Montgomery County Fire and Rescue Service

The Montgomery County Fire and Rescue Service (MCFRS), officially the Montgomery County Department of Fire and Rescue Services (DFRS), is the public safety agency that provides fire protection and emergency medical services for Montgomery County, Maryland. The services are provided by a combination of paid county personnel and volunteer members of the various independent, non-profit volunteer fire and rescue corporations located throughout the county.

Montgomery County Department of Fire and Rescue Services
Agency overview
Annual calls~110,000
Annual budget~$230,000,000
Staffing1,200+ career
Fire chiefJohn Kinsley (Interim)
EMS levelALS and BLS
IAFF1664
Motto
  • French: Gardez Bien
  • (in English) Guard Well
Facilities and equipment
Battalions5
Stations43 (figure includes volunteer corporation-owned firehouses, county-owned fire stations, and fire stations located on federal facilities)
Engines41
Trucks17
Rescues6
Ambulances50
HAZMAT2
Light and air2
Website
MontgomeryCountyMD.gov/MCFRS
https://www.iafflocal1664.org/

History

MCFRS personnel with FBI agents at the Pentagon a day after the September 11 attacks in 2001.

1980s

Recruit Class 1 for MCFRS begins 2/29/1988.

1990s

The MCFRS went to Oklahoma City in 1995 to conduct USAR operations after the Oklahoma City bombing.[1]

2000s

In 2001, the MCFRS went to Pentagon in Arlington County, Virginia aboard RideOn buses to assist in urban search and rescue (USAR) efforts immediately after the September 11 attacks.[1]

In 2004, the County Council passed legislation to reorganize the Fire & Rescue Service by placing all personnel, career and volunteer, under the command of a single fire chief. However, actual services are delivered from the 19 local fire and rescue companies, who own and operate 25 of the fire stations in the county. The county uses an incident command system to coordinate the efforts of paid and volunteer personnel at the scenes of emergencies. Montgomery County works closely with and has mutual aid agreements with Washington, D.C., Fairfax, Frederick, Howard, and Prince George's counties.

In 2007, MCFRS implemented the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments (MWCOG) unit numbering system. This system is based on the assignment of an individual numeric jurisdictional identifier for each major geographic jurisdiction within the MWCOG. These numeric assignments are:

0 – Washington, DC

1 – Arlington County

2 – City of Alexandria

3 – Metro Washington Airport Authority

4 – Fairfax County

5 – Prince William County

6 – Loudoun County

7 – Montgomery County

8 – Prince George's County

9 – Frederick County

During an emergency that would require a response from multiple agencies, dispatchers are quickly able to identify what county a particular piece of apparatus came from. As well as a fast response time with other jurisdictions.

A typical mutual aide box alarm would sound like:

*Beeeep* Units operate on 7A4, 1000 Main Street cross street First Avenue house fire. Paramedic Engine 702, Paramedic Engine 701, Paramedic Engine 719, Engine 754, Engine 844, Truck 716, Aerial Tower 719, Rescue Squad 742, Medic 701, Battalion Chief 701, Battalion Chief 704, EMS 704, Safety 700, respond and operate on 7A4. Box Area 1-2. 15:45.

2010s

On 6/26/2015, current Fire Chief, Scott Goldstein, was sworn in.

In April 2020, MCFRS implemented a COVID-19 Surge Plan which included the staffing of more BLS ambulances, as well as moving ALS providers from AFRA and medic units to chase cars. This, paired with a continuous Blue Alert, which goes in effect when an EMS jurisdictional system is temporarily taxed to its limits in providing pre hospital care and ambulance transportation due to extraordinary situations that contribute to high demand for ambulance service, and decontamination teams stationed at each of the main hospitals in the county enabled proper patient distribution and lessoned the burden on the system. The Plan was ended in June 2020.

