brush Mini-Pumpers, 1 Hose Tender, 1 Attack Hose Tender, 5 Portable Hydrant Hose Tenders, 1 Pollution Control Unit, 1 High-Pressure Battery Unit, 1 Utility Unit, 6 Jet Skis, and numerous special, support, and relief units. Each Medic Unit responds from a street corner as opposed to responding from a Fire Station. The Street Medic Unit Base is located at 1415 Evans Ave. The SFFD responds to, approximately 120,500 emergency calls annually, with over 80 percent being EMS-related.

Division 2

Battalion 1

Engine 2, Truck 2, Battalion 1 - 1340 Powell St. - Chinatown
Engine 13, Truck 13, Rescue Captain 1, CO2 Unit - 530 Sansome St. - Financial District
Engine 28 - 1814 Stockton St. - North Beach
Engine 41 - 1325 Leavenworth St. - Nob Hill

Battalion 4

Engine 5, Truck 5, Division 2, Light Rescue 5 - 1301 Turk St. - Western Addition
Engine 10, Truck 10, CBRNE/USAR Unit 1 - 655 Presidio Ave. - Laurel Heights
Engine 16, Truck 16, Rescue Boat 16, Rescue Water Craft 1, Rescue Water Craft 2 - 2251 Greenwich St. - Cow Hollow
Engine 38, Battalion 4, Mobile Command Unit 1, Hydrant Tender 38 - 2150 California St. - Pacific Heights
Engine 51 - 218 Lincoln Ave. - Presidio

Battalion 7

Engine 12, Truck 12 - 1145 Stanyan St. - Cole Valley
Engine 14, Truck 14 - 551 26th Ave. - Richmond District
Engine 22, Hydrant Tender 22 - 1290 16th Ave. - Inner Sunset District
Engine 31, Battalion 7, Rescue Captain 2 - 441 12th Ave.
Engine 34, Coastal Rescue Unit 1 - 441 12th Ave. - Inner Richmond District

Battalion 8

Engine 18, Truck 18, Coastal Rescue Unit 2 - 1935 32nd Ave. - Sunset District
Engine 19, Truck 19, Homeland Security Trailer - 390 Buckingham Way - University/Lakeside
Engine 20, Mobile Air Unit 1, Mobile Air Unit 2, Pollution Control Unit, Mobile Air Support Trailer 1, Mobile Air Support Trailer 2 - 285 Olympia Way - Midtown Terrace
Engine 23 - 1348 45th Ave. - Outer Sunset District
Engine 40, Battalion 8 - 2155 18th Ave. - Parkside

Division 3

Battalion 2

Engine 3, Truck 3 - 1067 Post St. - North of Market/Tenderloin
Engine 6, Truck 6, Decon. Unit 1 - 135 Sanchez St. - Duboce Triangle
Engine 21, Light Rescue 21, Attack Hose Tender 21, Utility Unit 1 - 1443 Grove St. - Panhandle/Alamo Square
Engine 29, Decon. Unit 2, Tow Unit 1, Fuel Unit 1 - 299 Vermont St. - Portero Hill
Engine 36, Battalion 2, Haz-Mat. Unit 1 - 109 Oak St. - Hayes Valley

Battalion 3

Engine 1, Truck 1, Rescue Squad 1 - 935 Folsom St. - South of Market
Engine 8, Truck 8, Battalion 3 - 36 Bluxome St. - South of Market/Mission Bay
Engine 35, Fireboat 1 "Phoenix", Fireboat 2 "Guardian", Rescue Boat 35 - The Embarcadero, Pier 2 - South Beach
Engine 48, Truck 48, Rescue Ambulance 48, Hose Tender 48, Hydrant Tender 48 - 750 Ave. M., Bldg. 600 - Treasure Island

Battalion 6

Engine 7, Truck 7, Rescue Squad 2, Division 3, Light Rescue 7 - 2300 Folsom St. - Mission District
Engine 11, Truck 11, Battalion 6, Rescue Captain 3 - 3880 26th St. - Noe Valley
Engine 24 - 100 Hoffman Ave. - Twin Peaks
Engine 26 - 80 Digby St. - Glen Park
Engine 32, Mini-Pumper 32 - 194 Park St. - Bernal Heights

Battalion 9

Engine 15, Truck 15, Battalion 9, CA EMA Unit 361 - 1000 Ocean Ave. - Ingleside
Engine 33 - 8 Capitol Ave. - Oceanview
Engine 39, Multi-Casualty Unit 2 - 1091 Portola Dr. - Forest Hill
Engine 43, Mini-Pumper 43, CA EMA Unit 248 - 720 Moscow St. - Excelsior

