Multiple-alarm fire
Encyclopedia
One-alarm, two-alarm, three-alarm fires, or higher, are categories of fire
Fire
Fire is the rapid oxidation of a material in the chemical process of combustion, releasing heat, light, and various reaction products. Slower oxidative processes like rusting or digestion are not included by this definition....

s indicating the level of response by local authorities, with an elevated number of alarms indicating increased commitment of resources. The term multiple-alarm is a quick way of indicating that a fire was severe and difficult to contain. This system of classification is common in the USA
Firefighting in the United States
Firefighting in the United States can be traced back to the 17th century when, after a great conflagration in Boston in 1631, the Massachusetts Bay Colony passed a law banning smoking in public places. In 2003 in the United States there were approximately 800,000 volunteer firefighters and 300,000...

 among both fire department
Fire department
A fire department or fire brigade is a public or private organization that provides fire protection for a certain jurisdiction, which typically is a municipality, county, or fire protection district...

s and news agencies.

Definition

A common misconception is that a "three-alarm fire," for example, means that three firehouses responded to the fire. This is not the rule behind the naming convention, albeit some cities may use the number of firehouses responding for multi-alarm designations because that is the simplest way to determine an alarm number.

The most widely used formula for multi-alarm designation is based on the number of units (firetrucks
Fire apparatus
A fire apparatus, fire engine, fire truck, or fire appliance is a vehicle designed to assist in fighting fires by transporting firefighters to the scene and providing them with access to the fire, along with water or other equipment...

 for example) and firefighters responding to a fire; the more vehicles and firefighters responding, the higher the alarm designation. (Note: In most cities, a "unit" can be anything from a tanker or ladder truck to rescue vehicles to even cars driven by the chief and deputies.)

With this unit/firefighter alarm designation, the initial dispatch is referred to as a "first alarm" and is typically the largest. Subsequent alarms are calls for additional units, usually because the fire has grown and additional resources are needed to combat it, or that the incident is persisting long enough that firefighters on scene need to be replaced due to exhaustion.

Requests for units and firefighters from outside jurisdictions do not normally occur in multi-firehouse urban areas until elevated alarms are reached (alarm three and above), but will depend on the location of the incident and the condition of the authority having jurisdiction at the time of the incident.

History

The system of classification comes from the old tradition of using pull stations
Fire alarm box
A fire alarm box is an outdoor device used for notifying a fire department of a fire. Early boxes used the telegraph system and were the main method of calling the fire department to a neighborhood in the days before people had telephones. When the box is triggered, a spring-loaded wheel spins and...

 to alert the local departments to a fire in their area. The "box" would send a message to all local stations by telegraph that there was a fire, indicating the location as a number: (station area)-(box number), e.g., 11-2. Fires are still dispatched as "box alarms," following this tradition, with maps broken up into a grid of "box areas."

Typical Alarm Levels

Below is a list of the alarm levels used in the response policy of the New York City Fire Department
New York City Fire Department
The New York City Fire Department or the Fire Department of the City of New York has the responsibility for protecting the citizens and property of New York City's five boroughs from fires and fire hazards, providing emergency medical services, technical rescue as well as providing first response...

, in New York City
New York City
New York is the most populous city in the United States and the center of the New York Metropolitan Area, one of the most populous metropolitan areas in the world. New York exerts a significant impact upon global commerce, finance, media, art, fashion, research, technology, education, and...

, New York
New York
New York is a state in the Northeastern region of the United States. It is the nation's third most populous state. New York is bordered by New Jersey and Pennsylvania to the south, and by Connecticut, Massachusetts and Vermont to the east...

, United States
United States
The United States of America is a federal constitutional republic comprising fifty states and a federal district...

. This is a basic example of how alarm levels are categorized in a fire department, how many fire apparatuses respond to each alarm level, etc. In New York, however, additional special alarm levels are utilized, aside from the conventional 1st Alarm, 2nd Alarm, 3rd Alarm, etc. Examples of such alarm levels are the Signal 10-75 Assignment, the Signals 10-76and 10-77 Assignments, and the Signal 10-60 Assignment. A 10-75 is a Working Fire(i.e., there is fire visible from a building), the10-76/10-77 Assignments are the alarm levels separate from the 1st, 2nd, 3rd Alarms, etc. that are the standard fire department responses to fires in high-rise buildings. The Signal 10-60 is a separate response to major disasters. Below is how the alarm levels are categorized in order per protocol and each apparatus count in an addition per alarm.
  • Box Alarm/1st Alarm Assignment:
    • 3 Engine Companies
    • 2 Ladder Companies
    • 1 Battalion Chief
  • 10-75(Working Fire) Assignment(Additional Units):
    • 1 Engine Company
    • 1 Ladder Company(operating as Firefighter Assist and Search Team)
    • 1 Squad Company
    • 1 Rescue Company
    • 1 Battalion Chief
    • 1 Division Chief
  • 2nd Alarm Assignment:
    • 5 Engine Companies
    • 2 Ladder Companies
    • 2 Battalion Chiefs(1 operating as the Incident Safety Officer Chief and 1 operating as the Resource Unit Leader Chief)
    • Rescue Battalion Chief
    • Safety Battalion Chief
    • 1 Satellite Unit(Special Unit)
    • 1 Recuperation and Care(R.A.C.) Unit(Special Unit)
    • 1 Tactical Support Unit(T.S.U.)(Special Unit)
    • 1 Field Communications Unit(Incident Command Vehicle)
  • 3rd Alarm Assignment:
    • 4 Engine Companies
    • 2 Ladder Companies
    • 3 Battalion Chiefs(1 operating as the Staging Chief and 1 operating as the Air Recon. Chief)
    • 1 Deputy Chief
    • 1 Mask Service Unit(M.S.U.)(Special Unit)
  • 4th Alarm Assignment:
    • 4 Engine Companies
    • 2 Ladder Companies
    • 1 Battalion Chief(operating as the Incident Planning Chief)
  • 5th Alarm Assignment:
    • 4 Engine Companies
    • 2 Ladder Companies
    • 1 Assistant Chief(Usually the Borough Commander)
    • Chief of Operations


If the incident commander decides that the incident does not require a higher alarm level to be requested, they can specially request an additional unit to the scene without requesting a full alarm level assignment. For example, at a Working Fire, there are 4 Engine Companies, 3 Truck Companies, 1 Squad Company, 1 Rescue Company, 2 Battalion Chiefs, and 1 Division Chief operating at the scene. If the fire is not large enough to require a 2nd Alarm, but a need for more equipment and manpower is needed, the commanding Chief can request additional units to respond "Specially Called" to the scene.

Thus, at the scene of a 5th Alarm Fire in New York, there are a total of 21 Engine Companies, 11 Ladder Companies, 1 Squad Company, 1 Rescue Company, 9 Battalion Chiefs, 1 Division Chief, 1 Deputy Chief, 1 Assistant Chief, and the Chief of Operations, as well as multiple specialized units and or specially called units operating on the scene.

All of these companies come from many firehouses to the scene. Some companies, however, are quartered together at the same firehouses. So, it is not a matter of how many firehouses respond to a fire, as popularly believed, but rather, how many companies/units and how many firefighters are operating on scene.

External links

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