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Boyertown Area Fire & Rescue Station #95-1 Mailing Address: 962 N. Reading Ave. Station Location: Boyertown, PA 19512 962 N. Reading Ave. Phone: 610.369.3777 Boyertown Area Fire & Rescue Station #95-2 Mailing Address: 962 N. Reading Ave. Station Location: Boyertown, PA 19512 10 Warwick St. Boyertown Area Fire & Rescue Station #95-3
Roughly bounded by Creek and Bullock Rds., the Beverly Farm, Big Bend, and Hill Girt Farms estates, and Brandywine Creek 39°51′05″N 75°35′12″W / 39.851389°N 75.586667°W / 39.851389; -75.586667 ( Twin Bridges Rural Historic
1 Originally organized as "Volunteer Fire Company" on March 17, 1887 and later underwent a name change to "Delaware City Hose Company" on January 23, 1889. There was a disrupted period of inactivity where there was no organized fire company and the Delaware City Fire Company was reorganized on July 9, 1924, however, the company uses the initial date of organization for the previous company in ...
The station operates as Chester Heights Fire Company with the Delaware County fire radio as Station 71. The organization is located at the corner of Valleybrook Road and Llewellyn Road. The fire station currently operates an engine (Engine 71), a medium duty rescue (Rescue 71), a QRS (Quick Response Service) (QRS 71) and a utility pickup truck ...
There are stations where fire fighters work 48 hours on and 48 hours off, whereas some allow 24 hours on and 72 hours off. [100] The mental impact of missing a child's first steps or a ballet recital can take a heavy impact on first responders.
Pennsylvania Task Force One, PA-TF-1, serves as one of FEMA’s 28 Urban Search and Rescue Teams. The sponsoring agency for Pennsylvania Task Force 1 Urban Search and Rescue is the Philadelphia Fire Department, through a Quad Party Memorandum of Agreement between the City of Philadelphia, DHS/FEMA Washington, D.C., FEMA Region III and the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency.
The City of Scranton currently maintains 7 fire stations [4] which house all fire apparatus, firefighters, and offices for the fire department. This amounts to having 5 engine companies, 2 truck companies, a rescue company, and a command/chief car providing protection to the City of Scranton on a daily basis.
The Reading Fire Department provides fire protection and emergency medical services to the city of Reading, Pennsylvania. [5] The department is responsible for approximately 10 square miles (26 km 2 ) with a population of just under 100,000 as of the 2020 United States Census Bureau estimate [update] .