“Our Mission Is To Provide Quality Public Service, Public Education, and Professional Emergency Response”

Monroe Fire Department

1810 Martin Luther King Blvd

Monroe, LA

(318)329-2474

Jimmie R. Bryant, Fire Chief

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The Monroe Fire Department has achieved the Class 1 rating with the Property Insurance Association of Louisiana, one of only a few departments nationwide to achieve such a rating.  This rating is based upon equipment, training, communication, and water supply. 

Fire Suppression— Saving Lives and Protecting Property

The department operates nine stations, with some housing multiple companies and crews, dispersed strategically throughout the city.  Each station is anchored by a fire “pumper” or engine company that is the main firefighting unit at a structure fire. 

 

Each engine company brings 500 gallons of water to the fire, which is used to supply the initial fire attack until a mass water supply can be obtained by a connection to a fire hydrant.   Also on the engine is three sections of 200 feet of fire attack line hose, usually 1 3/4 inches wide with a variable pattern nozzle.  This is taken into the structure by the fire attack team to extinguish the fire.  Also, is 1000 feet of four-inch wide supply line hose, which connects to the hydrant and brings water from the hydrant to the water intake on the engine’s pump. 

 

Each engine also brings a compliment of ground ladders.  Each engine is operated by four persons, led by a Company Officer (Fire Captain), driven and operated by a Lieutenant (Fire Driver), and manned by one or two (depending on available staffing) Privates.

The department also operates five aerial ladder companies.  They are housed at stations one, three, four, five, and seven.    The aerials at stations three and seven are “quints,” giving them the capability to connect to a hydrant, pump water, supply attack lines, and supply the aerial nozzle independent of any other apparatus.

 

Also at fire station seven, located at the Monroe Regional Airport, is our Aircraft Rescue Firefighting apparatus, Engine 62.  It houses 1,500 gallons of water and operates a 750 gallon-per-minute roof nozzle, and a 375 gallon-per-minute  bumper nozzle.  It also brings 200 gallons of aqueous film-forming foam which, when combined with water and aerated, is used to smother and contain hydrocarbon (gas, oil, jet fuel) spill fires.

 

 

At fire station two, located at the Monroe Public Safety Center, you’ll find two additional specialty units.  The Monroe Fire Department Heavy Rescue truck, Rescue-2, is housed at station 2.  Rescue-2 contains equipment for many types of rescue maneuvers and equipment for mitigating a hazardous materials incident. 

 

Also at station two is the EMS Supervisor / Safety Officer unit.  This unit is operated by a Fire Captain who is also certified and able to operate as a Paramedic.  He or she is responsible for supervising the safe operations at an incident, as well as overseeing the quality of patient care and all responders at an EMS or rescue incident. 

 

 

 

 

The nine stations are divided into three districts of three stations each.  Each district is supervised by a District Chief, labeled Districts 1, 2, and 3.  The District Chief supervises the daily operation of each of the stations in his district, oversees the Company Officers at the stations, initiates and conducts training drills and district meetings, and functions as Incident Commander at most structure fires.  The three District Chiefs are supervised by the shift Deputy Chief, which is also responsible for personnel scheduling, public relation events, and working with the Fire Chief as needed.

 

For a narrative on the Life Cycle of a Structure Fire, click here

Engine/Pumper. Photo by Ferrara Fire Apparatus

Aerial Ladder Company.  Photo by Ferrara Fire Apparatus