Fire Prevention Program in Laoag City, Ilocos Norte
Autor: andrew • August 15, 2012 • Research Paper • 9,840 Words (40 Pages) • 1,480 Views
FIRE PREVENTION IN AMERICA
AT THE DAWN OF THE NEW MILLENNIUM
EXECUTIVE LEADERSHIP
R125
BY: Azarang Mirkhah, P.E.
Fire Protection Engineer
Las Vegas Fire & Rescue
Las Vegas, NV
An applied research project submitted to the National Fire Academy as part of the Executive
Fire Officer Program (EFOP)
July 19992
ABSTRACT
American fire death statistics are among the highest in the industrial world, and this is unacceptable. The problem is that the fire service's historical emphasis on suppression alone has proven to be inadequate, and a higher priority should be put on the fire prevention and public education programs.
The purpose of this descriptive paper was to evaluate the priority of the fire prevention and public education programs in the overall hierarchy of priorities of the American fire service.
The questions researched were:
1. Historically, what has been the major priority of the American fire service?
2. Where do the fire prevention and public education programs fit within the overall hierarchy of current priorities of the metropolitan fire departments?
3. What has been the priority of the Las Vegas Fire & Rescue (LVF&R ) during the 90's?
The procedures applied were: researching the historical documents to identify the national trend; conduct a survey of the major metropolitan fire departments to identify their priorities based on their 1998 statistics; and conduct an analysis of the LVF&R's records during the 90's to identify the priorities.
The results indicated that historically suppression has been the major priority for the American fire service. Based on the 1998 statistics, the fire prevention and public education 3programs are still not a high priority for the major metropolitan fire departments, and during the 90's fire prevention has not been a high priority for the LVF&R.
The fire problem is a national problem, thus the recommendation should focus on a national solution to comprehensively address the problem. In 1947, the American fire service developed national recommendations to address the problem, but neither the resources, nor the mechanisms to implement them at the local level
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