fbpx
Wikipedia

Loudoun County Combined Fire and Rescue System

The Loudoun County Combined Fire-Rescue System (LC-CFRS) is made up of the career Loudoun County Fire and Rescue (LCFR) and 16 volunteer organizations. LC-CFRS has the responsibility of protecting the citizens and property of the towns, villages, and suburbs of Loudoun County, Virginia, United States, from fires and fire hazards, providing emergency medical services, and technical rescue response services, including Hazardous Materials mitigation, Mass Casualty Incident response services, environmental danger response services and more. The headquarters and training facilities of the department are in Leesburg, off Sycolin Road.[1]

Loudoun County Fire & Rescue
Operational area
Country United States
State Virginia
County Loudoun
Agency overview
StaffingCareer & Volunteer
Fire chiefKeith Johnson
EMS levelALS/BLS
IAFF3756
MottoTeamwork.Integrity.Professionalism.Service. (TIPS)
Facilities and equipment
Battalions3
Stations24
Engines33
Trucks6
Tillers2
Platforms4
Rescues5
Ambulances44
Tenders15
HAZMAT1
Light and air2
Website
Official website
IAFF website

LC-CFRS, one of the largest fire departments in Virginia, has approximately 1,500 volunteer personnel and 500 career staff that make up its firefighters, emergency medical technicians (EMT), paramedics and other emergency responders.[2] LC-CFRS uses a combined system to help respond to a diverse population spread throughout a suburban and rural county. Units can respond to building types that range from wood-frame single-family homes to high-rise structures, bridges and tunnels, large parks and wooded areas that can give rise to major brush fires, as well as large stretches of forest and mountains, such as the Blue Ridge Mountains, in addition to metro and bus lines. LC-CFRS provides care for a very large and diverse area, responding from stations scattered strategically throughout the county.

Organization edit

LC-CFRS uses a combination system, with career employees and volunteer members, to provide fire, rescue, and emergency medical services (EMS) to its citizens.

Throughout the 1980s and much of the 1990s, Loudoun's fire/rescue services were provided by volunteers supplemented by career Firefighter/Emergency Medical Technicians (EMTs). Over time, increased demand for service coupled with fewer volunteers available during daytime hours necessitated hiring additional career personnel.

Between Fiscal Year (FY) 93 and FY09, the number of career personnel has grown from 56.95 Full-Time Equivalent Employees (FTEs) to 504.01 FTEs.4 The volunteer component of the System comprises an estimated 1,476 total volunteers, approximately 770 of whom are active either operationally and/or administratively. Both of these groups see continuous, steady growth in terms of numbers and operational members.

LC-CFRS, around 2015, began the process of evaluating and potentially restructuring the department's upper management: the Fire-Rescue Commission, a board that oversees the entirety of the department, reports to the Chief and the county Board of Supervisors. The new structure will eliminate the commission, and will replace it with an executive committee, made up of several sub-committees (Presidents, Rescue Chiefs, and Fire Chiefs committees, amongst others), that will report to the Chief. The Chief will in turn then report to a non-fire/rescue County Administrator, who will report to the BOS. In 2015, LCFR instituted billing for EMS transports to hospitals, in a soft-billing capacity.

LC-CFRS edit

At the head of the Loudoun County Combined Fire-Rescue System, including the career and volunteer personnel that make up the department, is Chief Keith Johnson (C600). Under Chief Johnson are two Assistant Chiefs, and ten Deputy Chiefs, six in charge of a branch of the department and four serving as rotating Operations Shift Commanders. Additionally serving directly under Chief Johnson is Volunteer Program Manager Karen McQuaid, and the department of Professional Standards. The Office of Emergency Management used to operate under the Chief of the department, before it was moved, sometime between 2017 and 2019, to be directly under the County Administrator, Tim Hemstreet, who the Chief also reports to.

Chief Keith Johnson assumed command of the department following the retirement of Chief Keith Browner in 2018. Chief Browner in-turn assumed command after Chief Joseph E. Pozzo left to head Volusia County Fire Services, in Volusia County, Florida in 2010. In a December 2017 internal memo to department members, Chief Brower announced that he would retire effective 4/1/2018, after many decades of public service. In February 2018 Assistant Chief Keith Johnson (C600B) was promoted to Acting-Chief of Department, and is working with Chief Brower as he begins to phase out of his role with the department. A search is currently underway for a replacement chief. On 4/1/2018, Chief Brower officially retired, and Assistant Chief Johnson became full-time Acting Chief while a search for a replacement chief continues. In an internal memo, on Wednesday, May 9, 2018, Acting-Chief Keith Johnson was confirmed as the Department's new Fire-Rescue Chief.[3]

In a March 2018 Board of Directors meeting, a budget was approved that included funding for a new Deputy Chief for Volunteer Services, as well as two more Shift Commanders, four more EMS Supervisors (creating a new EMS 602 position), and other ancillary positions. EMS602 has been speculated to be placed at Purcellville Public Safety Center, Hamilton, or Leesburg. On 5/9/18, an internal department memo confirmed that starting in late June, 2018, the Shift Commander would become a 24/7 role, based out of Station 22, and that EMS602 would be out of Station 14. In July, 2018 it was announced that Deputy Chief Williams had been promoted to the Assistant Chief role; leaving his DC spot to be filled, as well as a new DC for Volunteer Services position. In Summer 2017, LCFR implemented a "Shift Commander" position, operating 7 days a week from 0600 to 1800, that utilizes two Deputy Chiefs on a rotating schedule. These two positions assumed the responsibilities of the old Deputy Chief of Operations position. With the addition of two more Shift Commanders in Spring, 2018, the position became a 24/7 role. These four Deputy Chiefs all rotate being on duty, while on duty they are referred to as the Shift Commander, with a dispatch callsign of "Operations 600".

Within LCFR, there is a Fire-Rescue System Chief, two Assistant Chiefs (ACs),[4] and ten Deputy Chiefs (DCs), who are each in charge of multiple departments, sections, programs, or endeavors.

Fire-Rescue System Chief (radio/dispatch ID):

  • Chief Keith Johnson (C600)

The two Assistant Chiefs are responsible for:

  • Operations: Assistant Chief James Williams (AC600)
  • Support Services & Volunteer Administration: Assistant Chief Travis Preau (AC600B)

The ten Deputy Chiefs are responsible for:

  • Operations: Four Deputy Chiefs rotating under the title of "Shift Commander" - Deputy Chief's Corey Parker, Michael Nally, Kevin Wright, & Roger Martin (O600, O600B)
  • Fire Marshal's Office: Chief Fire Marshall Micah Kiger (FM600)
  • Volunteer Services: Deputy Chief Jim Cook (DC640)
  • Communications and Support Services: Deputy Chief Nicole Pickrell (DC650)
  • EMS: Deputy Chief Jamie Cooper (DC660)
  • Asset Management: Deputy Chief Aaron Jacobs (DC670)
  • Training: Deputy Chief Randall Shank (DC690)

Medical Director's Office:

  • Operational Medical Director: Dr. John Morgan (OMD600)
  • Assistant Operational Medical Director: Al Pacifico PA-C (OMD600B)

Volunteer companies edit

While each volunteer company falls under the Loudoun County Fire and Rescue Department, each is largely responsible for its own administration and operation, on a day-to-day basis. LCFR provides support for volunteer companies through partial funding, training, protocols, and legal aid. While many companies often have the term "Department" in their name, such as Ashburn Volunteer Fire-Rescue Department, the correct term for these organizations would be "Company", to distinguish them from the overall department. Volunteer and career staff provide the same services and generally share the same standards in training and performance of services.

In speech, the physical building a company runs out of will often be referred to as a "station", and the organizational entity is often referred to as a "company". This is to help distinguish between companies that have multiple buildings/stations (such as Sterling Fire – stations 611, 618 and 624 and Sterling Rescue – stations 615, 625 and 635, Ashburn Fire and Rescue – stations 606 and 622, Leesburg Fire – stations 601 and 620), or mainly career staffed stations (such as Lucketts 610 and Philomont 608 which have some volunteer assistance, or Kirkpatrick Farms 627, Moorefield 623, Loudoun Heights 626, and Dulles South 619, which are completely career-staffed), from all other organizations with only a single building, which can be as easily referenced as company or station.

Each volunteer company draws its members primarily from the local community. While most volunteers join the company in their area, it is not uncommon for some members to run at different companies, depending on that individual's schedule, interests, or personality as well as the membership options offered by the individual company.

The membership of volunteer companies in the LC-CFRS system are usually headed by a Board of Directors (BOD). Sitting on the board will be members of the community as well as senior officers from the company. Under the BOD, are the two branches of a volunteer company, the Administrative side and the Operations side. At the head of each wing are the President and Fire/Rescue Chief, respectively. The President's Administrative side will see to the day-to-day functioning of the company, finances, support, and paperwork. Under the president are usually a vice president, secretary, treasurer, committee directors, and a Trial Board. The operations wing staff apparatus, respond to emergencies, train, and are largely the public face of a company. Under the Fire or Rescue Chief, depending on the nature and size of the company, there will be an assistant chief, deputy chiefs, captains, lieutenants, sergeants, engineers, crew chiefs (also called officers/attendants-in-charge), and then the firefighters and EMTs. The number, and type, of officers in a company depends largely on its size, with a small company having as few as five operational officers (not counting crew chiefs) and four administrative officers, or as many as fifteen officers in a larger company (not including Crew Chiefs). For example, Purcellville Volunteer Fire Company has one chief, one assistant chief, two captains and two lieutenants, but neither deputy chiefs nor sergeants. However, Leesburg Volunteer Fire Company has three captains and six lieutenants, in addition to other positions. From a summer 2017 reorganization approved by Chief Brower, career and volunteer officers up to captain are equivalently ranked, with career battalion chiefs being equivalent to an individual company chief, and career officers higher than battalion chief outranking all volunteer officers.

Currently, with the exception of Purcellville Rescue (CO. 14) and the stations that maintain 24/7 career staff (irrelevant of partial volunteer support, such as 8 and 10), every company in LC-CFRS is split in some way between career staff during the day (0600-1800) and volunteer staff during the night (1800-0600), with weekend coverage varying depending on company. For instance, Lovettsville Fire & Rescue (CO. 12) maintains 24/7 coverage during the weekend, while Purcellville Fire (CO. 2) continues the career/volunteer split shift throughout the entire week, including the weekend. Sterling Rescue manages three stations, two of the stations are staffed by the volunteers 24/7 (Station 15 and 25) and the third station is staffed by volunteers evenings and weekends, with a cooperative agreement for career staffing during the daytime hours at Station 35.

While many stations may have career staffing during the day and volunteer at night, this does not preclude volunteers from staffing apparatus and providing services to the community along with the career staff. It is also not uncommon for volunteers to come from home or work to staff units if a major incident is dispatched that requires additional apparatus, even if it is not the volunteers specific shift. This is done to prevent drainage of other resources from other parts of the county. While a unit may not be initially in service or dispatched, volunteers can come from home, after the first-out unit has been dispatched, to 'put-up' or 'put in service' a second or third-out unit.

Area served edit

The Loudoun County Fire and Rescue Department helps protects an area as far east as Fairfax County, VA, west to the Blue Ridge Mountains and Clark County, VA, north to the Potomac River and Frederick County, MD, and south past Route 50 to Route 620 – Braddock Road and the counties of Fauquier and Prince William, VA.

Mutual-Aid edit

As a result of the mutual-aid agreements in place in by Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments in the Washington Metropolitan Area, a standard numbering system was put into place for area fire and rescue departments. All units have a 3-4 digit designator, with the first digit denoting what agency the unit is from.

Loudoun County uses the 600 series designators. To reference companies and stations, the number of the organization follow a 6 – Station 606 for Ashburn, Company 612 for Lovettsville, and so on. To reference specific apparatus, the unit is referenced first by type (truck, ambulance, engine, etc.), then by station, using the prior 606 or 616 format, and then a specific alphanumeric identifier, if multiples of the same type run from that company. For example, the sole engine from Company 4 would always be referred to as Engine 604, the only tanker from Company 12 is Tanker 612, and the lone ambulance at station 626 is Ambulance 626. However, since Company 614 has three ambulances, they are permanently referred to respectively as Ambulance 614, 614B, and 614C.

Previously, Loudoun differed from other COG jurisdictions in that units used a numerical form to differentiate between units of the same type, as listed above. In other jurisdictions, apparatus of the same type have an alphabetical marking for identical units. Ambulances from the same company would be listed as Ambulance 404A and 404B, instead of Ambulance 606–1, as in Loudoun County. However, in May 2013, Loudoun switched to COG standards for fire vehicles, but not rescue vehicles. Wagon and Reserve Engine identifiers were retired and replaced with COG-compliant identifiers. For example, Reserve Engine 606 became E606B and Wagon 606 became E606C. The identifier for Rescue Engines was changed from ER to the COG-compliant RE. Jeeps were also redesignated as Brush units. All reserve units (Reserve Tankers (RK), Reserve Trucks (RT), etc.) were also redesignated as COG-compliant. (LCFR IB 2013–015). In November 2013 EMS vehicles began to follow the COG format.

In October 2013, it was announced that Loudoun had decided to fully adopt the COG pattern of apparatus designation and that ambulances would be transitioning to the new monikers November 4. Following the recent implementation of COG designations for fire apparatus, ambulances and other EMS vehicles will now use the -alpha (implied), -bravo, -charlie, etc. designations.

In Summer 2016, the entire Loudoun County public safety system went through a series of technology and CAD upgrades, and in the process changed some unit identifiers. While still following many COG guidelines, many apparatus designations were modified.

During an emergency that would require a response from multiple agencies, dispatchers are quickly able to identify what county or city a particular piece of apparatus came from, as well as request additional units from neighboring counties and jurisdictions if their own resources have been exhausted.

LC-CFRS also has mutual-aid agreements in place with non-COG counties, such as Jefferson County, West Virginia and Clarke County, Virginia. Likewise, for emergencies that require helicopter pick up for critical patients, LC-CFRS has agreements with Petroleum Helicopters International (PHi Air Medical), a national company that has rescue helicopters stationed throughout the D.C. Metro Area, as well as the rest of the United States, with the closest one, Air Care 3, stationed at Leesburg Airport.[5] In March 2018 it was announced that LCFR was seeking a MOU with the Little Fork Volunteer Fire-Rescue's Technical Large Animal Rescue Team.

