Binghamton Fire Department

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Binghamton Fire Department
Staffing Career
Strength 134 uniform
3 civilian
Stations 6
EMS Level ALS

The Binghamton Fire Department is the fire department for Binghamton, New York, USA.

Contents

[edit] Binghamton Fire Department Overview

The Binghamton Fire Department is comprised of a staff of 134 paid uniform fire-fighters and three civilian employees.

The department operates out of six stations, a training center and repair facility.

[edit] Emergency Medical System

  • First response from six strategically located fire stations.
  • Ambulance transport at the Advanced Life Support/Paramedic level.
  • Training level - paramedic and EMT-Defibrillation

[edit] Special Operations

All manners of land and aquatic rescue are used such as:

  • High-angle rope rescue
  • Confined-space rescue
  • Building collapse
  • Vehicle extrication
  • Water rescue
  • Ice rescue
  • HAZ-MAT full service response

[edit] Fire Suppression

Binghamton Fire Bureau stations are manned 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. It has earned a reputation as one of the most progressive fire departments in New York state through:

  • Aggressive interior search/rescue and fire attack
  • Standard procedures for organizing firefighting operations
  • Acquisition of state-of-the-art firefighting equipment and techniques
  • An Emergency Medical Services (EMS) program started in 1981 now at transporting *ALS/Paramedic level

[edit] Fire Prevention

  • Public education.
  • Fire investigation to determine cause and origin.
  • Computerization of gathered information and fire department business.
  • Juvenile Involved Fire-Play Intervention and Education (JIFIE) program.
  • Code compliance
  • Elimination of unnecessary response.

[edit] Binghamton Fire Department Fallen Heroes

19 City of Binghamton firefighters have lost their lives in the line of duty:

  • Firefighter Gerald F. Mullins, January 8, 1994
  • Chief Donald E. Faughnan, May 1, 1987
  • Firefighter Francis E. Furch, December 31, 1977
  • Captain Donald W. McGeever, September 29, 1975
  • Chief John F. Cox, September 29, 1975
  • Firefighter John C. Russell, September 29, 1975
  • Lieutenant Clyde E. Johns, October 24, 1970
  • Captain Lawrence E. O'Hara, January 13, 1967
  • Training Instructor James M. Sullivan, November 10, 1962
  • Firefighter Jerome P. Ryan, September 3, 1951
  • Firefighter Arnold B. Shepard, February 5, 1951
  • Chief Arthur J. Dillon, March 7,1946
  • Firefighter James W. McCarthy, October 8, 1940
  • Firefighter William S. Kennedy, April 29, 1929
  • Chief Charles VanCleve, January 16, 1929
  • Firefighter William T. Moran, September 17, 1928
  • Firefighter H. Clair Brainard, March 25, 1925
  • Firefighter Joseph E. Muggleton, June 14, 1914
  • Captain Walter Howell, March 5, 1914
  • Firefighter Francis J Haher, September 26, 1898

[edit] External links