Battalion 10

Engine 9, Truck 9, Battalion 10, Hydrant Tender 9, Rescue Boat 9, Rescue Water Craft 3, Rescue Water Craft 4 - 2245 Jerrold Ave. - Bayview
Engine 17, Truck 17, High-Pressure Battery Unit 1, Hydrant Tender 17 - 1295 Shafter Ave. - South Basin
Engine 25, Mini-Pumper 25, Multi-Casualty Unit 1 - 3305 3rd St. - Hunters Point
Engine 37 - 798 Wisconsin St. - Potrero Hill
Engine 42 - 2430 San Bruno Ave. - Silver Terrace
Engine 44, Mini-Pumper 44 - 1298 Girard St. - Vistacion Valley
Street Medic Unit Base, Rescue Captain 4, BioMed Unit, Arson Unit, Logistics Units, Supply Units - 1415 Evans Ave. - Hunters Point

San Francisco-Oakland(SFO) International Airport

Engine 46, Rescue 11(ARFF Crash Unit), Rescue 41(Relief ARFF Crash Unit), Medic 94, ARFF Captain - S. Area Dr.
Engine 56, Truck 44, Truck 47(Relief), Rescue 9(ARFF Crash Unit), Rescue 90(Relief), Medic 93 - W. Field Rd.
Rescue 10(ARFF Crash Unit), Rescue 37(ARFF Crash Unit), Rescue 40(Relief), Rescue 49(Relief), Airboat, Mooseboat, Rescue Water Craft 5, Rescue Water Craft 6 - N. Access Rd.
 
Baltimore, MD - The largest city in the state of Maryland, Baltimore currently has a population of 621,342 people living in just over 80 square miles. Baltimore is currently the 24th largest city in the United Sattes and is a major seaport along the East Coast. The city is home to blocks of 2-story brick rowhouses, mixed-occupancy buildings, factories and industrial complexes, warehouses, high-rises, museums and tourist destinations, smaller single-family homes, and many vacant buildings.

The Baltimore City Fire Department(BCFD) was founded in 1797 as a volunteer-run organization and made a paid, professional one by 1859. The BCFD currently has over 1,800 uniformed personnel and operates out of 37 Fire Stations, located throughout the city in 6 Battalions and 1 EMS Battalion, under the command of a Deputy Chief/Shift Commander per shift. The Baltimore City Fire Department also operates 31 Engines, 17 Trucks, 4 Squads, 1 Rescue, 24 ALS Medic Units, 4 EMS Supervisors, 2 Fireboats, 2 Haz-Mat. Units, 1 Decon. Unit, 1 Collapse Unit, 2 AirFlex Units, 1 Dive Rescue Unit, 1 Mobile Communications Unit, 1 Water Tower Unit, 1 Mobile Air Compressor Unit, 1 Foam Unit, and numerous other special, support, and reserve units. The BCFD currently responds to, approximately 270,000 emergency calls annually.

Battalion 1 (East Baltimore)

Engine 5, Truck 3, Medic 10 - 2120 Eastern Ave. - Fells Point
Truck 20, Medic 20 - 5714 Eastern Ave. - Greektown
Engine 27, Truck 26 - 4315 Mannasota Ave. - Parkside
Engine 41, Battalion 1 - 520 S. Conkling St. - Canton/Highlandtown
Engine 50, Medic 2, EMS 5 - 1601 Broening Hwy. - O'Donnell Heights
Engine 51 - 645 N. Highland St. - Ellwood Park

Battalion 2 (Central/Northeast Baltimore)

Engine 2 - 800 Light St. - Federal Hill
Engine 6, Truck 1, Medic 7, Medic 24, Battalion 2, Car 4(Shift Commander), Safety 2, AirFlex Unit 2, Mobile Communications Unit, Fire Investigation Unit, Water Tower Unit(Truck 51) - 1100 Hillen St. - Old Town
Engine 13, Truck 16, Medic 4 - 405 McMechen St. - Madison Park
Engine 31, Medic 3 - 3123 Greenmount Ave. - Charles Village/Waverly
Truck 5, Medic 16, EMS 3 - 805 E. 25th St. - Barclay/Midway
Engine 33 - 1223 N. Montford Ave. - Middle East

Battalion 3 (West Baltimore)