According to a briefing presented by the Communications Division, units from certain divisions generally fall under a set numbering, which was slightly modified in summer 2019:

  • The 650 series is assigned to Communications.
  • The 660 series is assigned to the Fire Marshal's Office (FMO).
  • The 670 series is assigned to LCFR Administration.
  • The 680 series is assigned to the Office of Emergency Management (OEM) (MC 680 = MCI Trailer) and to the reserve fleet (Rescue 680, ALS 680).
  • The 690 series is assigned to the Training Center and some reserve pieces (Engines 690-91-98-99, Truck 690)

Other ancillary positions that fall under this special designation are as follows:

  • Staffing Lieutenant (Operations Aide): OAIDE600
  • Staffing Captain: CAP600
  • Logistics: LOG600
  • Battalion Chief (Relief): BC604
  • Battalion Chief (Special Operations): BC600 and BC600B
  • Battalion Chief (Communications): BC650
  • Radio Systems (Communications): COM651-653
  • Battalion Chief (EMS): BC660
  • Battalion Chief (Health & Safety): BC 670
  • Battalion Chief (Facilities): BC671
  • Captains (Administrative roles): CAP670-672
  • Apparatus: APP670
  • Battalion Chief (Training): BC690
  • Captains (Training): CAP690-691

Per the Virginia Safe Haven Law and emphasized during a significant event in spring of 2013, an open informational bulletin was released by LCFR to remind both the department and the public that all staffed fire and rescue stations were mandated to accept any child less than 14 days that was safely handed over by a parent (as opposed to being left at the door), providing a defense against abuse or neglect charges.

Notable Incidents edit

  • September 11, 2001 - Pentagon Terror Attack: Like the majority of fire departments in the D.C.-metro area, LC-CFRS played a part in the response, including station back-fill and recovery work.
  • May 25, 2008 - Meadowood Ct. Fire: Mayday Alert event - case study used through subsequent training at the Fire Academy. [6]
  • February 16, 2024 - Silver Ridge Dr. Explosion: Mayday and subsequent LODD event, where firefighters responding to an inside gas leak were caught in an explosion. Firefighter Trevor Brown of Sterling Volunteer Fire Company was killed in the blast, and 10 other firefighters from LC-CFRS were injured and hospitalized. [7]

Fire and rescue stations and apparatus edit

Station Location Staffing Fire units EMS units Other units
Volunteer/Career Engine Truck Tanker Rescue Ambulance
Station 601 Leesburg Volunteer E T K CC,CU,HS,U,B
Station 602 Purcellville Day=Career, Night=Volunteer E, RE TL K BC, B(2), SV, CC, U, N
Station 603 Middleburg Career E(2) K A (2) B, U, MC
Station 604 Round Hill Career E, RE K A(2) B, CV, U
Station 605 Hamilton Career E, RE K B, CC, U
Station 606 Ashburn Day=Career, Night=Volunteer E (3) TL, T, TT A (3) CC(4), ALS, SV, N, U, UTV, SC
Station 607 Aldie Career E R A B, SV, U, UTV,WL
Station 608 Philomont Career PE, E K B, SV, CC, LA, AU
Station 609 Arcola Day=Career, Night=Volunteer E (3) K A (3) B(2), ALS, CC, SV, SU(2), U, UTV(2), N
Station 610 Lucketts Career E K A B(2), Z(2), SWT, CV, U
Station 611 Sterling Park Day=Career, Night=Volunteer E (2) CU, B/SV, CC, N
Station 612 Lovettsville Day=Career, Night=Volunteer E(2) K A (2) CV, B, U, ALS
Station 613 Leesburg Day=Career, Night=Volunteer A (6) Y, ALS, CC, UTV, SV, SWT, U, Z, CU
Station 614 Purcellville Volunteer A (3) EM602, CV, ALS (2), MC, N (2), CH, UTV
Station 615 Sterling Park Day=Career, Night=Volunteer A (3) ALS, U, Y, CC, Z, UTV, SWT
Station 617 Hamilton Day=Career, Night=Volunteer R A (3) CC (2), CV (1), ALS601, U, UTV(2)
Station 618 Cascades Day=Career, Night=Volunteer E (2) TL CC, SV, N
Station 619 Dulles South Riding Career E TL A (1) BC, H, HS, DE
Station 620 Leesburg Day=Career, Night=Volunteer E TT K R CC, HS, B
Station 621 Mount Weather Career E T A (2) B, HS, SU(3),CC(2), UTV
Station 622 Lansdowne Day=Career, Night=Volunteer E (2) A (2) SO601, O
Station 623 Moorefield Career E A (2) MAB, EM601
Station 624 Kincora Career E Q, BC
Station 625 Cascades Volunteer TR A (3) AL, SV(2), Z(2), Y, ST (3) SWT, N
Station 626 Loudoun Heights Career PE K A B
Station 627 Kirkpatrick Farms Career PE K A
Station 628(F) Leesburg South
Station 635 Kincora Day=Career, Night=Volunteer R A(2) AL,U, ST, Y, MC615
Station 690/699 LCFR Headquarters & Training Center Career E(4) T K R A(4) BC604,BU699,EM,CC(4),SO(2),CD,OP,ST(8),V(4),U680,R680 UTV(3)
Red Rum Warehouse Red Rum Drive, Ashburn Career E A (2) LU
Office of Emergency Management (OEM) LCFR Headquarters Career CP680, OE(6), MC, UTV(5), U
LCFR Headquarters 801 Sycolin Rd. Career C600, AC600, AC600B, OMD600
Fire Marshal's Office (FMO) Station 9 Career FM (14), BD (2), FMT
Inova Loudoun Hospital (Lansdowne) Ashburn DE600
Unit types:

This key attempts to duplicate the terminology used for dispatch, however there are some unique identifiers used here that are not used operationally in the county. Not every key below is included in the unit list above, as there can be overlap (such as when a Chief is running a Command unit).

(#)=Number of units

A=Ambulance, ALS=ALS Chase, AU=Mobile Air Unit

B=Brush/Jeep, BC=Battalion Chief, BD=Bomb Disposal (FMO), BU=Bus, BS=Boat Support

C=Chief, CC=Command Chase, CD=Chief of Department, CU=Canteen Unit, CN=Captain, CP=Command Post, CV=Chase Vehicle (BLS/ALS)

DC=Deputy Chief, DE=Decon Trailer, DO=Duty Officer

E=Engine, EM=EMS Supervisor

FM=Fire Marshal

H=HazMat Unit, HS=HazMat Support

JS=Jet Ski

K=Tanker

LA=Light/Air Unit, LU=Logistics Unit

MAB=Mobile Ambulance Bus, MCI=Mass Casualty Incident Trailer, MC=Mass Casualty Support Unit

N=Chaplain (Individuals, not vehicles), NC=Chaplain Chase vehicle

OE=Office of Emergency Management (individuals), OMD=Operational Medical Director, O=Deputy Chief of Operations 600

PIO=Public Information Officer, PE=Paramedic Engine

Q=Quint

R=Heavy Rescue, RE=Rescue Engine

SC=Shift Commander, SV=SERV, SO=Safety Officer, ST=Support Trailer (trailer with specific equipment, such as HM or MCI), SU=Support Unit, SWT=Swift Water Team

T=Truck, TT=Tiller, TL=Tower Ladder, TR=Technical Rescue

U=Utility, UTV=All-Terrain Utility Vehicle (Gator, Polaris, etc.)

V=Van

WL=Wild Land unit

Y=Bike Team

Z=Zodiac Water Unit (boat, etc.)

Note after May 13, 2013: Wagon and Reserve Engine identifiers were retired and replaced with COG-compliant identifiers. For example, RE606 became E606B and W606 became E606C. The identifier for Rescue Engines was changed from ER to the COG-complaint RE. Jeeps were also re-designated as Brush units. All reserve units (Reserve Tankers (RK), Reserve Trucks (RT), etc.) were also re-designated as COG-compliant. (LCFR IB 2013–015)

On November 4, 2013, all county EMS units began using the COG-compliant identifiers. The 4th number in the old identifier is replaced with the corresponding letter of the alphabet (except for 1, which has no letter). A613-1 is now A613, A613-2 is A613B, A613-3 is A613C, etc.

(F)=Future/Planned Station (UC)=Under Construction (*)=Future Unit

Note: Under LC-CFRS procedures, some trucks/towers and rescue engines can operate as medium rescues, or "squads," as needed, assuming certain staffing and equipment requirements are met. This is to help offset the limited number of heavy rescue apparatus. Examples of apparatus capable of this would be Trucks 601, 606, and 620, and Rescue Engines 602 and 609.

Company/station histories edit

  • Leesburg Fire, Companies 1 & 20—"The Big House" & "The Pride of Old Town"[8]

Leesburg Volunteer Fire Company was formed on November 15, 1803, and occupies two locations in Leesburg. Station 1 is located at 215 W. Loudoun Street, and houses support units and retired apparatus for LVFC, as well as houses the live-in members. Station 20 is the predominantly active arm of LVFC and runs out of the station located on Plaza Street next to the Leesburg Police station. However, unit numbering is not totally indicative of station—for instance, the tiller stationed at 20 was long called Truck 601, however, due to the new backup truck that was purchased now using that designation, it is now called Truck 620. While some Leesburg units are numbered from Station 1, many are still located at Station 20. LVFC has announced plans to the Fire & Rescue Commission to remodel the old Station 1, and to return it to active service (instead of using it as a holding facility), instead of building a brand new Station 1. Currently, minimal operations occur out of Station 1, and it is primarily used for storage. It is unclear how the proposed opening of a South Leesburg station will affect LVFC and operations out of Station 1 – whether LVFC will continue to run minimal operations out of the space, it will be closed, or expanded use will be found. Company 1/20 is complemented by LCFR career staffing during day shift, 0600–1800. Leesburg's tanker is unique, in that it has the capacity to run as an engine – all the other tankers in LC-CFRS are limited to their tanker role. Tankers are easy to distinguish in Loudoun, but Co. 1-20's tanker has the appearance of an engine, though much taller. In August 2015, Rescue 613 was relinquished by Loudoun Volunteer Rescue Squad, and reassigned to Station 20 as Rescue 620, to be operated 24/7 by career personnel.

  • Purcellville Public Safety Center, Purcellville Fire, Company 2—"The Deuce"

The Purcellville Volunteer Fire Company, nicknamed "The Deuce," was formed in the early 20th century. At the time, two hand-drawn chemical wagons were placed in service. In 1923, PVFD received its charter and the era of motorized fire apparatus began. PVFC recently moved into a new station on the north end of Purcellville with PVRS Co. 14. Company 2 has two alternating shifts of LCFR career staff, A and B shift, during the day from 0600 to 1800 hrs, and six volunteer crews at night from 1800 to 0600. Station 2 also houses Battalion Chief 602 – BC 602 is set to receive a new buggy within the coming months. While the unit will reflect the new color scheme for county vehicles, the unit will be a departure from all other chase vehicles, in that instead of a Tahoe style body, a small pickup with a covered bed will be used – potentially to reflect the more rural nature of the 2nd Battalion. PVFC is currently in the process of planning and ordering a brand new Tower, to replace the current TL602.

  • Middleburg Fire and Rescue, Company 3—"The Fightin' Foxes" (DISBANDED) / LCFR Middleburg, Station 3

When the Middleburg Volunteer Fire Department was incorporated in 1936, it had one fire truck and covered the Route 50 corridor from the top of Paris Mountain to Chantilly. In the early 1950s, Co. 3 was given an ambulance and initiated emergency medical care, becoming fire and rescue. Relations between career & volunteers become strained in 2010, but career staff have recently returned to CO. 3, staffing the station 24/7. Station 3 was remodeled after the bay roof collapsed in the winter storms of 2010–11. In Summer 2015 Middleburg Volunteer Fire-Rescue disbanded and is no longer an organization, having sold all of its equipment and property to the county or other entities. LCFR Career personnel will now operate out of Station 3, but will continue to use the Middleburg Volunteer Fire-Rescue name for the short term, as a gesture of respect to the former volunteers.[9]

  • Round Hill Fire and Rescue, Company 4-"The Fearless Fourth"

The Round Hill Fire Department was started in the early 20th century. Its equipment consisted of a hand-pulled cart carrying several lengths of hose. The first fire alarm was sounded by clanging a big iron bell. In 1938, the Round Hill Volunteer Fire Dept. was formally organized. The first piece of equipment purchased was a used truck that had a water tank and pump mounted on it. Next, a siren and fire extinguishers were added. In 1949, the first ambulance was purchased. Round Hill relies largely on 24/7 career staff now, with some volunteers at nights, weekends, & for events.

  • Hamilton Fire, Company 5—"The Nickel" & "The Fighting Fifth" [10]

The Hamilton Volunteer Fire Department held its first organized meeting in July 1944, and a year later purchased its first fire truck. In January 1946, it moved into its firehouse which, with remodeling and additions, is still in use. HVFD has an attack pumper, a pumper/tanker, a brush truck and a light and air unit. It has a BLS non-transport license to provide EMS assistance and over a dozen of its average of 30 active members are qualified 1st Responders or EMTs. In 2000, HVFD and the Hamilton Volunteer Rescue Squad together purchased 10 acres (40,000 m2) of land to build the Hamilton Public Safety Center where both companies are housed. Many Company 5 personnel run with HVRS or help staff Rescue 617. ALS 601, a career unit, is also housed at station 5/17, in addition to career staffing during weekdays from 0600 to 1800 hrs. In October 2013, HVFC requested immediate 7−12 career support, meaning that county staff would run 7 nights week, instead of the prior 5, with 24/7 support requested as soon as possible. Additionally in October, ALS 601 that had been running out of Station 17 along with a career ambulance during the day, instituted a new policy where the ALS providers for ALS 601 will cross-staff a medic unit. This means that if an ALS call goes out in Hamilton's first due, Medic 617 will take the call, but if it is outside of Hamilton's first due, ALS 601 will take the call, placing M617 out of service. In May 2014, HVFC requested immediate emergency staffing due to an inadequate number of volunteers, which LCFR fulfilled. This means that HVFC is now staffed 24/7 by LCFR personnel with some assistance from HVFC.

  • Ashburn Fire and Rescue, Companies 6 & 22—"The Swarm" & "The Rt. 7 Express" [11]
 
Logo of the Ashburn Volunteer Fire-Rescue Department.

