Dublin
Fire Brigade was officially brought into being with the Dublin Corporation
Fire Brigade Act of 1862.
Today the Brigade has over 900 personnel and is responsible
for providing fire cover for Dublin City and County, for providing
and an emergency ambulance service for much of Dublin and for operating
a control room which responds it ambulances in Dublin and mobilizes
fire appliances in five counties.
Dublin which is a fast growing
city of over 1 million people is situated on the east coast of
Ireland at the mouth of the river Liffey. The area of Dublin is
over 922sq kilometres.
The city and county contain a whole range of risks
associated with firefighting and medical emergencies. From several
airports, to chemical factories, schools, numerous hospitals a
major seaport and any number of other risks. All of these must
be taken into account when providing the necessary level of fire
and emergency medical services.
Under the 1981 Fire Services
Act the local authority is charged with providing a fire service.
Dublin City Council (formerly Dublin Corporation) runs this service
on behalf of the 4 local authorities in Dublin. The other 3 are
Dun Laoghaire-Rathdown, South Dublin County Council and Fingal
County Council.
The ambulance service operates under guidelines
laid down by the Pre-Hosptial Emergency Care Committee (PHECC).
Dublin Fire Brigade's first ambulance responded in 1898.
Dublin Fire Brigade has 15
stations 11 of which are fulltime and the remaining 4 in North
County Dublin are retained (paid per call on pager). 10 of the
stations have ambulances that operate from them. Firefighters
rotate from ambulance to fire duties with the frequency depending
on the number of personnel in each station. All firefighters are
trained to Emergency Medical Technician Part-B standard
with a number also having completed the American paramedic standard
course. (see
ambulance page)
Dublin Fire Brigade also runs
a regional control room manned by firefighters and officers which
received 143,350 calls for assistance in 2000 with over 105,275
of these requiring a response by either a fire engine or ambulance.
The statistics
page list the most frequent type of calls.
The training
centre for the fire brigade is located on the northside
of the city and is the largest in Ireland.
All training from fire to medical takes place here
not only for it's staff but also for many other individuals and
organizations both from Ireland and abroad. A whole range of courses
are run at the centre.
The headquarters for Dublin
Fire Brigade which is located in the city centre includes Fire
Brigade Administration, Control Centre, Central Fire Station,
and Fire Prevention.
The role of the Fire Prevention
Section includes ensuring adequate fire safety in buildings and
other structures, and is governed primarily by the Fire Services
Act 1981, the Building Control Act 1990, and various guides to
fire safety in buildings of different use.
Among the recent introductions
Dublin Fire Brigade has started a Swiftwater Rescue Response,
has candidates on the EMT Advanced program and is currenlty training
in technical rope heights rescue.
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