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Pages in category "Fire departments in Ontario" The following 16 pages are in this category, out of 16 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B.
Old Station 2 on Pickering Beach Road is now in Ajax, Ontario. The old Brougham Fire Hall later became Station 3 and is now an abandoned antiques store on Highway 7 between Old Brock Road and Brougham Road. Scugog Township Fire Department is mainly a part-time operation, but there are a number of full-time staff. The department operates five ...
The Toronto Fire Services was created in 1998 from the merger of the former fire departments of the original City of Toronto, East York, Etobicoke, North York, Scarborough and York. It is the largest fire department in Canada [ 4 ] and the 5th largest municipal fire department in North America.
No. 8 Hose Station, Toronto, Ontario; The Old Fire Hall, Toronto, Ontario; List of historic Toronto fire stations, Ontario; Fire Fighters Museum (Winnipeg, Manitoba), in a 1904 fire station building; Caserne de pompiers, Chambly, Quebec, photo here; Prince Albert Historical Museum, Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, in the city's 1912 fire hall
There are 45 fire stations located across Ottawa, including 16 Paid On-Call stations and 5 composite stations. The stations are assigned to 9 district operations units. On Friday September 3, 2010, Chief deHooge announced that a three-year trial testing the use of 24-hour shift rotations would begin in January 2011.
As a result, the Hamilton Fire Department, which served the original city, was merged with the fire departments of Ancaster, Dundas, Flamborough, Glanbrook and Stoney Creek. [7] The department went from 12 stations to 26, and became a composite department with both full-time and paid-on-call firefighters. [8]
For example, Station 201 would be Brampton's no. 1 station and P201 would be a pumper assigned to it, and so on. Spare apparatus (for Mississauga and Brampton) would be numbered with a 5 as the second numerical digit in the number (P251, A254, etc.). A list of fire halls and locations and current apparatus as of April 2019: [2]
The Kitchener Fire Department provides fire protection, technical rescue services, hazardous materials response, and first responder emergency medical assistance to the city of Kitchener, Ontario. [1] The department has seven fire stations and 229 employees. [2]