Engine 8, Truck 10, Medic 15, Battalion 3, Decon. Unit 1 - 1503 W. LaFayette Ave. - Sandtown/Harlem Park
Engine 14, Medic 21 - 1908 Hollins St. - West Pratt/Franklin Square
Engine 30, Truck 8, Medic 12 - 3220 Frederick Ave. - Carroll South
Engine 36 - 2249 Edmonson Ave. - Midtown/Edmonson
Squad 47 - 2608 Washington Blvd. - Morrell Park
Engine 53 - 608 Swann Ave. - Hunting Ridge
Engine 55, Truck 23 - 1229 Bush St. - Washington Village

Battalion 4 (North Baltimore)

Engine 4, Truck 29 - 1201 E. Cold Spring Ln. - Northwood/Hillen
Engine 21, Medic 19 - 3724 Roland Ave. - Roosevelt Park
Engine 42, Medic 6, Battalion 4 - 4522 Harford Rd. - Montebello Park
Engine 43, Medic 18 - 1100 Walters Ave. - Woodbourne Heights
Engine 44, Truck 25 - 2 Upland Rd. - Roland Park

Battalion 5 (Northwest Baltimore)

Engine 20, Truck 18, Medic 8 - 3130 W. North Ave. - Walbrook
Engine 29, Medic 17 - 4312 Park Heights Ave. - Greenspring
Squad 40, Truck 12, Medic 11, Battalion 5 - 3906 Liberty Heights Ave. - Forest Park
Engine 45, Truck 27, Medic 14 - 2700 Glen Ave. - Western Run Park
Engine 46, EMS 4 - 5500 Reisterstown Rd. - Woodmere
Engine 52 - 3525 Woodbrook Ave. - Woodbrook

Battalion 6 (Central/South Baltimore)

Engine 23, Truck 6, Rescue 1, Medic 1, Medic 22, Medic 23, Battalion 6, Special Operations Battalion, EMS 2, Haz-Mat. Unit 1, Haz-Mat. Unit 2, AirFlex Unit 1, Collapse Unit 1, SCUBA/Dive Unit 1, Special Rescue Operations Unit 1, M.A.C. Unit 23 - 15 S. Eutaw St. - Downtown
Squad 26, Truck 6, Medic 5, EMS Battalion - 1001 E. Fort Ave. - South Baltimore/Locust Point
Engine 35, Truck 21, Medic 9, Foam 35 - 430 Maude Ave. - Brooklyn
Engine 57 - 4427 Pennington Ave. - Curtis Bay
Engine 58 - 2425 Annapolis Rd. - Westport
 
Boston, MA - The Whip City, Beantown, the City by the Charles is currently the capital of and the largest city in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Boston is currently the largest city in New England and the 21st largest city in the United States, with a population of 636,400 people living in in 48 square miles. First settled in 1630 and incorporated as a city in 1822, Boston is home to unique architecture, historical sites, government buildings, an extensive subway and railroad network, brownstone-style rowhouses, industrial complexes and warehouses, mixed-occupancy building, many "3-decker" multiple-family dwellings, high-rises and commercial buildings, museums, sporting venues, large apartment buildings, many colleges and universities, hospitals and educational institutions, and smaller private homes. The city also has many highways and a unique tunnel system underneath the Downtown area. Boston also has a very low crime rate, with only 62 homicides in 2008. Boston is also home to the Boston-Logan International Airport, a large transportation hub in the New England region.

The Boston Fire Department(BFD) was established in 1678 and currently has over 1,500 uniformed and civilian employees. The Boston Fire Department currently operates out of 34 Fire Stations, including 1 Fire Brigade Station on Long Island in Boston Harbor, in 9 Districts organized into 2 Divisions, each commanded by a Deputy Division Chief per shift. The BFD currently operates 34 Engine Companies (including 1 Fire Brigade Engine), 21 Ladder Companies (including 1 Fire Brigade Ladder), 2 Tower Ladder Companies, 2 Rescue Companies, 1 Marine Unit (3 Fireboats), 1 Haz-Mat. Unit, 1 Decon. Unit, 1 Decon. Support Unit, 1 Collapse Rescue Unit, 2 Technical Support Units, 1 Dive Unit, 1 Special/Lighting Unit, 1 Air Supply Unit, 1 Fireground Rehab./Mass Casualty Unit, 1 Field/Tactical Communications Unit, 2 Brush Units, and numerous other special, support, and reserve units. In 2013, the Boston Fire Department responded to 74,191 fire and BLS emergency medical services incidents.