In March 2021, MCFRS implemented the new P25 radio system which changed channel names. cpyess hill way

7A (Dispatch) became 7A2 (Dispatch)

7B (Ops) became 7A1 (Ops 1)

  • Second operations channel added designated 7A3 (Ops 3)

7C(Incident 10) became 7A4 (Incident 10)

7D (Incident 11) became 7A5 (Incident 11)

7E (Incident 12) became 7A6 (Incident 12)

7F (Announcement 10) became 7A7 (Announcement10)

7G (Incident 20) became 7A8 (Incident 20)

7H (Incident 21) became 7A9 (Incident 21)

7I (Incident 22) became 7A10 (Incident 22)

7J (Announcement 20) became 7A11 (Announcement 20)

71C (Incident 30) became 7B4 (Incident 30)

71D (Incident 31) became 7B5 (Incident 31)

71E (Incident 32) became 7B6 (Incident 32)

71F (Announcement 30 became 7B7 (Announcement 30)

*Same Pattern continues until 7C8 (Incident 60)*

7K (Alternate) became 7A14 (Alternate)

7L (Secure Alternate) became 7A12 (Secure Alternate)

72C (Emergency Medical Resource Center Call Patch) became 7H1 (EMRC Call Patch)

72D (EMRC Consult 1) became 7H2 (EMRC Consult 1)

72E (EMRC Consult 2) became 7H3 (EMRC Consult 2)

On June 30, 2023, Fire Chief Scott Goldstein left MCFRS to move with family to the West Coast. It has been announced that Goldstein has accepted an offer to serve as the Chief of the Cowlitz 2 Fire & Rescue in Cowlitz County, Washington.

Stations and Apparatus

The county is broken into five battalions, with a total of 36 fire stations and 2 rescue squads.

StationCompanyBattalionEngine Company or Paramedic Engine CompanySpecial Service UnitsEMS UnitsOther units
1Silver Spring VFD1st BattalionPE701M701, A701, A701B, ALS701DCN701
2Takoma Park VFD1st BattalionPE702, E702BA702, A702B
3Rockville VFD3rd BattalionPE703, PE703BAT703, RS703M703 (weekdays) A703C (weekends), A703, A703B, ALS703SU703, UT703B, UT703C
4Sandy Spring VFD4th BattalionPE704A704W704
5Kensington VFD - Old Town4th BattalionPE705, PE705BA705, A705B, ALS705B705, CT705
6Bethesda FD2nd BattalionPE706T706A706
7*Chevy Chase FD2nd BattalionPE707A/M707 (BCCRS staffed)HM707, UT707
8Gaithersburg-Washington Grove VFD3rd BattalionPE708PAT708M708, A708, A708B, A708C, ALS708 CT708, B708, UT708, UT708B, UTV708, BUTV708
9Hyattstown VFD5th BattalionPRE709, RBE709B709, B709B, W709, UT709, UTV709
10*Cabin John Park VFD2nd BattalionPE710, E710BT710A710, ALS710SW710, SW710B, UT710
11Glen Echo FD2nd BattalionPE711 A711, A711B, ALS711UT711,

UTV711

12Hillandale VFD1st BattalionPE712M712, A712BC701, UT712, UTV712
13Damascus VFD5th BattalionPE713, E713B,

BE713

M713, A713B713, W713
14*Upper Montgomery County VFD5th BattalionPRE714,

BE714

M714

A714 (Volunteer staffed when available)

UT714, UTV714, B714, CT714, BT714, SW714, W714
15Burtonsville VFD1st BattalionPE715,

PE715B

T715, RS715M715, A715B715, UT715
16Silver Spring VFD - Four Corners1st BattalionPE716T716A716MAU716
17Laytonsville VFD5th BattalionPE717, EW717, BE717RS717A717B717, CT717, W717
18Kensington VFD - Glenmont4th BattalionPE718AT718A718BC704, EMS704, CP718
19Silver Spring VFD - Montgomery Hills1st BattalionPE719AT719
20*Bethesda FD - Midtown Bethesda2nd BattalionPE720BC702
21Kensington VFD - Viers Mill Village4th BattalionPE721A721
22Kingsview (MCFRS)5th BattalionPE722, BE722A722MAB722, MCSU722, W722, B722
23*Rockville VFD - Twinbrook3rd BattalionPE723AT723M723, A723
24Hillandale VFD - Colesville1st BattalionPE724, E724BAT724A724

A724B (Volunteer staffed when available)

