Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
On February 26, 1990 a group of 40 Call/Volunteer Firefighters representing 14 Southeastern Massachusetts fire departments met in Carver to discuss the concept of starting a Statewide Call/Volunteer Firefighters' Association. This meeting was organized by the Carver Firefighters Association and Carver Fire Chief, Dana E. Harriman. [2]
It truly is necessary in the training and education for firefighters statewide,” Worcester Fire Chief Martin W. Dyer said. ... With 35 recruits from all over Central and Eastern Massachusetts ...
Certified Fire Executive: CFE: Texas Fire Chiefs Association [23] National Crime Prevention Specialist: NCPS: National Crime Prevention Association: Fire Marshal FM Center for Public Safety Excellence (CPSE) [24] Chief EMS Officer CEMSO Center for Public Safety Excellence (CPSE) [25] Chief Training Officer CTO Center for Public Safety ...
The Boston Fire Department was established as the first paid fire department in the United States, and is the largest municipal fire department in New England serving approximately 685,000 people living in the 48.4-square-mile (125 km 2) area of the city proper. Additionally, it actively participates in MetroFire, the fire services mutual aid ...
Auburn is one of 214 municipal fire departments in Massachusetts that will share $1,138,565 for fire safety education programs. Mass. municipal fire departments share $1M in state grants to ...
A division of the state public safety department, The Board of Elevator Regulations, has eight members who are appointed to serve by the Governor of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. The Board of Elevator Regulations regulates the construction, installation, alteration and operation of all elevators in Massachusetts.
Jeffrey Rawson has worked as a firefighter for 21 years. But when it came time to pick a new lieutenant at the Pittsfield, Mass., fire department, Rawson didn't get the job. He believes it's ...
The rank of an officer in an American fire department is most commonly denoted by a number of speaking trumpets, a reference to a megaphone-like device used in the early days of the fire service, although typically called "bugle" in today's parlance. Ranks proceed from one (lieutenant) to five (fire chief) bugles.