The Ashburn Volunteer Fire Department was started in 1947 after the tragic deaths of three children in a house fire. It was officially established in 1948, and its first piece of equipment was a 1927 American LaFrance pumper. The station was built in 1950, with expansions in 1963 and 1993. In 1991, Ashburn Volunteer Fire Department expanded its services and added its first ambulance. In 1996, it officially became the Ashburn Volunteer Fire-Rescue Department. In 2010 Station 22, Landsdowne, was opened. AVF&R is supplemented by career staffing 7 days a week from 0600 to 1800. Station 22 also houses Safety Officer 600, since BC 601 moved to Station 24/35 in January 2014, and Station 6 houses a 24/7 career medic unit. AVFRD currently has plans and blueprints to renovate the original station 6 building. The plan currently calls for the existing station to be torn down, leaving the banquet hall "Founder's Hall" standing, and creating a new building on the old ground. Additionally, the company has plans to completely upgrade its fleet with a potential new color scheme. The process of upgrading the fleet began in early 2014, with the order of two brand new Ferrara fire engines, which will potentially highlight the possible new company color-scheme of black and yellow. Additionally, plans are in place for the order of two new ambulances, and the replacement of T606 with a Tiller truck. In late January 2014 it was announced that Engine 606C, the old Wagon, would be decommissioned and was removed from service at the beginning of February. On March 3, 2014, it was announced that the Chaplain chase vehicle had been sold to a member of the company, would have its emergency equipment removed and the unit would be taken out of service. In early 2014, Safety 600, which had recently been replaced by a new SUV of apparatus similar to the BC vehicles, was replaced with a pick-up truck with a covered bed, though still using the new color scheme. In May 2014, construction of temporary facilities on Station 6 property began, with expected demolition of the current facility and then groundbreaking for the new building to happen in June. The new station became operational in March 2016. In Summer, 2017 AVFRD took delivery of a brand new Tiller, to replace the company's Truck unit. The unit is currently going through outfitting to go in-service. Additionally, in 2017, AVFRD replaced all five ambulances, and put in service an ATV unit, to be used on the W&OD trail and for public events. In May, 2018 it was confirmed that the Shift Commander would begin running out of Station 22 over the summer. At the end of June 2018, OP600 started running out of station 22. On Wednesday 6/27/18, TT606 went in service operationally, and ran its first calls. In July, 2018 an internal memo was released stating that the Safety Officer 600 designation would be changed to instead reflect the Battalion that the unit operated in. Because of this SO600 was renamed to SO601; this may be in anticipation of additional Safety Officer's being added to operations.

  • Aldie Fire and Rescue, Company 7[12]

The Aldie Volunteer Fire Department was established in 1955 and its first piece of fire apparatus, a used 1948 GMP fire engine, was purchased for $5,500. In 1956, Co. 7 purchased its first station, which was formerly a garage and service station, and bought a 1939 Ford fire engine. In 1971, Co 7. built a new station on the same property as the old fire station. In 2010, CO. 7 began operation of a county-owned heavy rescue vehicle. Formerly Rescue 603, Rescue 607 was repainted & re-equipped to be sent to Aldie. In 2012, Aldie received a brand new heavy rescue vehicle from Pierce Manufacturing. When that unit arrived, now designated Rescue 607 and in-service, the old Rescue 607 was returned to the county for refurbishing, and is now stationed as the first county reserve rescue, Rescue 680, at the Training Center. AVF&R is in the process of trying to find ground on which to build a new Station 7. Aldie has career staff supplementation 24/7. Company 7 is earmarked to receive a new engine in 2013. Aldie received a new ambulance in January 2014. In November 2017 the county announced plans to demolish several nearby buildings to make way for the new Aldie station, but this plan has been met with objection from many local residents, who believe that it would significantly change the face of the village of Aldie, and possibly be detrimental to the area's historic character. While design work continues for the site in question, the Board of Supervisors is currently trying to locate an alternate site for the new station. In April, 2019, Station 7 received a new gator unit.

  • Philomont Fire, Company 8

The Philomont Volunteer Fire Department was organized in 1955 and was equipped with a used pumper and tanker provided by other fire stations. In 1956, PVFC got its first new pumper, and in 1968 it bought a 1,500 gallon tanker. In 1975 and 1994, two expansions were added to the station, adding a meeting hall and providing a total of seven bays to house the apparatus. Philomont relies largely on career staff now, with some volunteers. Unlike many modern stations, Station 8 is a two-story building, with bays and offices on the ground floor, and kitchens, bunking and community rooms on the second. Such a layout is shared with Station 4, Station 10, and to some degree by Station 11/18. PVFC is run primarily by LCFR staffing 24/7, with several volunteers. PVFC is the only station in LCFR to operate two tankers, as well as the only one that still uses a house siren to alert volunteers. Additionally, PVFC is the only fire company that owns and operates a volunteer chase medic – ALS 608. In September 2012, CO. 8 received a brand new brush unit. In 2017 the company took over the utilization of the MAU, the wildland unit was placed permanently out of service due to an accident, and ALS 608 was placed permanently out of service. In February 2018, the Ladies Auxiliary retired, and with just four active volunteers remaining, it is likely Company 8 will disband and turn completely over to the county before the end of 2018. In the summer of 2019, Engine 608 was upgraded to have ALS capabilities and could be staffed as a Paramedic-Engine, identical to PE626 and 627.

  • Arcola Fire and Rescue, Company 9 [13]

The Arcola Volunteer Fire Department was formed in 1957, formerly, and alternatively, known as Arcola-Pleasant Valley Volunteer Fire-Rescue Department. A station was built and its first piece of fire equipment, a 1,250 gal Tanker truck, was purchased through the Civil Defense for $75.00. In the 1960s, the first ambulance was put in service and the Ladies Auxiliary was formed. During Hurricane Agnes in the 1970s, 200 people were sheltered and fed at Station 9. The 1980s and 1990s saw an addition built onto the station, and a recruitment program was started to help prepare for future growth. On September 29, 2011, ground was broken for the new Brambleton Public Safety Center, which will house career/volunteer staffing from CO. 9 as well as the headquarters for the Loudoun County Fire Marshal's Office. In November 2013, the FMO moved all of its apparatus and operational staff to the new Station 9 building. AVFD is staffed 6am-6pm, 7 days a week by LCFR career staff. AVFD expects fire-rescue operations to commence from the new station 9 in April 2014. On April 3, 2014, AVFD received a brand new Tanker, which has a unique cab compared to the rest of county tankers - it was sold 1–2 years later after continued mechanical issues. In 2017 the station received the tanker transfer from station 623.

  • Lucketts Fire & Rescue, Company 10—"The Nuthouse"

The Lucketts Volunteer Fire Department was established in 1960 with one fire truck and a two-bay firehouse. A few members of the community recognized the need to start a local fire company, and prior to the company's establishment, a fire truck was purchased and kept at a local farm. Dispatch called the Chief's home and his wife called local members by phone to tell them of an emergency. The fire truck was brought to the scene while members were en route. Today, Lucketts' original firehouse provides seven bays to house its apparatus. Lucketts is career staffed 24/7. Station 10 is home of the LCFR Swiftwater team, as there is easy access to the Potomac River, and White's Ferry. Station 10 is primarily LCFR career staffed, with little volunteer assistance. Lucketts received a new engine in 2014. Lucketts is the home of the county's career-staffed Swift Water Rescue team. Station 10 will be going through remodeling, or will have a brand new station built, in the near future and the county is currently looking at land parcels and will be accepting bids sometime in 2019.[14]

  • Sterling Volunteer Fire Company, Companies 11, 18, & 24
 
Logo of the Sterling Volunteer Fire Company.

The Sterling Park Volunteer Fire Department started in 1966 with two old, used pumpers and a tanker in a barn on Holly Ave. By 1998 they had become the Sterling Volunteer Fire Company and expanded to two stations. The station in Sterling Park, Station 11, is shared with the Sterling Volunteer Rescue Squad (as Station 15) and houses an engine, ladder tower, and a canteen unit. A second station, Station 18 (also SVRS Station 25), was built in Sugarland Run and housed a single engine. Construction of a new Station 18 (and 25) in Cascades was completed in 1997. The Cascades station houses an engine and tanker. The old station 18 is used by the Loudoun County Sheriff's Office. On Saturday, Nov 9th, 2013, Station 24 (also SVRS Station 35) officially opened along Route 28 near the Dulles Town Center. The station houses an engine, quint, and Battalion Chief 601. Stations 11 and 18 are career staffed daily from 6 am – 6 pm, and volunteer staffed from 6 pm – 6 am. Station 24 has 24/7 career staffing, supplemented by volunteers. In the 2020 County Budget, additional staffing was proposed to move to a 7/12 career schedule at Stations 11 and 18, and to add an additional career member to the 24/7 staffing at Station 24.

  • Lovettsville Fire & Rescue, Company 12 [15] "The Border Patrol"

The Lovettsville Rescue Squad received its charter in 1966. In 1967, a fire company was begun and combined with the rescue squad to form one company in 1968. The current building was erected in 1974 and has had two subsequent additions built. It has split operations between career and volunteers – with career staffing during weekdays from 0600 to 1800. LVFR recently received a brand new Wagon, to replace their older model Wagon 612. LVF&R hopes to begin construction of a new station within the next few years.

  • Loudoun County Volunteer Rescue Squad (Leesburg), Company 13 [16]

On September 12, 1952, 12 men throughout the county started the first rescue squad in Loudoun County, the Loudoun County Volunteer Rescue Squad. Until funds could be raised to purchase their own vehicle, Albert Laycock donated his Ford Ranch Wagon for their first response unit. The first official squad vehicle purchased was a '51 Chevrolet truck with a utility bed made to carry patients. Over the years, units were housed in Purcellville, Hamilton and Leesburg until other squads could be formed. The squad building on Catoctin Circle was constructed in 1975. One paramedic unit from Company 13 receives career supplementation during the day from 0600 to 1800, and one paramedic unit is staffed 24/7 by career personnel. In August 2015, due to long staffing problems, LCVRS relinquished their Heavy Rescue Squad, which will be reassigned to Station 20 and operated 24/7 by career personnel.

  • Purcellville Public Safety Center, Purcellville Volunteer Rescue Squad, Company 14—"The Mainstreet Medics"
 
Ambulance 614-2 responding to a call during the February 5–6, 2010 blizzard

The Purcellville Volunteer Rescue Squad has been in existence since 1969. PVRS currently boasts three ambulances, a Basic Life Support chase vehicle (similar in function to a SERV), an Advanced Life Support chase vehicle, and a second ALS chase vehicle on loan from the county (ALS 680). CO. 14 is also the home of the Mass Casualty Support Unit, on loan from LCFR (note: the text on the vehicle's side reads "Medical Care Support Unit", though it is still referenced & dispatched as the Mass Casualty Support Unit). Having moved into a brand new facility in the summer of 2009, shared with PVFC CO. 2, PVRS maintains an all-volunteer rescue squad and is the only fire or rescue company in LC-CFRS to maintain 24/7 volunteer staffing. In 2012, ALS 690 was stationed at PVRS for company ALS use, but was then shortly replaced by ALS 680, which reflected the new county paint scheme for smaller vehicles and following the new county policy of using the '680' series of designators for county reserve units. PVRS received ALS 680 on Friday 3/1/2013, a larger ALS chase than ALS 690, which exemplified the new county color scheme for chase vehicles, of base red with tan and white striping, and yellow/red chevrons on the back of the vehicle. This piece is used by the ALS volunteers of PVRS and as a replacement, when needed, for ALS 601 by career staff. As of October 2014, ALS 680 is no longer stationed at company 14. On April 2, 2014, PVRS received a brand new ambulance to replace A614, the oldest unit with that company. This ambulance is similar to A614-B, and is the first Purcellville-owned unit (as opposed to MSCU 614), to reflect the recent county FRG that all new apparatus must have chevrons. In Summer 2015, PVRS received a brand new ALS chase unit, to supplement their existing ALS chase. In May 2018 it was confirmed that the new EMS602 would begin operations of Station 14 over the summer. This will be the first 24/7 career staffed unit out of this station. EMS602 went into service at the end of June 2018. There is additionally discussion to relocate MSCU614 to another station.

 
Brand new Ambulance 614–2 at the Purcellville Public Safety Center
  • Sterling Volunteer Rescue Squad, Companies 15, 25, & 35

Founded in 1964, the Sterling Volunteer Rescue Squad was created as a "Jaycees" project in a newly developed planned community in Eastern Loudoun County, following a tragic pedestrian accident in which bystanders had to wait for an ambulance from Loudoun Rescue, which was then headquartered in Hamilton, Virginia. The first station was co-located with the Library in the 200 block of N. Sterling Blvd, in 1968 a crash truck was purchased under a highway safety grant, that unit (Sterling 1) was housed at the Shell gas station in Sterling Park. A year earlier the membership of Sterling Rescue would be active in forming the Sterling Vol. Fire Company. In the early 1970s, both Sterling Rescue and the Sterling Fire Company would work together to build its first station to house both organizations in Sterling Park. Both organizations continue to be independent corporations, co-located in the same stations. Later, that same decade, Sterling Rescue would be instrumental in implementing Advance Life Support care within the Loudoun County system.

Recognizing response delays and an increasing call volume in the communities north of Route 7, now known as Potomac Falls, members living in that area would respond to emergencies in an old ambulance parked in their driveway. Later a substation was built to provide an area to garage the ambulance in the Sugarland community. In December 1997 the substation was replaced with a larger station which was built in the Cascades community. The Sugarland facility still remains but is used for the storage of equipment and supplies, houses the department's Special Events Team and is used by the Loudoun County Sheriff's Office for their community policing activities.

Sterling Rescue provides both emergency medical care and transport (ALS/BLS), and rescue operations throughout Eastern Loudoun County and the region. Sterling Rescue is home of one of Virginia's Office of EMS's, Disaster Task Force (NOVA TF-8) which has been deployed on several events throughout the Commonwealth. Sterling Rescue has received recognition for its contributions by the Loudoun County government, Northern Virginia EMS Council, Virginia Office of EMS, recipient of the "1999 Governor's Award for Agency of the Year", and EMS Magazine's "2006 Best Volunteer EMS Agency".

In 2012, Sterling Rescue had over 7100 responses, and its 200 volunteer members, staffing both stations, provided over 121,000 hours of time to the community. To meet an ever-increasing demand on services, plans are underway for the construction of a third station along Rt. 28 in the area of Dulles Towncenter Mall, and it is expected to be open in 2013. Ground was broken for the new station, in Kincora on Route 28/7, on March 1, 2012.[17]

On May 29, 2013, SVRS unveiled its new Medical Care Support Unit, a medical supply truck in the vein of the MCSU operated by PVRS. The MSU is a 2005 E450 box truck which was a delivery truck before being purchased by SVRS and re-outfitted. The unit is labeled as MSU-615 in the field.