B724
25*Kensington VFD - Aspen Hill4th BattalionPE725T725ALS725, A725, A725B, A725C SU725, BT725
26Bethesda FD - North Bethesda2nd BattalionPE726A/M726 (BCCRS staffed)EMS702, MAB726, MCSU726
27Public Safety Training Academy (MCFRS)E727, E727BT727CP727
28*Gaithersburg-Washington Grove VFD - Derwood3rd BattalionPE728A728HM728
29Germantown VFD5th BattalionPE729, PE729BRS729M729, A729BT729, SU729
30*Cabin John Park VFD - Potomac2nd BattalionPE730A730W730, B730, SW730, SW730B, UT730
31*Rockville VFD - Quince Orchard3rd BattalionPE731T731M731BT731, W731, TR700, TR700B, SU731, UT731, UTV731
32Travilah (MCFRS)3rd BattalionPE732A732, M732BC703, EMS703, SA700, DC700, CP732
33Rockville VFD - Potomac3rd BattalionPE733A733B733, CT733, MAU733
34Milestone (MCFRS)5th BattalionPE734T734A734DCN734, BC705
35Clarksburg (MCFRS)5th BattalionPE735AT735A735
40Sandy Spring VFD - Olney4th BattalionPE740AT740A740B740, BT740, CT740, UT740, UTV740, BUTV740
Rescue Co. 1 Bethesda-Chevy Chase Rescue Squad 2nd Battalion RS741, RS741B M741, A741B, A/M741C, A/M741D, ALS741, UT741
Rescue Co. 2 Wheaton Volunteer Rescue Squad 4th Battalion RS742, RS742B A742, A742B, A742C, A742D, ALS742, ALS742B UT742, UTV742
50NDW Bethesda (Federal)
51National Institute of Health (Federal)
52Naval Surface Warfare Center (Federal)
53National Institutes of Standards and Technology (Federal)
54Fort Detrick Forest Glen Annex (Federal)

Note

Stations listed in the above chart with red "(MCFRS)" or green "(Federal)" next to their names are government-owned. Stations that do not say "(MCFRS)" or "(Federal)" belong to volunteer fire & rescue corporations.


Leadership

2004 - 2008, Tom Carr:

2008-2013, Richard R. Bowers, Jr.:

2013- 2015, Steve Lohr:

2015-2023, Scott E. Goldstein:

Legend

* Denotes Special Operations Station

  • Stations 7, 28, 20, 25 - Hazmat Response Team
  • Stations 10, 30, 14 - Swift Water Rescue Team
  • Stations 25, 29, 31 - Technical Rescue Team (TRT)
  • Station 23 - Emergency Response Team (ERT)

Abbreviations:

  • A - Ambulance
  • ALS - Paramedic Chase Vehicle
  • AT - Aerial Tower
  • B - Brush
  • BC - Battalion Chief
  • BE - Brush Engine
  • BS - Boat Support
  • BT - Boat
  • BUTV - Brush Utility Task Vehicle
  • CT - Canteen
  • CP - Command Post
  • DC - Duty Operations Chief
  • E - Engine
  • EMS - EMS Duty Officer
  • EW - Engine Tanker
  • HM - HazMat Unit
  • M - Medic Unit
  • MAB - Medical Ambulance Bus
  • MAU - Mobile Air Unit
  • MCSU - Medical Care Support Unit
  • PAT - Paramedic Aerial Tower
  • PBE - Paramedic Brush Engine
  • PE - Paramedic Engine
  • PRE - Paramedic Rescue Engine
  • RE - Rescue Engine
  • RS - Rescue Squad
  • SA - Safety Officer
  • SU - Support Unit
  • SW - Swift Water
  • T - Truck
  • TR - Technical Rescue
  • UTV - Utility Task Vehicle
  • W - Tanker

See also

Further reading

  • "Council Approves Changes to Fire & Rescue Services" (PDF) (Press release). Montgomery County Government. May 4, 2004. Retrieved 2007-01-01.
  • "Bethesda Fire Department, Inc. - History". Bethesda Fire Department, Inc. Retrieved 2018-08-01.
  • "Glen Echo Fire Department - about GEFD". Glen Echo Fire Department. Archived from the original on 2006-07-15. Retrieved 2007-01-01.
  • "Montgomery County Volunteer Fire and Rescue Association - about us". Montgomery County Volunteer Fire and Rescue Association. Archived from the original on 2007-10-09. Retrieved 2007-01-01.
  • Parrish, Warren (June 9, 2004). "County volunteer firefighters endorse restructuring law". The Gazette Newspapers. Retrieved 2007-01-01.

References

  1. 911NewsCoverage (4 July 2014). "ABC (WJLA) 9-11-2001 News Coverage 11:00 PM - 12:00 AM". Archived from the original on 2021-12-19 via YouTube.
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