Division 1

District 1 (East Boston)

Engine 5, Car 1(1st District Chief) - 360 Saratoga St. - East Boston
Engine 9, Ladder 2, Decon. Support Unit - 239 Sumner St. - East Boston
Engine 56, Ladder 21 - 1 Ashley St. - East Boston

District 3 (Charlestown/North End/Beacon Hill/West End)

Engine 4, Ladder 24, Car 3(3rd District Chief) - 200 Cambridge St. - Beacon Hill/West End
Engine 8, Ladder 1 - 392 Hanover St. - North End
Engine 32, Ladder 9 - 525 Main St. - Charlestown
Engine 50 - 34 Winthrop St. - Charlestown
Marine Unit (Marine 1, Marine 2, Marine 3) - Burroughs Wharf - North End

District 4 (Back Bay/South End)

Engine 3, Special/Lighting Unit - 618 Harrison Ave. - South End
Engine 7, Ladder 17, Car 4(4th District Chief) - 200 Columbus Ave. - Back Bay
Engine 22, Haz-Mat. 1, Fireground Rehab./Mass Casualty Unit - 700 Tremont St. - South End
Engine 33, Ladder 15 - 941 Boylston St. - Back Bay

District 6 (Downtown/South Boston)

Engine 2, Ladder 19 - 700 E. 4th St. - South Boston
Engine 10, Tower Ladder 3, Rescue 1, C6(1st Division Chief), Collapse Rescue 1, Technical Support Unit(T.S.U.) 1, Dive Unit, Technical Rescue Unit and Trailer - 125 Purchase St. - Downtown
Engine 39, Ladder 18, Car 6(6th District Chief), Decon. 1, C11(Hospital Representative) - 272 D. St. - D Street/South Boston

District 11 (Allston/Brighton)

Engine 29, Ladder 11, Car 11(11th District Chief) - 138 Chestnut Hill Ave. - Brighton
Engine 41, Ladder 14 - 460 Cambridge St. - Allston
Engine 51 - 425 Faneuil St. - Brighton

Division 2

District 7 (Roxbury/Dorchester)

Engine 14, Ladder 4, H1(Safety District Chief) - 174 Dudley St. - Roxbury
Engine 17, Ladder 7, Car 7(7th District Chief) - 7 Parish St. - Dorchester
Engine 21 - 641 Columbia Rd. - Dorchester
Engine 24, Ladder 23 - 36 Washington St. - Grove Hall/Dorchester

District 8 (Dorchester)

Engine 16, Car 8(8th District Chief) - 9 Gallivan Blvd. - Dorchester
Engine 18, Ladder 6 - 1884 Dorchester Ave. - Dorchester
Engine 20 - 301 Neponset Ave. - Dorchester
Engine 52, Ladder 29 - 974 Blue Hill Ave. - Dorchester
Engine 54(Fire Brigade Unit), Ladder 31(Fire Brigade Unit) - Long Island - Boston Harbor

District 9 (Jamaica Plain/Roxbury)

Engine 28, Tower Ladder 10, C7(2nd Division Chief), Technical Support Unit(T.S.U.) 2 - 746 Centre St. - Jamaica Plain
Engine 37, Ladder 26, T1(Special Operations District Chief) - 560 Huntington Ave. - Roxbury
Engine 42, Rescue 2, Car 9(9th District Chief) - 1870 Columbus Ave. - Roxbury

District 12 (West Roxbury/Hyde Park/Readville/Roslindale)

Engine 30, Ladder 25 - 1940 Centre St. - West Roxbury
Engine 48, Ladder 28, Brush Unit 48 - 60 Fairmont Ave. - Hyde Park
Engine 49 - 409 Neponset Valley Pkwy. - Readville
Engine 53, Ladder 16, Car 12(12th District Chief) - 945 Canterbury St. - Roslindale
Engine 55, Brush Unit 55 - 5115 Washington St. - West Roxbury
 
Detroit, MI - Detroit is currently the largest city in the state of Michigan and the 18th largest city in the United States. Once a prosperous industrial city and the largest automotive manufacturing town in America, Detroit has now fallen on difficult economic times and has a very high crime and arson rate. Motown, Hockey Town, or Rock City currently has a population of 681,000 people living in an area of 139 square miles of land. Detroit is currently one of the most dangerous cities in the United States with one of the highest homicide rates in the country. Detroit is located along the Detroit River and nearby the Great Lakes. The city has some high-rises in the Downtown area and some revitalized neighborhoods, such as the Waterfront, however much of the city remains subject to serious urban blight. Entire neighborhoods lie vacated or burned out, with many vacant lots and abandoned buildings, from smaller single-family homes to massive factory complexes. The high arson rate in the city usually produces over 500 arson-related fires a month.