On Saturday, November 9, 2013, Station 24/35 officially opened, housing two ambulances, a utility truck, the MSU, and a bike team. The opening of the station marks a new era in the history of SVRS, as LCFR career personnel will begin operating SVRS vehicles for the first time, only at station 35, on a 7/12 basis, 6 am – 6 pm. This means that SVRS will no longer be 100% volunteer operated, even though the majority of their operations for the time being remain volunteer, and all vehicles company-owned, leaving only Purcellville Rescue as the only 100% volunteer company in the county.

The 2020 County Budget including proposals for 7/12 career staffing for Rescue 615, which would be transferred to Station 24/35, and re-labeled to Rescue 635. This would make R635 the second most-staffed rescue in the county, next to R620, as R607 and R617 are not fully staffed, but are cross-staffed.

  • Neersville Fire & Rescue, Company 16—"The Outpost" (DISBANDED) / LCFR Loudoun Heights, Station 26

Neersville Volunteer Fire and Rescue began in 1976 as a sub-station of Round Hill. It housed a borrowed ambulance in a neighbor's driveway until the community members built its community building to house the ambulance. Two years later it became the Neersville Volunteer Rescue Squad, and in July 1979 it became Neersville Volunteer Fire and Rescue Company. Neersville relies primarily on 24/7 career staff now, with very few volunteers. Neersville has recently had difficulty maintaining volunteer support, to the extent that the company lost its license to carry patients as a volunteer company. However, with an incremental increase in membership, the company is petitioning to rejoin the county system and rebuild itself. Neersville remains in need of volunteers. Construction of a new Western Loudoun station, to replace Station 16, which is in significant need of repair, has begun – there are concerns that the construction of this new building will force out Neersville Fire & Rescue, the smallest volunteer fire and rescue organization within LC-CFRS, leading to their cessation as an organization. On February 6, 2013, the Loudoun County Board of Supervisors voted to revoke Neersville Volunteer Fire & Rescue's charter, following a long history of contention between the two organizations and a recommendation to dissolve the company by a Government Reform Commission. This has been reported to be a controversial decision, as proponents state that adequate research was done, while company and area volunteers state they were never consulted for a fair decision. The effects of this vote will reportedly take a while to finalize, as several of the vehicles and property are still held by NVFR, though it is believed that not only will the company's charter be revoked, but the company number will not be used in the future. In 2013 the company's charter was revoked, disbanding Company 16; leaving matters of company-owned apparatus, and privately held finances to be finalized. Operations will be continued by LCFR. As LCFR is constructing a new station, the area of Neersville will be covered by the Western Loudoun station, provided by 24/7 career staffing only. Neersville will be receiving a new tanker and a new brush truck sometime in 2013, with the engine up for replacement as well. The county received the new tanker that will replace Tanker 616. However, it is being held until the new station at Loudoun Heights is operational, at which time Neersville 16 will be retired, and operations will be conducted under Loudoun Heights 26, which the tanker reflects. Loudoun Heights is receiving a new brush, ambulance, and tanker in 2014. In 2015, Loudoun Heights Station 26 became operational. In Fall 2017 the county completed a 2-year pilot study on the utilization of a Paramedic Engine (the county's first such program) - the pilot was deemed a success and PE626 will be a permanent unit.

  • Hamilton Rescue, Company 17 [18]

Establishing its roots in 1952 as Loudoun County's first rescue squad, the members of the Hamilton community were volunteering their time and skills long before Station 17 was renamed in 1979. The Hamilton Volunteer Rescue Squad serves the town of Hamilton and its surrounding areas, including Paeonian Springs and Waterford, and are the "second due" units in Purcellville and Leesburg. In addition to BLS & ALS operations, Company 17 also utilizes a boat unit, a heavy rescue unit (Rescue 617), and a bike team. These specialty units are staffed primarily by the HVRS Special Operations Division. Company 17 is supplemented by career staffing during the day, who also operate the county chase unit ALS601 – career personnel put in service a medic unit which operates within the first due, or as the ALS chase for non-first due calls. Hamilton received a new ambulance in October 2013, A617C, which being county-owned, deviates from the green color scheme of HVRS, and is red, following county colors. A617C is the primary response unit when LCFR Career Staff are on duty. A617 and A617B are owned and primarily operated by the volunteers of Hamilton Rescue. HVRS also received a Utility unit in late December 2013, also to be operated by the HVRS Special Operations. In a March 2018 inter-department memo, it was announced that HVRS had decommissioned its swiftwater rescue team.

  • LCFR Dulles South Public Safety Center, Station 19-"The Big Top"

Constructed by the county, it houses both Fire-Rescue and a Sheriff's substation. It began operation on May 7, 2007, with a grand opening in June 2007. The station is staffed 24/7 by LCFR staff with no volunteer participation. The county Hazardous Materials response team, which includes a large primary response unit and multiple support units and trailers, is stationed here. Station 19 received a new engine in the spring of 2013. As of 2017, the haz-mat team is in the process of planning out the purchase of replacement vehicles. Station 19 is expecting delivery a brand new HazMat unit, and a hazmat support unit, in Spring, 2018.

  • Mt. Weather Fire and Rescue, Company 21

Maintained by all-career staff, this company watches over the Mt. Weather area in the Blue Ridge Mountains and the Federal Emergency Management Agency's Mount Weather Emergency Operations Center. Company 21 is only considered a LC-CFRS company for operational planning purposes, as the staffing is maintained by FEMA. To respond to mutual aid calls, the units must be released by FEMA prior to response. Used primarily by LC-CFRS for station fills in the western end of the county, such as Purcellville or Round Hill. Likewise, some LC-CFRS units can be used to staff Mt. Weather – however, visiting units are primarily confined to the fire station and are chaperoned at all times. Mt. Weather received a brand new engine in June 2014.

  • LCFR Moorefield, Station 23-"The Warehouse Rats"

Originally the second Ashburn station, Loudoun County took over when Ashburn Fire & Rescue moved into the new Landsdowne station 22. Originally stationed at the Red Rum Drive warehouse facility, LCFR opened a brand new station 23 in Moorefield in August 2011. It is the second all-career station in the county. This station housed several specialty apparatus, including the Mobile Air Unit, used for SCBA cylinder refilling on significant incidents, and the ambulance bus. Moorefield received a second Ambulance in 2014. In 2016-2017 the MAU was transferred to Station 608. In 2017 the Tanker was transferred to Station 609. The station is currently the home of an engine, medic, ambulance, MAB, and EMS Supervisor.

  • LCFR Kirkpatrick Farms, Station 27

Construction is currently ongoing for the county's newest station in the Kirkpatrick Farms area south of Rt 50. The station is scheduled to open in Spring 2018 and will have a Paramedic Engine (the county's 2nd), Tanker, and Ambulance. An internal memo in Spring, 2018 stated that after completion of a pilot Advanced EMT Program, Station 27 would be the first in the region to utilize the entry-level ALS certification. In July 2018, Loudoun County announced that construction on Station 27 had been halted and that the contractor had been fired due to delays, despite the facility being ~90% complete. The county announced that it would be working to hire a new contractor, but that the facility was now not scheduled to be open until the end of 2019, despite an original March 2018 scheduled opening. The County stated that the ~35 operational staff who were scheduled to be assigned there, including new hires, would be assigned to other staffing holes within the county, until the station opens.[19] In April 2019, construction finished and the county assumed possession of the facility and grounds in order to begin moving in equipment, with no go-live date as of yet announced.[20]

  • LCFR Leesburg South, Station 28

Station 28 is a planned station that is under development, tentatively titled "Leesburg South". It is uncertain at this time whether this will be career staffed station, or mixed career and volunteer. Plans for location and apparatus to be stationed there are still under discussion.

  • Loudoun County Training Center (Leesburg), Station 90/99 & Red Rum Drive Warehouse
 
LCFR Training Center 690

The Training Center for LC-CFRS — nicknamed "The Rock". This facility has many classrooms and lecture halls, the High Bay (houses the Rock's gym, and several apparatus, and encompasses a four-story building for training), and the Burn and Extrication Pads for training. Many training & reserve apparatus, such as Engines 690,91,98,99, Truck 690, and multiple ambulances are stationed here when not in the field running as a reserve unit. Additionally, several career vehicles are stationed here, such as senior officer's chase vehicles, reserve BC/Safety Officer/EMS Supervisor chase vehicles, Bus 690 for training events, and more. Additionally, new units often come through the Rock for outfitting before being transferred to their home station. Reserve Rescue 680 alternates being stationed between here and the Warehouse. There are many reserve and field units that are stationed at either headquarters or Red Rum, and as the units are rotated in and out of the field, it can be very difficult to keep track of the complete roster of units.

LC-CFRS also maintains additional apparatus and equipment storage at the Red Rum Drive Warehouse in Ashburn, VA. The warehouse is now the home for many reserve, specialty, and FMO apparatus as well as fleet maintenance operations.

LC-CFRS Training Center is across the road from the Leesburg Airport, between the National Guard Armory and the Adult Detention Center of the Loudoun County Sheriff's Office. After a recent move, there are additional department offices just north of the airport, which will become the home of many LCFR management, including the ECC – ostensibly leaving the entirety of the current training center for only training, as opposed to combined headquarters and training. In 2015, discussions began about the possibility of installing a small station at the training center, primarily to house senior-level operations personnel and some specialty apparatus, though not to replace the proposed Leesburg South station.

Dispatch edit

The Loudoun County Emergency Communications Center serves as the county's public safety answering point for fire, rescue and police incidents, using the county's Enhanced-911 (E-911) system. The center operates 24 hours a day. Emergency and non-emergency fire and rescue calls are processed and police-related calls are transferred to the appropriate law enforcement agency. Each shift includes workers who are certified in various aspects of emergency medical dispatch and who meet the standards set by the national Association of Public Communications Officers.[21]

When a member of the public dials "911" they speak with an LCFR 911 operator who assigns the call to where it needs to go based on the information provided.

  • If it is police-related, the information is sent to the Loudoun County Sheriff Office radio dispatcher for the precinct or special unit concerned, or to local Police Departments.
  • If it is near a major airport the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority is notified.
  • If it is a fire, hazmat, rescue or EMS incident, the LCFR 911 operator will directly dispatch the call information to the appropriate units

Box numbers edit

Each address in the city is assigned a box number, based on the closest street, special building or highway box. This gives the companies en route cross streets for the alarm. If there is also a street address given to the dispatchers, the responding apparatus will get this information in the firehouse, over the air, and via their mobile data terminals (computer aided dispatch – CAD) in the apparatus. At present, there are several thousand physical street boxes in Loudoun County, with many additional special building boxes and highway boxes, as well as "dummy boxes" used for special response assignments. In addition, there are airport crash boxes for Washington Dulles International Airport and other airports. When either box is sounded it brings an automatic second alarm (2-2) response of equipment, along with various special units.

Critical Information Dispatch System edit

Critical Information Dispatch System (CIDS, pronounced "sids") information is transmitted to units in the firehouse and en route is information that is collected on a building during inspections and by public input, which would affect fire-fighting operations. Such things as:

  • warehoused apartments,
  • type and length of line stretch (or hose),
  • number of apartments per floor,
  • unsafe conditions, standpipe conditions, and other information

This information is relayed via dispatcher and MDT while units are en route, allowing incoming units to develop operations plans prior to arriving on scene.

Gallery edit

Affiliations edit

 
Local 3756 Logo

IAFF Local 3756 edit

LCFR career personnel are represented by International Association of Fire Fighters Local 3756. The chapter was chartered in 1997, and now has over 500 members, with representation across all shifts, divisions, battalions, and many ranks.[22]

Virginia Task Force 1 edit

Several members of the LC-CFRS system are also members of Urban Search and Rescue Virginia Task Force 1,[23] a part of the Fairfax County Fire and Rescue Department.[24]

References edit

  1. ^ "– LCFR Headquarters 2010-03-16 at the Wayback Machine." LCFR Website. Retrieved on March 2, 2010.
  2. ^ – LCFR Staffing 2010-03-16 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on March 3, 2010
  3. ^ "– LCFR Chief Johnson Loudoun.gov, Retrieved on May 10, 2018.
  4. ^ "- Loudoun Fire." Loudoun Fire Website. Retrieved on August 27, 2015.
  5. ^ "PHI Air Medical :: National Map". Phiairmedical.com. Retrieved 7 August 2018.
  6. ^ "Fire Engineering::Surviving a Mayday". Fireengineering.com. Retrieved 18 February 2024.
  7. ^ "Civic Alert::Home Explosion". Loudoun.gov. Retrieved 18 February 2024.
  8. ^ – Leesburg fire History 2012-03-04 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on March 3, 2010
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-09-10. Retrieved 2015-08-27.
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-06-04. Retrieved 2010-03-03.
  11. ^ "History - Ashburn Volunteer Fire and Rescue Department". Retrieved 7 August 2018.
  12. ^ "Aldie Volunteer Fire Department, Inc". Aldiefire.org. Retrieved 7 August 2018.
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-04-17. Retrieved 2010-03-03.
  14. ^ Greene, Renss (2019-04-29). "Fire/Rescue Gets Kirkpatrick Station, Lucketts Moves Ahead". Loudoun Now. Retrieved 2019-05-31.
  15. ^ "Lovettsville Volunteer Fire and Rescue - About Us". Lovettsvillevfr.org. Retrieved 7 August 2018.
  16. ^ "The Loudoun County Volunteer Rescue Squad - Leesburg, Virginia - Company 13". Lcvrs.org. Retrieved 7 August 2018.
  17. ^ "Kincora Fire-Rescue Station Construction Begins - Leesburg Today Onli…". Archive.today. 27 January 2013. Archived from the original on 27 January 2013. Retrieved 7 August 2018.
  18. ^ . Archived from the original on 2010-11-30. Retrieved 2010-03-02.
  19. ^ "Kirkpatrick Fire Station Construction Stopped; Contractor Fired". Loudounnow.com. 13 July 2018. Retrieved 7 August 2018.
  20. ^ Greene, Renss (2019-04-29). "Fire/Rescue Gets Kirkpatrick Station, Lucketts Moves Ahead". Loudoun Now. Retrieved 2019-05-31.
  21. ^ ". Archived from the original on 2010-05-27. Retrieved 2010-03-02. – LCFR ECC."
  22. ^ "Career Staffing By Station". Iaff3756.org. Retrieved 7 August 2018.
  23. ^ [1][permanent dead link]
  24. ^ "Virginia Task Force 1 - International Urban Search and Rescue". Vatf1.org. Retrieved 7 August 2018.

External links edit

Official websites
  • Loudoun County official website
  • LC-CFRS official website
  • LCFR Volunteer website
  • IAFF Local 3756
Company websites
  • Aldie Vol. Fire [2]
  • Arcola-Pleasant Valley Vol. Fire [3]
  • Ashburn Vol. Fire & Rescue [4]
  • Hamilton Vol. Fire [5]
  • Hamilton Vol. Rescue [6]
  • Leesburg Vol. Fire [7]
  • Loudoun County Vol. Rescue [8]
  • Lovettsville Vol. Fire & Rescue [9]
  • Middleburg Vol. Fire
  • Neersville Vol. Fire [11][permanent dead link]
  • Philomont Vol. Fire
  • Purcellville Vol. Fire [13]
  • Purcellville Vol. Rescue [14]
  • Round Hill Vol. Fire & Rescue [15]
  • Sterling Vol. Fire [16]
  • Sterling Vol. Rescue [17]
Other
  • Emergency Communications Center Radio Communications Webcast (Windows only) [18]
  • Unofficial LC-CFRS Radio Feed [19]

39°05′N 77°38′W / 39.09°N 77.64°W / 39.09; -77.64

loudoun, county, combined, fire, rescue, system, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, external, links, follow, wikipedia, policies, guidelines. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references August 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Loudoun County Combined Fire and Rescue System news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The Loudoun County Combined Fire Rescue System LC CFRS is made up of the career Loudoun County Fire and Rescue LCFR and 16 volunteer organizations LC CFRS has the responsibility of protecting the citizens and property of the towns villages and suburbs of Loudoun County Virginia United States from fires and fire hazards providing emergency medical services and technical rescue response services including Hazardous Materials mitigation Mass Casualty Incident response services environmental danger response services and more The headquarters and training facilities of the department are in Leesburg off Sycolin Road 1 Loudoun County Fire amp RescueOperational areaCountry United StatesState VirginiaCountyLoudounAgency overviewStaffingCareer amp VolunteerFire chiefKeith JohnsonEMS levelALS BLSIAFF3756MottoTeamwork Integrity Professionalism Service TIPS Facilities and equipmentBattalions3Stations24Engines33Trucks6Tillers2Platforms4Rescues5Ambulances44Tenders15HAZMAT1Light and air2WebsiteOfficial websiteIAFF websiteLC CFRS one of the largest fire departments in Virginia has approximately 1 500 volunteer personnel and 500 career staff that make up its firefighters emergency medical technicians EMT paramedics and other emergency responders 2 LC CFRS uses a combined system to help respond to a diverse population spread throughout a suburban and rural county Units can respond to building types that range from wood frame single family homes to high rise structures bridges and tunnels large parks and wooded areas that can give rise to major brush fires as well as large stretches of forest and mountains such as the Blue Ridge Mountains in addition to metro and bus lines LC CFRS provides care for a very large and diverse area responding from stations scattered strategically throughout the county Contents 1 Organization 1 1 LC CFRS 1 2 Volunteer companies 2 Area served 2 1 Mutual Aid 3 Notable Incidents 4 Fire and rescue stations and apparatus 5 Company station histories 6 Dispatch 6 1 Box numbers 6 2 Critical Information Dispatch System 7 Gallery 8 Affiliations 8 1 IAFF Local 3756 8 2 Virginia Task Force 1 9 References 10 External linksOrganization editLC CFRS uses a combination system with career employees and volunteer members to provide fire rescue and emergency medical services EMS to its citizens Throughout the 1980s and much of the 1990s Loudoun s fire rescue services were provided by volunteers supplemented by career Firefighter Emergency Medical Technicians EMTs Over time increased demand for service coupled with fewer volunteers available during daytime hours necessitated hiring additional career personnel Between Fiscal Year FY 93 and FY09 the number of career personnel has grown from 56 95 Full Time Equivalent Employees FTEs to 504 01 FTEs 4 The volunteer component of the System comprises an estimated 1 476 total volunteers approximately 770 of whom are active either operationally and or administratively Both of these groups see continuous steady growth in terms of numbers and operational members LC CFRS around 2015 began the process of evaluating and potentially restructuring the department s upper management the Fire Rescue Commission a board that oversees the entirety of the department reports to the Chief and the county Board of Supervisors The new structure will eliminate the commission and will replace it with an executive committee made up of several sub committees Presidents Rescue Chiefs and Fire Chiefs committees amongst others that will report to the Chief The Chief will in turn then report to a non fire rescue County Administrator who will report to the BOS In 2015 LCFR instituted billing for EMS transports to hospitals in a soft billing capacity LC CFRS edit At the head of the Loudoun County Combined Fire Rescue System including the career and volunteer personnel that make up the department is Chief Keith Johnson C600 Under Chief Johnson are two Assistant Chiefs and ten Deputy Chiefs six in charge of a branch of the department and four serving as rotating Operations Shift Commanders Additionally serving directly under Chief Johnson is Volunteer Program Manager Karen McQuaid and the department of Professional Standards The Office of Emergency Management used to operate under the Chief of the department before it was moved sometime between 2017 and 2019 to be directly under the County Administrator Tim Hemstreet who the Chief also reports to Chief Keith Johnson assumed command of the department following the retirement of Chief Keith Browner in 2018 Chief Browner in turn assumed command after Chief Joseph E Pozzo left to head Volusia County Fire Services in Volusia County Florida in 2010 In a December 2017 internal memo to department members Chief Brower announced that he would retire effective 4 1 2018 after many decades of public service In February 2018 Assistant Chief Keith Johnson C600B was promoted to Acting Chief of Department and is working with Chief Brower as he begins to phase out of his role with the department A search is currently underway for a replacement chief On 4 1 2018 Chief Brower officially retired and Assistant Chief Johnson became full time Acting Chief while a search for a replacement chief continues In an internal memo on Wednesday May 9 2018 Acting Chief Keith Johnson was confirmed as the Department s new Fire Rescue Chief 3 In a March 2018 Board of Directors meeting a budget was approved that included funding for a new Deputy Chief for Volunteer Services as well as two more Shift Commanders four more EMS Supervisors creating a new EMS 602 position and other ancillary positions EMS602 has been speculated to be placed at Purcellville Public Safety Center Hamilton or Leesburg On 5 9 18 an internal department memo confirmed that starting in late June 2018 the Shift Commander would become a 24 7 role based out of Station 22 and that EMS602 would be out of Station 14 In July 2018 it was announced that Deputy Chief Williams had been promoted to the Assistant Chief role leaving his DC spot to be filled as well as a new DC for Volunteer Services position In Summer 2017 LCFR implemented a Shift Commander position operating 7 days a week from 0600 to 1800 that utilizes two Deputy Chiefs on a rotating schedule These two positions assumed the responsibilities of the old Deputy Chief of Operations position With the addition of two more Shift Commanders in Spring 2018 the position became a 24 7 role These four Deputy Chiefs all rotate being on duty while on duty they are referred to as the Shift Commander with a dispatch callsign of Operations 600 Within LCFR there is a Fire Rescue System Chief two Assistant Chiefs ACs 4 and ten Deputy Chiefs DCs who are each in charge of multiple departments sections programs or endeavors Fire Rescue System Chief radio dispatch ID Chief Keith Johnson C600 The two Assistant Chiefs are responsible for Operations Assistant Chief James Williams AC600 Support Services amp Volunteer Administration Assistant Chief Travis Preau AC600B The ten Deputy Chiefs are responsible for Operations Four Deputy Chiefs rotating under the title of Shift Commander Deputy Chief s Corey Parker Michael Nally Kevin Wright amp Roger Martin O600 O600B Fire Marshal s Office Chief Fire Marshall Micah Kiger FM600 Volunteer Services Deputy Chief Jim Cook DC640 Communications and Support Services Deputy Chief Nicole Pickrell DC650 EMS Deputy Chief Jamie Cooper DC660 Asset Management Deputy Chief Aaron Jacobs DC670 Training Deputy Chief Randall Shank DC690 Medical Director s Office Operational Medical Director Dr John Morgan OMD600 Assistant Operational Medical Director Al Pacifico PA C OMD600B Volunteer companies edit While each volunteer company falls under the Loudoun County Fire and Rescue Department each is largely responsible for its own administration and operation on a day to day basis LCFR provides support for volunteer companies through partial funding training protocols and legal aid While many companies often have the term Department in their name such as Ashburn Volunteer Fire Rescue Department the correct term for these organizations would be Company to distinguish them from the overall department Volunteer and career staff provide the same services and generally share the same standards in training and performance of services In speech the physical building a company runs out of will often be referred to as a station and the organizational entity is often referred to as a company This is to help distinguish between companies that have multiple buildings stations such as Sterling Fire stations 611 618 and 624 and Sterling Rescue stations 615 625 and 635 Ashburn Fire and Rescue stations 606 and 622 Leesburg Fire stations 601 and 620 or mainly career staffed stations such as Lucketts 610 and Philomont 608 which have some volunteer assistance or Kirkpatrick Farms 627 Moorefield 623 Loudoun Heights 626 and Dulles South 619 which are completely career staffed from all other organizations with only a single building which can be as easily referenced as company or station Each volunteer company draws its members primarily from the local community While most volunteers join the company in their area it is not uncommon for some members to run at different companies depending on that individual s schedule interests or personality as well as the membership options offered by the individual company The membership of volunteer companies in the LC CFRS system are usually headed by a Board of Directors BOD Sitting on the board will be members of the community as well as senior officers from the company Under the BOD are the two branches of a volunteer company the Administrative side and the Operations side At the head of each wing are the President and Fire Rescue Chief respectively The President s Administrative side will see to the day to day functioning of the company finances support and paperwork Under the president are usually a vice president secretary treasurer committee directors and a Trial Board The operations wing staff apparatus respond to emergencies train and are largely the public face of a company Under the Fire or Rescue Chief depending on the nature and size of the company there will be an assistant chief deputy chiefs captains lieutenants sergeants engineers crew chiefs also called officers attendants in charge and then the firefighters and EMTs The number and type of officers in a company depends largely on its size with a small company having as few as five operational officers not counting crew chiefs and four administrative officers or as many as fifteen officers in a larger company not including Crew Chiefs For example Purcellville Volunteer Fire Company has one chief one assistant chief two captains and two lieutenants but neither deputy chiefs nor sergeants However Leesburg Volunteer Fire Company has three captains and six lieutenants in addition to other positions From a summer 2017 reorganization approved by Chief Brower career and volunteer officers up to captain are equivalently ranked with career battalion chiefs being equivalent to an individual company chief and career officers higher than battalion chief outranking all volunteer officers Currently with the exception of Purcellville Rescue CO 14 and the stations that maintain 24 7 career staff irrelevant of partial volunteer support such as 8 and 10 every company in LC CFRS is split in some way between career staff during the day 0600 1800 and volunteer staff during the night 1800 0600 with weekend coverage varying depending on company For instance Lovettsville Fire amp Rescue CO 12 maintains 24 7 coverage during the weekend while Purcellville Fire CO 2 continues the career volunteer split shift throughout the entire week including the weekend Sterling Rescue manages three stations two of the stations are staffed by the volunteers 24 7 Station 15 and 25 and the third station is staffed by volunteers evenings and weekends with a cooperative agreement for career staffing during the daytime hours at Station 35 While many stations may have career staffing during the day and volunteer at night this does not preclude volunteers from staffing apparatus and providing services to the community along with the career staff It is also not uncommon for volunteers to come from home or work to staff units if a major incident is dispatched that requires additional apparatus even if it is not the volunteers specific shift This is done to prevent drainage of other resources from other parts of the county While a unit may not be initially in service or dispatched volunteers can come from home after the first out unit has been dispatched to put up or put in service a second or third out unit Area served editThe Loudoun County Fire and Rescue Department helps protects an area as far east as Fairfax County VA west to the Blue Ridge Mountains and Clark County VA north to the Potomac River and Frederick County MD and south past Route 50 to Route 620 Braddock Road and the counties of Fauquier and Prince William VA Mutual Aid edit As a result of the mutual aid agreements in place in by Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments in the Washington Metropolitan Area a standard numbering system was put into place for area fire and rescue departments All units have a 3 4 digit designator with the first digit denoting what agency the unit is from 000 series Washington D C 100 series Arlington County Virginia includes City of Falls Church 200 series City of Alexandria Virginia 300 series Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority includes Reagan National Airport and Dulles International Airport 400 series Fairfax County Virginia includes City of Fairfax 500 series Prince William County Virginia Includes City of Manassas and City of Manassas Park 600 series Loudoun County Virginia 700 series Montgomery County Maryland 800 series Prince George s County Maryland 900 series Frederick County Maryland 1000 series Charles County Maryland 1100 series Fauquier County Virginia 1200 series Culpeper County Virginia 1300 series Warren County VirginiaLoudoun County uses the 600 series designators To reference companies and stations the number of the organization follow a 6 Station 606 for Ashburn Company 612 for Lovettsville and so on To reference specific apparatus the unit is referenced first by type truck ambulance engine etc then by station using the prior 606 or 616 format and then a specific alphanumeric identifier if multiples of the same type run from that company For example the sole engine from Company 4 would always be referred to as Engine 604 the only tanker from Company 12 is Tanker 612 and the lone ambulance at station 626 is Ambulance 626 However since Company 614 has three ambulances they are permanently referred to respectively as Ambulance 614 614B and 614C Previously Loudoun differed from other COG jurisdictions in that units used a numerical form to differentiate between units of the same type as listed above In other jurisdictions apparatus of the same type have an alphabetical marking for identical units Ambulances from the same company would be listed as Ambulance 404A and 404B instead of Ambulance 606 1 as in Loudoun County However in May 2013 Loudoun switched to COG standards for fire vehicles but not rescue vehicles Wagon and Reserve Engine identifiers