The Detroit Fire Department(DFD) was established in 1860 and currently has over 1,141 uniformed firefighters and paramedics. The Detroit Fire Department, in recent years, has been cut in half due to budget cuts. In 2012, 15 fire companies were closed. The DFD currently operates out of 37 Fire Stations, located throughout the city in 8 Battalions, under the command of a Deputy Chief/Tour Commander per shift. The Detroit Fire Department also operates 25 Engine Companies, 11 Ladder Companies (including 1 Platform), 6 Squad Companies, 1 Fireboat, 1 Haz-Mat. Unit, 1 Tactical Unit, 1 Decon. Unit, 1 Mobile Command Unit, and 22 ALS Medic Ambulances. Of the 22 Medic Units that the DFD operates, usually around 12 Medic Units are in service daily, covering the entire square mileage area of the city. The DFD currently responds to approximately 165,000 emergency calls annually, with over 80 percent being emergency-medical services-related incidents, and approximately 9,000 working structural fires, with over 500 a month being arson-related.

1st Battalion

Engine 1 - 111 W. Montcalm St. - Downtown/Foxtown
Chief 1, Medic 8, Tac. 2, Haz-Mat. 1, Decon. Unit - 3050 Russell St. - Midtown/Cass Corridor
Ladder 20, Squad 2, Medic 6 - 433 Alexandrine St. W. - Midtown/Cass Corridor
Engine 9, Ladder 6, Medic 21 - 3737 Lafayette St. E. - Elmwood Park
Car 200(Chief of Department), Car 201(Deputy Chief), Car 202(Deputy Chief), Car 203(Tour Commander), Fire Headquarters - 1301 3rd St.(Public Safety Complex) - Downtown/Brickton

2nd Battalion

Engine 34 - 6535 Livernois Ave. - Tireman
Engine 42, Medic 2 - 6324 W. Chicago St. - Dexter-Linwood
Engine 55, Ladder 27, Chief 2, Medic 5 - 18140 Joy Rd. - Gardenview Estates
Engine 57 - 13960 Burt Rd. - Brightmoor
Ladder 22 - 6830 McGraw St. - Michigan-Martin

4th Battalion

Engine 30, Medic 3 - 16543 Meyers Rd. - Harmony Village
Engine 53 - 15217 Greenfield Rd. -  North Grandmont-Rosedale
Engine 54, Ladder 26, Medic 4, Medic 22 - 16825 Trinity St. - East Riverdale
Engine 59, Squad 1, Chief 4, Medic 17 - 17800 Curtis St. - Greenfield

5th Battalion

Engine 17, Ladder 7 (Platform), Chief 5 - 6100 2nd Ave. - Wayne State University
Squad 4 - 1697 Grand Blvd. W. - Core City
Engine 35, Medic 20, Medic 23 - 111 Kenilworth St. - Central Woodward/Alden Park
Engine 39, Medic 1 - 8700 14th St. - Boston Edison

6th Battalion

Squad 3 - 1818 Grand Blvd. E. - Chene
Medic 12 - 2200 Crane St. - The Villages
Chief 6 - 11740 Jefferson Ave. E. - Connor Creek
Engine 41, Medic 14 - 5000 Rohns St. - East Side

7th Battalion

Medic 7 - 2775 Warren Ave. W. - Core City
Engine 27, Ladder 8, Chief 7, Medic 9, Medic 19 - 4700 Fort St. W. - Port of Detroit/Southwest
Engine 29 - 7600 W. Jefferson Ave. - Delray
Engine 33 - 1041 Lawndale St. - Springwells/Delray
Engine 48, Medic 11 - 2300 Fort St. S. - Boynton

8th Battalion

Engine 40, Ladder 17, Medic 10 - 13939 Dexter Ave. - Oakman Boulevard
Engine 44, Ladder 18, Chief 8 - 21 7 Mile W. - Berg-Lasher/Old Redford
Squad 5 - 18326 Livernois Ave. - University District
Engine 56, Medic 16 - 18601 Ryan Rd. - Conant Gardens/Krainz Woods
Medic 18 - 900 Merrill Plaisance St. - Palmer Park

9th Battalion

Engine 46 - 10101 Knodell St. - Airport
Engine 50, Ladder 23, Chief 9, Medic 15 - 12895 Houston Whittier St. - Conner
Ladder 31 - 5029 Manistique St. - Chalmers Heights
Engine 58, Squad 6 - 10800 Whittier St. - Denby
Engine 60 - 19701 Hoover St. - Pulaski
 
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