were retired and replaced with COG compliant identifiers For example Reserve Engine 606 became E606B and Wagon 606 became E606C The identifier for Rescue Engines was changed from ER to the COG compliant RE Jeeps were also redesignated as Brush units All reserve units Reserve Tankers RK Reserve Trucks RT etc were also redesignated as COG compliant LCFR IB 2013 015 In November 2013 EMS vehicles began to follow the COG format In October 2013 it was announced that Loudoun had decided to fully adopt the COG pattern of apparatus designation and that ambulances would be transitioning to the new monikers November 4 Following the recent implementation of COG designations for fire apparatus ambulances and other EMS vehicles will now use the alpha implied bravo charlie etc designations In Summer 2016 the entire Loudoun County public safety system went through a series of technology and CAD upgrades and in the process changed some unit identifiers While still following many COG guidelines many apparatus designations were modified During an emergency that would require a response from multiple agencies dispatchers are quickly able to identify what county or city a particular piece of apparatus came from as well as request additional units from neighboring counties and jurisdictions if their own resources have been exhausted LC CFRS also has mutual aid agreements in place with non COG counties such as Jefferson County West Virginia and Clarke County Virginia Likewise for emergencies that require helicopter pick up for critical patients LC CFRS has agreements with Petroleum Helicopters International PHi Air Medical a national company that has rescue helicopters stationed throughout the D C Metro Area as well as the rest of the United States with the closest one Air Care 3 stationed at Leesburg Airport 5 In March 2018 it was announced that LCFR was seeking a MOU with the Little Fork Volunteer Fire Rescue s Technical Large Animal Rescue Team According to a briefing presented by the Communications Division units from certain divisions generally fall under a set numbering which was slightly modified in summer 2019 The 650 series is assigned to Communications The 660 series is assigned to the Fire Marshal s Office FMO The 670 series is assigned to LCFR Administration The 680 series is assigned to the Office of Emergency Management OEM MC 680 MCI Trailer and to the reserve fleet Rescue 680 ALS 680 The 690 series is assigned to the Training Center and some reserve pieces Engines 690 91 98 99 Truck 690 Other ancillary positions that fall under this special designation are as follows Staffing Lieutenant Operations Aide OAIDE600 Staffing Captain CAP600 Logistics LOG600 Battalion Chief Relief BC604 Battalion Chief Special Operations BC600 and BC600B Battalion Chief Communications BC650 Radio Systems Communications COM651 653 Battalion Chief EMS BC660 Battalion Chief Health amp Safety BC 670 Battalion Chief Facilities BC671 Captains Administrative roles CAP670 672 Apparatus APP670 Battalion Chief Training BC690 Captains Training CAP690 691Per the Virginia Safe Haven Law and emphasized during a significant event in spring of 2013 an open informational bulletin was released by LCFR to remind both the department and the public that all staffed fire and rescue stations were mandated to accept any child less than 14 days that was safely handed over by a parent as opposed to being left at the door providing a defense against abuse or neglect charges Notable Incidents editSeptember 11 2001 Pentagon Terror Attack Like the majority of fire departments in the D C metro area LC CFRS played a part in the response including station back fill and recovery work May 25 2008 Meadowood Ct Fire Mayday Alert event case study used through subsequent training at the Fire Academy 6 February 16 2024 Silver Ridge Dr Explosion Mayday and subsequent LODD event where firefighters responding to an inside gas leak were caught in an explosion Firefighter Trevor Brown of Sterling Volunteer Fire Company was killed in the blast and 10 other firefighters from LC CFRS were injured and hospitalized 7 Fire and rescue stations and apparatus editStation Location Staffing Fire units EMS units Other unitsVolunteer Career Engine Truck Tanker Rescue AmbulanceStation 601 Leesburg Volunteer E T K CC CU HS U BStation 602 Purcellville Day Career Night Volunteer E RE TL K BC B 2 SV CC U NStation 603 Middleburg Career E 2 K A 2 B U MCStation 604 Round Hill Career E RE K A 2 B CV UStation 605 Hamilton Career E RE K B CC UStation 606 Ashburn Day Career Night Volunteer E 3 TL T TT A 3 CC 4 ALS SV N U UTV SCStation 607 Aldie Career E R A B SV U UTV WLStation 608 Philomont Career PE E K B SV CC LA AUStation 609 Arcola Day Career Night Volunteer E 3 K A 3 B 2 ALS CC SV SU 2 U UTV 2 NStation 610 Lucketts Career E K A B 2 Z 2 SWT CV UStation 611 Sterling Park Day Career Night Volunteer E 2 CU B SV CC NStation 612 Lovettsville Day Career Night Volunteer E 2 K A 2 CV B U ALSStation 613 Leesburg Day Career Night Volunteer A 6 Y ALS CC UTV SV SWT U Z CUStation 614 Purcellville Volunteer A 3 EM602 CV ALS 2 MC N 2 CH UTVStation 615 Sterling Park Day Career Night Volunteer A 3 ALS U Y CC Z UTV SWTStation 617 Hamilton Day Career Night Volunteer R A 3 CC 2 CV 1 ALS601 U UTV 2 Station 618 Cascades Day Career Night Volunteer E 2 TL CC SV NStation 619 Dulles South Riding Career E TL A 1 BC H HS DEStation 620 Leesburg Day Career Night Volunteer E TT K R CC HS BStation 621 Mount Weather Career E T A 2 B HS SU 3 CC 2 UTVStation 622 Lansdowne Day Career Night Volunteer E 2 A 2 SO601 OStation 623 Moorefield Career E A 2 MAB EM601Station 624 Kincora Career E Q BCStation 625 Cascades Volunteer TR A 3 AL SV 2 Z 2 Y ST 3 SWT NStation 626 Loudoun Heights Career PE K A BStation 627 Kirkpatrick Farms Career PE K AStation 628 F Leesburg SouthStation 635 Kincora Day Career Night Volunteer R A 2 AL U ST Y MC615Station 690 699 LCFR Headquarters amp Training Center Career E 4 T K R A 4 BC604 BU699 EM CC 4 SO 2 CD OP ST 8 V 4 U680 R680 UTV 3 Red Rum Warehouse Red Rum Drive Ashburn Career E A 2 LUOffice of Emergency Management OEM LCFR Headquarters Career CP680 OE 6 MC UTV 5 ULCFR Headquarters 801 Sycolin Rd Career C600 AC600 AC600B OMD600Fire Marshal s Office FMO Station 9 Career FM 14 BD 2 FMTInova Loudoun Hospital Lansdowne Ashburn DE600Unit types This key attempts to duplicate the terminology used for dispatch however there are some unique identifiers used here that are not used operationally in the county Not every key below is included in the unit list above as there can be overlap such as when a Chief is running a Command unit Number of unitsA Ambulance ALS ALS Chase AU Mobile Air UnitB Brush Jeep BC Battalion Chief BD Bomb Disposal FMO BU Bus BS Boat SupportC Chief CC Command Chase CD Chief of Department CU Canteen Unit CN Captain CP Command Post CV Chase Vehicle BLS ALS DC Deputy Chief DE Decon Trailer DO Duty OfficerE Engine EM EMS SupervisorFM Fire MarshalH HazMat Unit HS HazMat SupportJS Jet SkiK TankerLA Light Air Unit LU Logistics UnitMAB Mobile Ambulance Bus MCI Mass Casualty Incident Trailer MC Mass Casualty Support UnitN Chaplain Individuals not vehicles NC Chaplain Chase vehicleOE Office of Emergency Management individuals OMD Operational Medical Director O Deputy Chief of Operations 600PIO Public Information Officer PE Paramedic EngineQ QuintR Heavy Rescue RE Rescue EngineSC Shift Commander SV SERV SO Safety Officer ST Support Trailer trailer with specific equipment such as HM or MCI SU Support Unit SWT Swift Water TeamT Truck TT Tiller TL Tower Ladder TR Technical RescueU Utility UTV All Terrain Utility Vehicle Gator Polaris etc V VanWL Wild Land unitY Bike TeamZ Zodiac Water Unit boat etc Note after May 13 2013 Wagon and Reserve Engine identifiers were retired and replaced with COG compliant identifiers For example RE606 became E606B and W606 became E606C The identifier for Rescue Engines was changed from ER to the COG complaint RE Jeeps were also re designated as Brush units All reserve units Reserve Tankers RK Reserve Trucks RT etc were also re designated as COG compliant LCFR IB 2013 015 On November 4 2013 all county EMS units began using the COG compliant identifiers The 4th number in the old identifier is replaced with the corresponding letter of the alphabet except for 1 which has no letter A613 1 is now A613 A613 2 is A613B A613 3 is A613C etc F Future Planned Station UC Under Construction Future UnitNote Under LC CFRS procedures some trucks towers and rescue engines can operate as medium rescues or squads as needed assuming certain staffing and equipment requirements are met This is to help offset the limited number of heavy rescue apparatus Examples of apparatus capable of this would be Trucks 601 606 and 620 and Rescue Engines 602 and 609 Company station histories editLeesburg Fire Companies 1 amp 20 The Big House amp The Pride of Old Town 8 Leesburg Volunteer Fire Company was formed on November 15 1803 and occupies two locations in Leesburg Station 1 is located at 215 W Loudoun Street and houses support units and retired apparatus for LVFC as well as houses the live in members Station 20 is the predominantly active arm of LVFC and runs out of the station located on Plaza Street next to the Leesburg Police station However unit numbering is not totally indicative of station for instance the tiller stationed at 20 was long called Truck 601 however due to the new backup truck that was purchased now using that designation it is now called Truck 620 While some Leesburg units are numbered from Station 1 many are still located at Station 20 LVFC has announced plans to the Fire amp Rescue Commission to remodel the old Station 1 and to return it to active service instead of using it as a holding facility instead of building a brand new Station 1 Currently minimal operations occur out of Station 1 and it is primarily used for storage It is unclear how the proposed opening of a South Leesburg station will affect LVFC and operations out of Station 1 whether LVFC will continue to run minimal operations out of the space it will be closed or expanded use will be found Company 1 20 is complemented by LCFR career staffing during day shift 0600 1800 Leesburg s tanker is unique in that it has the capacity to run as an engine all the other tankers in LC CFRS are limited to their tanker role Tankers are easy to distinguish in Loudoun but Co 1 20 s tanker has the appearance of an engine though much taller In August 2015 Rescue 613 was relinquished by Loudoun Volunteer Rescue Squad and reassigned to Station 20 as Rescue 620 to be operated 24 7 by career personnel Purcellville Public Safety Center Purcellville Fire Company 2 The Deuce The Purcellville Volunteer Fire Company nicknamed The Deuce was formed in the early 20th century At the time two hand drawn chemical wagons were placed in service In 1923 PVFD received its charter and the era of motorized fire apparatus began PVFC recently moved into a new station on the north end of Purcellville with PVRS Co 14 Company 2 has two alternating shifts of LCFR career staff A and B shift during the day from 0600 to 1800 hrs and six volunteer crews at night from 1800 to 0600 Station 2 also houses Battalion Chief 602 BC 602 is set to receive a new buggy within the coming months While the unit will reflect the new color scheme for county vehicles the unit will be a departure from all other chase vehicles in that instead of a Tahoe style body a small pickup with a covered bed will be used potentially to reflect the more rural nature of the 2nd Battalion PVFC is currently in the process of planning and ordering a brand new Tower to replace the current TL602 Middleburg Fire and Rescue Company 3 The Fightin Foxes DISBANDED LCFR Middleburg Station 3When the Middleburg Volunteer Fire Department was incorporated in 1936 it had one fire truck and covered the Route 50 corridor from the top of Paris Mountain to Chantilly In the early 1950s Co 3 was given an ambulance and initiated emergency medical care becoming fire and rescue Relations between career amp volunteers become strained in 2010 but career staff have recently returned to CO 3 staffing the station 24 7 Station 3 was remodeled after the bay roof collapsed in the winter storms of 2010 11 In Summer 2015 Middleburg Volunteer Fire Rescue disbanded and is no longer an organization having sold all of its equipment and property to the county or other entities LCFR Career personnel will now operate out of Station 3 but will continue to use the Middleburg Volunteer Fire Rescue name for the short term as a gesture of respect to the former volunteers 9 Round Hill Fire and Rescue Company 4 The Fearless Fourth The Round Hill Fire Department was started in the early 20th century Its equipment consisted of a hand pulled cart carrying several lengths of hose The first fire alarm was sounded by clanging a big iron bell In 1938 the Round Hill Volunteer Fire Dept was formally organized The first piece of equipment purchased was a used truck that had a water tank and pump mounted on it Next a siren and fire extinguishers were added In 1949 the first ambulance was purchased Round Hill relies largely on 24 7 career staff now with some volunteers at nights weekends amp for events Hamilton Fire Company 5 The Nickel amp The Fighting Fifth 10 The Hamilton Volunteer Fire Department held its first organized meeting in July 1944 and a year later purchased its first fire truck In January 1946 it moved into its firehouse which with remodeling and additions is still in use HVFD has an attack pumper a pumper tanker a brush truck and a light and air unit It has a BLS non transport license to provide EMS assistance and over a dozen of its average of 30 active members are qualified 1st Responders or EMTs In 2000 HVFD and the Hamilton Volunteer Rescue Squad together purchased 10 acres 40 000 m2 of land to build the Hamilton Public Safety Center where both companies are housed Many Company 5 personnel run with HVRS or help staff Rescue 617 ALS 601 a career unit is also housed at station 5 17 in addition to career staffing during weekdays from 0600 to 1800 hrs In October 2013 HVFC requested immediate 7 12 career support meaning that county staff would run 7 nights week instead of the prior 5 with 24 7 support requested as soon as possible Additionally in October ALS 601 that had been running out of Station 17 along with a career ambulance during the day instituted a new policy where the ALS providers for ALS 601 will cross staff a medic unit This means that if an ALS call goes out in Hamilton s first due Medic 617 will take the call but if it is outside of Hamilton s first due ALS 601 will take the call placing M617 out of service In May 2014 HVFC requested immediate emergency staffing due to an inadequate number of volunteers which LCFR fulfilled This means that HVFC is now staffed 24 7 by LCFR personnel with some assistance from HVFC Ashburn Fire and Rescue Companies 6 amp 22 The Swarm amp The Rt 7 Express 11 nbsp Logo of the Ashburn Volunteer Fire Rescue Department The Ashburn Volunteer Fire Department was started in 1947 after the tragic deaths of three children in a house fire It was officially established in 1948 and its first piece of equipment was a 1927 American LaFrance pumper The station was built in 1950 with expansions in 1963 and 1993 In 1991 Ashburn Volunteer Fire Department expanded its services and added its first ambulance In 1996 it officially became the Ashburn Volunteer Fire Rescue Department In 2010 Station 22 Landsdowne was opened AVF amp R is supplemented by career staffing 7 days a week from 0600 to 1800 Station 22 also houses Safety Officer 600 since BC 601 moved to Station 24 35 in January 2014 and Station 6 houses a 24 7 career medic unit AVFRD currently has plans and blueprints to renovate the original station 6 building The plan currently calls for the existing station to be torn down leaving the banquet hall Founder s Hall standing and creating a new building on the old ground Additionally the company has plans to completely upgrade its fleet with a potential new color scheme The process of upgrading the fleet began in early 2014 with the order of two brand new Ferrara fire engines which will potentially highlight the possible new company color scheme of black and yellow Additionally plans are in place for the order of two new ambulances and the replacement of T606 with a Tiller truck In late January 2014 it was announced that Engine 606C the old Wagon would be decommissioned and was removed from service at the beginning of February On March 3 2014 it was announced that the Chaplain chase vehicle had been sold to a member of the company would have its emergency equipment removed and the unit would be taken out of service In early 2014 Safety 600 which had recently been replaced by a new SUV of apparatus similar to the BC vehicles was replaced with a pick up truck with a covered bed though still using the new color scheme In May 2014 construction of temporary facilities on Station 6 property began with expected demolition of the current facility and then groundbreaking for the new building to happen in June The new station became operational in March 2016 In Summer 2017 AVFRD took delivery of a brand new Tiller to replace the company s Truck unit The unit is currently going through outfitting to go in service Additionally in 2017 AVFRD replaced all five ambulances and put in service an ATV unit to be used on the W amp OD trail and for public events In May 2018 it was confirmed that the Shift Commander would begin running out of Station 22 over the summer At the end of June 2018 OP600 started running out of station 22 On Wednesday 6 27 18 TT606 went in service operationally and ran its first calls In July 2018 an internal memo was released stating that the Safety Officer 600 designation would be changed to instead reflect the Battalion that the unit operated in Because of this SO600 was renamed to SO601 this may be in anticipation of additional Safety Officer s being added to operations Aldie Fire and Rescue Company 7 12 The Aldie Volunteer Fire Department was established in 1955 and its first piece of fire apparatus a used 1948 GMP fire engine was purchased for 5 500 In 1956 Co 7 purchased its first station which was formerly a garage and service station and bought a 1939 Ford fire engine In 1971 Co 7 built a new station on the same property as the old fire station In 2010 CO 7 began operation of a county owned heavy rescue vehicle Formerly Rescue 603 Rescue 607 was repainted amp re equipped to be sent to Aldie In 2012 Aldie received a brand new heavy rescue vehicle from Pierce Manufacturing When that unit arrived now designated Rescue 607 and in service the old Rescue 607 was returned to the county for refurbishing and is now stationed as the first county reserve rescue Rescue 680 at the Training Center AVF amp R is in the process of trying to find ground on which to build a new Station 7 Aldie has career staff supplementation 24 7 Company 7 is earmarked to receive a new engine in 2013 Aldie received a new ambulance in January 2014 In November 2017 the county announced plans to demolish several nearby buildings to make way for the new Aldie station but this plan has been met with objection from many local residents who believe that it would significantly change the face of the village of Aldie and possibly be detrimental to the area s historic character While design work continues for the site in question the Board of Supervisors is currently trying to locate an alternate site for the new station In April 2019 Station 7 received a new gator unit Philomont Fire Company 8The Philomont Volunteer Fire Department was organized in 1955 and was equipped with a used pumper and tanker provided by other fire stations In 1956 PVFC got its first new pumper and in 1968 it bought a 1 500 gallon tanker In 1975 and 1994 two expansions were added to the station adding a meeting hall and providing a total of seven bays to house the apparatus Philomont relies largely on career staff now with some volunteers Unlike many modern stations Station 8 is a two story building with bays and offices on the ground floor and kitchens bunking and community rooms on the second Such a layout is shared with Station 4 Station 10 and to some degree by Station 11 18 PVFC is run primarily by LCFR staffing 24 7 with several volunteers PVFC is the only station in LCFR to operate two tankers as well as the only one that still uses a house siren to alert volunteers Additionally PVFC is the only fire company that owns and operates a volunteer chase medic ALS 608 In September 2012 CO 8 received a brand new brush unit In 2017 the company took over the utilization of the MAU the wildland unit was placed permanently out of service due to an accident and ALS 608 was placed permanently out of service In February 2018 the Ladies Auxiliary retired and with just four active volunteers remaining it is likely Company 8 will disband and turn completely over to the county before the end of 2018 In the summer of 2019 Engine 608 was upgraded to have ALS capabilities and could be staffed as a Paramedic Engine identical to PE626 and 627 Arcola Fire and Rescue Company 9 13 The Arcola Volunteer Fire Department was formed in 1957 formerly and alternatively known as Arcola Pleasant Valley Volunteer Fire Rescue Department A station was built and its first piece of fire equipment a 1 250 gal Tanker truck was purchased through the Civil Defense for 75 00 In the 1960s the first ambulance was put in service and the Ladies Auxiliary was formed During Hurricane Agnes in the 1970s 200 people were sheltered and fed at Station 9 The 1980s and 1990s saw an addition built onto the station and a recruitment program was started to help prepare for future growth On September 29 2011 ground was broken for the new Brambleton Public Safety Center which will house career volunteer staffing from CO 9 as well as the headquarters for the Loudoun County Fire Marshal s Office In November 2013 the FMO moved all of its apparatus and operational staff to the new Station 9 building AVFD is staffed 6am 6pm 7 days a week by LCFR career staff AVFD expects fire rescue operations to commence from the new station 9 in April 2014 On April 3 2014 AVFD received a brand new Tanker which has a unique cab compared to the rest of county tankers it was sold 1 2 years later after continued mechanical issues In 2017 the station received the tanker transfer from station 623 Lucketts Fire amp Rescue Company 10 The Nuthouse The Lucketts Volunteer Fire Department was established in 1960 with one fire truck and a two bay firehouse A few members of the community recognized the need to start a local fire company and prior to the company s establishment a fire truck was purchased and kept at a local farm Dispatch called the Chief s home and his wife called local members by phone to tell them of an emergency The fire truck was brought to the scene while members were en route Today Lucketts original firehouse provides seven bays to house its apparatus Lucketts is career staffed 24 7 Station 10 is home of the LCFR Swiftwater team as there is easy access to the Potomac River and White s Ferry Station 10 is primarily LCFR career staffed with little volunteer assistance Lucketts received a new engine in 2014 Lucketts is the home of the county s career staffed Swift Water Rescue team Station 10 will be going through remodeling or will have a brand new station built in the near future and the county is currently looking at land parcels and will be accepting bids sometime in 2019 14 Sterling Volunteer Fire Company Companies 11 18 amp 24 nbsp Logo of the Sterling Volunteer Fire Company The Sterling Park Volunteer Fire Department started in 1966 with two old used pumpers and a tanker in a barn on Holly Ave By 1998 they had become the Sterling Volunteer Fire Company and expanded to two stations The station in Sterling Park Station 11 is shared with the Sterling Volunteer Rescue Squad as Station 15 and houses an engine ladder tower and a canteen unit A second station Station 18 also SVRS Station 25 was built in Sugarland Run and housed a single engine Construction of a new Station 18 and 25 in Cascades was completed in 1997 The Cascades station houses an engine and tanker The old station 18 is used by the Loudoun County Sheriff s Office On Saturday Nov 9th 2013 Station 24 also SVRS Station 35 officially opened along Route 28 near the Dulles Town Center The station houses an engine quint and Battalion Chief 601 Stations 11 and 18 are career staffed daily from 6 am 6 pm and volunteer staffed from 6 pm 6 am Station 24 has 24 7 career staffing supplemented by volunteers In the 2020 County Budget additional staffing was proposed to move to a 7 12 career schedule at Stations 11 and 18 and to add an additional career member to the 24 7 staffing at Station 24 Lovettsville Fire amp Rescue Company 12 15 The Border Patrol The Lovettsville Rescue Squad received its charter in 1966 In 1967 a fire company was begun and combined with the rescue squad to form one company in 1968 The current building was erected in 1974 and has had two subsequent additions built It has split operations between career and volunteers with career staffing during weekdays from 0600 to 1800 LVFR recently received a brand new Wagon to replace their older model Wagon 612 LVF amp R hopes to begin construction of a new station within the next few years Loudoun County Volunteer Rescue Squad Leesburg Company 13 16 On September 12 1952 12 men throughout the county started the first rescue squad in Loudoun County the Loudoun County Volunteer Rescue Squad Until funds could be raised to purchase their own vehicle Albert Laycock donated his Ford Ranch Wagon for their first response unit The first official squad vehicle purchased was a 51 Chevrolet truck with a utility bed made to carry patients Over the years units were housed in Purcellville Hamilton and Leesburg until other squads could be formed The squad building on Catoctin Circle was constructed in 1975 One paramedic unit from Company 13 receives career supplementation during the day from 0600 to 1800 and one paramedic unit is staffed 24 7 by career personnel In August 2015 due to long staffing problems LCVRS relinquished their Heavy Rescue Squad which will be reassigned to Station 20 and operated 24 7 by career personnel Purcellville Public Safety Center Purcellville Volunteer Rescue Squad Company 14 The Mainstreet Medics nbsp Ambulance 614 2 responding to a call during the February 5 6 2010 blizzardThe Purcellville Volunteer Rescue Squad has been in existence since 1969 PVRS currently boasts three ambulances a Basic Life Support chase vehicle similar in function to a SERV an Advanced Life Support chase vehicle and a second ALS chase vehicle on loan from the county ALS 680 CO 14 is also the home of the Mass Casualty Support Unit on loan from LCFR note the text on the vehicle s side reads Medical Care Support Unit though it is still referenced amp dispatched as the Mass Casualty Support Unit Having moved into a brand new facility in the summer of 2009 shared with PVFC CO 2 PVRS maintains an all volunteer rescue squad and is the only fire or rescue company in LC CFRS to maintain 24 7 volunteer staffing In 2012 ALS 690 was stationed at PVRS for company ALS use but was then shortly replaced by ALS 680 which reflected the new county paint scheme for smaller vehicles and following the new county policy of using the 680 series of designators for county reserve units PVRS received ALS 680 on Friday 3 1 2013 a larger ALS chase than ALS 690 which exemplified the new county color scheme for chase vehicles of base red with tan and white striping and yellow red chevrons on the back of the vehicle This piece is used by the ALS volunteers of PVRS and as a replacement when needed for ALS 601 by career staff As of October 2014 ALS 680 is no longer stationed at company 14 On April 2 2014 PVRS received a brand new ambulance to replace A614 the oldest unit with that company This ambulance is similar to A614 B and is the first Purcellville owned unit as opposed to MSCU 614 to reflect the recent county FRG that all new apparatus must have chevrons In Summer 2015 PVRS received a brand new ALS chase unit to supplement their existing ALS chase In May 2018 it was confirmed that the new EMS602 would begin operations of Station 14 over the summer This will be the first 24 7 career staffed unit out of this station EMS602 went into service at the end of June 2018 There is additionally discussion to relocate MSCU614 to another station nbsp Brand new Ambulance 614 2 at the Purcellville Public Safety CenterSterling Volunteer Rescue Squad Companies 15 25 amp 35Founded in 1964 the Sterling Volunteer Rescue Squad was created as a Jaycees project in a newly developed planned community in Eastern Loudoun County following a tragic pedestrian accident in which bystanders had to wait for an ambulance from Loudoun Rescue which was then headquartered in Hamilton Virginia The first station was co located with the Library in the 200 block of N Sterling Blvd in 1968 a crash truck was purchased under a highway safety grant that unit Sterling 1 was housed at the Shell gas station in Sterling Park A year earlier the membership of Sterling Rescue would be active in forming the Sterling Vol Fire Company In the early 1970s both Sterling Rescue and the Sterling Fire Company would work together to build its first station to house both organizations in Sterling Park Both organizations continue to be independent corporations co located in the same stations Later that same decade Sterling Rescue would be instrumental in implementing Advance Life Support care within the Loudoun County system Recognizing response delays and an increasing call volume in the communities north of Route 7 now known as Potomac Falls members living in that area would respond to emergencies in an old ambulance parked in their driveway Later a substation was built to provide an area to garage the ambulance in the Sugarland community In December 1997 the substation was replaced with a larger station which was built in the Cascades community The Sugarland facility still remains but is used for the storage of equipment and supplies houses the department s Special Events Team and is used by the Loudoun County Sheriff s Office for their community policing activities Sterling Rescue provides both emergency medical care and transport ALS BLS and rescue operations throughout Eastern Loudoun County and the region Sterling Rescue is home of one of Virginia s Office of EMS s Disaster Task Force NOVA TF 8 which has been deployed on several events throughout the Commonwealth Sterling Rescue has received recognition for its contributions by the Loudoun County government Northern Virginia EMS Council Virginia Office of EMS recipient of the 1999 Governor s Award for Agency of the Year and EMS Magazine s 2006 Best Volunteer EMS Agency In 2012 Sterling Rescue had over 7100 responses and its 200 volunteer members staffing both stations provided over 121 000 hours of time to the community To meet an ever increasing demand on services plans are underway for the construction of a third station along Rt 28 in the area of Dulles Towncenter Mall and it is expected to be open in 2013 Ground was broken for the new station in Kincora on Route 28 7 on March 1 2012 17 On May 29 2013 SVRS unveiled its new Medical Care Support Unit a medical supply truck in the vein of the MCSU operated by PVRS The MSU is a 2005 E450 box truck which was a delivery truck before being purchased by SVRS and re outfitted The unit is labeled as MSU 615 in the field On Saturday November 9 2013 Station 24 35 officially opened housing two ambulances a utility truck the MSU and a bike team The opening of the station marks a new era in the history of SVRS as LCFR career personnel will begin operating SVRS vehicles for the first time only at station 35 on a 7 12 basis 6 am 6 pm This means that SVRS will no longer be 100 volunteer operated even though the majority of their operations for the time being remain volunteer and all vehicles company owned leaving only Purcellville Rescue as the only 100 volunteer company in the county The 2020 County Budget including proposals for 7 12 career staffing for Rescue 615 which would be transferred to Station 24 35 and re labeled to Rescue 635 This would make R635 the second most staffed rescue in the county next to R620 as R607 and R617 are not fully staffed but are cross staffed Neersville Fire amp Rescue Company 16 The Outpost DISBANDED LCFR Loudoun Heights Station 26Neersville Volunteer Fire and Rescue began in 1976 as a sub station of Round Hill It housed a borrowed ambulance in a neighbor s driveway until the community members built its community building to house the ambulance Two years later it became the Neersville Volunteer Rescue Squad and in July 1979 it became Neersville Volunteer Fire and Rescue Company Neersville relies primarily on 24 7 career staff now with very few volunteers Neersville has recently had difficulty maintaining volunteer support to the extent that the company lost its license to carry patients as a volunteer company However with an incremental increase in membership the company is petitioning to rejoin the county system and rebuild itself Neersville remains in need of volunteers Construction of a new Western Loudoun station to replace Station 16 which is in significant need of repair has begun there are concerns that the construction of this new building will force out Neersville Fire amp Rescue the smallest volunteer fire and rescue organization within LC CFRS leading to their cessation as an organization On February 6 2013 the Loudoun County Board of Supervisors voted to revoke Neersville Volunteer Fire amp Rescue s charter following a long history of contention between the two organizations and a recommendation to dissolve the company by a Government Reform Commission This has been reported to be a controversial decision as proponents state that adequate research was done while company and area volunteers state they were never consulted for a fair decision The effects of this vote will reportedly take a while to finalize as several of the vehicles and property are still held by NVFR though it is believed that not only will the company s charter be revoked but the company number will not be used in the future In 2013 the company s charter was revoked disbanding Company 16 leaving matters of company owned apparatus and privately held finances to be finalized Operations will be continued by LCFR As LCFR is constructing a new station the area of Neersville will be covered by the Western Loudoun station provided by 24 7 career staffing only Neersville will be receiving a new tanker and a new brush truck sometime in 2013 with the engine up for replacement as well The county received the new tanker that will replace Tanker 616 However it is being held until the new station at Loudoun Heights is operational at which time Neersville 16 will be retired and operations will be conducted under Loudoun Heights 26 which the tanker reflects Loudoun Heights is receiving a new brush ambulance and tanker in 2014 In 2015 Loudoun Heights Station 26 became operational In Fall 2017 the county completed a 2 year pilot study on the utilization of a Paramedic Engine the county s first such program the pilot was deemed a success and PE626 will be a permanent unit Hamilton Rescue Company 17 18 Establishing its roots in 1952 as Loudoun County s first rescue squad the members of the Hamilton community were volunteering their time and skills long before Station 17 was renamed in 1979 The Hamilton Volunteer Rescue Squad serves the town of Hamilton and its surrounding areas including Paeonian Springs and Waterford and are the second due units in Purcellville and Leesburg In addition to BLS amp ALS operations Company 17 also utilizes a boat unit a heavy rescue unit Rescue 617 and a bike team These specialty units are staffed primarily by the HVRS Special Operations Division Company 17 is supplemented by career staffing during the day who also operate the county chase unit ALS601 career personnel put in service a medic unit which operates within the first due or as the ALS chase for non first due calls Hamilton received a new ambulance in October 2013 A617C which being county owned deviates from the green color scheme of HVRS and is red following county colors A617C is the primary response unit when LCFR Career Staff are on duty A617 and A617B are owned and primarily operated by the volunteers of Hamilton Rescue HVRS also received a Utility unit in late December 2013 also to be operated by the HVRS Special Operations In a March 2018 inter department memo it was announced that HVRS had decommissioned its swiftwater rescue team LCFR Dulles South Public Safety Center Station 19 The Big Top Constructed by the county it houses both Fire Rescue and a Sheriff s substation It began operation on May 7 2007 with a grand opening in June 2007 The station is staffed 24 7 by LCFR staff with no volunteer participation The county Hazardous Materials response team which includes a large primary response unit and multiple support units and trailers is stationed here Station 19 received a new engine in the spring of 2013 As of 2017 the haz mat team is in the process of planning out the purchase of replacement vehicles Station 19 is expecting delivery a brand new HazMat unit and a hazmat support unit in Spring 2018 Mt Weather Fire and Rescue Company 21Maintained by all career staff this company watches over the Mt Weather area in the Blue Ridge Mountains and the Federal Emergency Management Agency s Mount Weather Emergency Operations Center Company 21 is only considered a LC CFRS company for operational planning purposes as the staffing is maintained by FEMA To respond to mutual aid calls the units must be released by FEMA prior to response Used primarily by LC CFRS for station fills in the western end of the county such as Purcellville or Round Hill Likewise some LC CFRS units can be used to staff Mt Weather however visiting units are primarily confined to the fire station and are chaperoned at all times Mt Weather received a brand new engine in June 2014 LCFR Moorefield Station 23 The Warehouse Rats Originally the second Ashburn station Loudoun County took over when Ashburn Fire amp Rescue moved into the new Landsdowne station 22 Originally stationed at the Red Rum Drive warehouse facility LCFR opened a brand new station 23 in Moorefield in August 2011 It is the second all career station in the county This station housed several specialty apparatus including the Mobile Air Unit used for SCBA cylinder refilling on significant incidents and the ambulance bus Moorefield received a second Ambulance in 2014 In 2016 2017 the MAU was transferred to Station 608 In 2017 the Tanker was transferred to Station 609 The station is currently the home of an engine medic ambulance MAB and EMS Supervisor LCFR Kirkpatrick Farms Station 27Construction is currently ongoing for the county s newest station in the Kirkpatrick Farms area south of Rt 50 The station is scheduled to open in Spring 2018 and will have a Paramedic Engine the county s 2nd Tanker and Ambulance An internal memo in Spring 2018 stated that after completion of a pilot Advanced EMT Program Station 27 would be the first in the region to utilize the entry level ALS certification In July 2018 Loudoun County announced that construction on Station 27 had been halted and that the contractor had been fired due to delays despite the facility being 90 complete The county announced that it would be working to hire a new contractor but that the facility was now not scheduled to be open until the end of 2019 despite an original March 2018 scheduled opening The County stated that the 35 operational staff who were scheduled to be assigned there including new hires would be assigned to other staffing holes within the county until the station opens 19 In April 2019 construction finished and the county assumed possession of the facility and grounds in order to begin moving in equipment with no go live date as of yet announced 20 LCFR Leesburg South Station 28Station 28 is a planned station that is under development tentatively titled Leesburg South It is uncertain at this time whether this will be career staffed station or mixed career and volunteer Plans for location and apparatus to be stationed there are still under discussion Loudoun County Training Center Leesburg Station 90 99 amp Red Rum Drive Warehouse nbsp LCFR Training Center 690The Training Center for LC CFRS nicknamed The Rock This facility has many classrooms and lecture halls the High Bay houses the Rock s gym and several apparatus and encompasses a four story building for training and the Burn and Extrication Pads for training Many training amp reserve apparatus such as Engines 690 91 98 99 Truck 690 and multiple ambulances are stationed here when not in the field running as a reserve unit Additionally several career vehicles are stationed here such as senior officer s chase vehicles reserve BC Safety Officer EMS Supervisor chase vehicles Bus 690 for training events and more Additionally new units often come through the Rock for outfitting before being transferred to their home station Reserve Rescue 680 alternates being stationed between here and the Warehouse There are many reserve and field units that are stationed at either headquarters or Red Rum and as the units are rotated in and out of the field it can be very difficult to keep track of the complete roster of units LC CFRS also maintains additional apparatus and equipment storage at the Red Rum Drive Warehouse in Ashburn VA The warehouse is now the home for many reserve specialty and FMO apparatus as well as fleet maintenance operations LC CFRS Training Center is across the road from the Leesburg Airport between the National Guard Armory and the Adult Detention Center of the Loudoun County Sheriff s Office After a recent move there are additional department offices just north of the airport which will become the home of many LCFR management including the ECC ostensibly leaving the entirety of the current training center for only training as opposed to combined headquarters and training In 2015 discussions began about the possibility of installing a small station at the training center primarily to house senior level operations personnel and some specialty apparatus though not to replace the proposed Leesburg South station Dispatch editThe Loudoun County Emergency Communications Center serves as the county s public safety answering point for fire rescue and police incidents using the county s Enhanced 911 E 911 system The center operates 24 hours a day Emergency and non emergency fire and rescue calls are processed and police related calls are transferred to the appropriate law enforcement agency Each shift includes workers who are certified in various aspects of emergency medical dispatch and who meet the standards set by the national Association of Public Communications Officers 21 When a member of the public dials 911 they speak with an LCFR 911 operator who assigns the call to where it needs to go based on the information provided If it is police related the information is sent to the Loudoun County Sheriff Office radio dispatcher for the precinct or special unit concerned or to local Police Departments If it is near a major airport the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority is notified If it is a fire hazmat rescue or EMS incident the LCFR 911 operator will directly dispatch the call information to the appropriate unitsBox numbers edit Each address in the city is assigned a box number based on the closest street special building or highway box This gives the companies en route cross streets for the alarm If there is also a street address given to the dispatchers the responding apparatus will get this information in the firehouse over the air and via their mobile data terminals computer aided dispatch CAD in the apparatus At present there are several thousand physical street boxes in Loudoun County with many additional special building boxes and highway boxes as well as dummy boxes used for special response assignments In addition there are airport crash boxes for Washington Dulles International Airport and other airports When either box is sounded it brings an automatic second alarm 2 2 response of equipment along with various special units Critical Information Dispatch System edit Critical Information Dispatch System CIDS pronounced sids information is transmitted to units in the firehouse and en route is information that is collected on a building during inspections and by public input which would affect fire fighting operations Such things as warehoused apartments type and length of line stretch or hose number of apartments per floor unsafe conditions standpipe conditions and other informationThis information is relayed via dispatcher and MDT while units are en route allowing incoming units to develop operations plans prior to arriving on scene Gallery edit nbsp Old Ambulance 623 2 Ashburn prior to transfer to Station 22 and COG unit name changes nbsp Old Reserve Engine 623 Ashburn prior to transfer to Station 22 and COG unit name changes nbsp Ambulance 614C Purcellville nbsp Ambulance 614B Purcellville nbsp LCFR HazMat 619 Dulles South prior to repainting nbsp North side of the High Bay at the Training Center nbsp Tower 602 amp Truck 690 perform a flag arch nbsp MCSU 614 Purcellville nbsp Volunteer Fireschool drills at the Burn Building nbsp Reserve Rescue 680 nbsp Prior Battalion Chief 601 vehicle nbsp Prior Safety Officer 600 vehicle nbsp Ambulance 613C LeesburgAffiliations edit nbsp Local 3756 LogoIAFF Local 3756 edit LCFR career personnel are represented by International Association of Fire Fighters Local 3756 The chapter was chartered in 1997 and now has over 500 members with representation across all shifts divisions battalions and many ranks 22 Virginia Task Force 1 edit Several members of the LC CFRS system are also members of Urban Search and Rescue Virginia Task Force 1 23 a part of the Fairfax County Fire and Rescue Department 24 References edit LCFR Headquarters Archived 2010 03 16 at the Wayback Machine LCFR Website Retrieved on March 2 2010 LCFR Staffing Archived 2010 03 16 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on March 3 2010 LCFR Chief Johnson Loudoun gov Retrieved on May 10 2018 Loudoun Fire Loudoun Fire Website Retrieved on August 27 2015 PHI Air Medical National Map Phiairmedical com Retrieved 7 August 2018 Fire Engineering Surviving a Mayday Fireengineering com Retrieved 18 February 2024 Civic Alert Home Explosion Loudoun gov Retrieved 18 February 2024 Leesburg fire History Archived 2012 03 04 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on March 3 2010 Middleburg Fire Department Converts to All Career Staff Leesburg Today Online Daily News Coverage of Loudoun County Leesburg Ashburn Business Archived from the original on 2015 09 10 Retrieved 2015 08 27 HVFD History Archived from the original on 2009 06 04 Retrieved 2010 03 03 History Ashburn Volunteer Fire and Rescue Department Retrieved 7 August 2018 Aldie Volunteer Fire Department Inc Aldiefire org Retrieved 7 August 2018 Arcola Pleasant Valley Volunteer Fire Department gt gt History Archived from the original on 2009 04 17 Retrieved 2010 03 03 Greene Renss 2019 04 29 Fire Rescue Gets Kirkpatrick Station Lucketts Moves Ahead Loudoun Now Retrieved 2019 05 31 Lovettsville Volunteer Fire and Rescue About Us Lovettsvillevfr org Retrieved 7 August 2018 The Loudoun County Volunteer Rescue Squad Leesburg Virginia Company 13 Lcvrs org Retrieved 7 August 2018 Kincora Fire Rescue Station Construction Begins Leesburg Today Onli Archive today 27 January 2013 Archived from the original on 27 January 2013 Retrieved 7 August 2018 Hamilton Rescue Archived from the original on 2010 11 30 Retrieved 2010 03 02 Kirkpatrick Fire Station Construction Stopped Contractor Fired Loudounnow com 13 July 2018 Retrieved 7 August 2018 Greene Renss 2019 04 29 Fire Rescue Gets Kirkpatrick Station Lucketts Moves Ahead Loudoun Now Retrieved 2019 05 31 Communications amp Support Services Archived from the original on 2010 05 27 Retrieved 2010 03 02 LCFR ECC Career Staffing By Station Iaff3756 org Retrieved 7 August 2018 1 permanent dead link Virginia Task Force 1 International Urban Search and Rescue Vatf1 org Retrieved 7 August 2018 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Loudoun County Fire and Rescue Department nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Loudoun County Combined Fire and Rescue System Official websitesLoudoun County official website LC CFRS official website LCFR Volunteer website IAFF Local 3756Company websitesAldie Vol Fire 2 Arcola Pleasant Valley Vol Fire 3 Ashburn Vol Fire amp Rescue 4 Hamilton Vol Fire 5 Hamilton Vol Rescue 6 Leesburg Vol Fire 7 Loudoun County Vol Rescue 8 Lovettsville Vol Fire amp Rescue 9 Middleburg Vol Fire 10 Neersville Vol Fire 11 permanent dead link Philomont Vol Fire 12 Purcellville Vol Fire 13 Purcellville Vol Rescue 14 Round Hill Vol Fire amp Rescue 15 Sterling Vol Fire 16 Sterling Vol Rescue 17 OtherEmergency Communications Center Radio Communications Webcast Windows only 18 Unofficial LC CFRS Radio Feed 19 39 05 N 77 38 W 39 09 N 77 64 W 39 09 77 64 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Loudoun County Combined Fire and Rescue System amp oldid 1211536888, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.