NFPA 1720 Standard for the Organization and Deployment of Fire Suppression Operations, Emergency Medical Operations and Special Operations to the Public by Volunteer Fire Departments
NFPA 1720 義務消防隊員應付公眾滅火操作,應急醫療操作和特殊操作組織和開展標準
1.1* Scope. This standard contains minimum requirements relating to the organization and deployment of fire suppression operations, emergency medical operations, and special operations to the public by volunteer and combination fire departments.
1.1.1* The requirements address functions and outcomes of fire department emergency service delivery, response capabilities, and resources.
1.1.2 This standard also contains minimum requirements for managing resources and systems, such as health and safety, incident management, training, communications, and pre-incident planning.
1.1.3 This standard addresses the strategic and system issues involving the organization, operation, and deployment of a fire department and does not address tactical operations at a specific emergency incident.
1.1.4 This standard does not address fire prevention, community education, fire investigations, support services, personnel management, and budgeting.
Manage volunteer fire department resources and maximize deployment effectiveness with NFPA 1720.
Provide the best service to the public and maximize company resources with the latest requirements based on the "best practices" for our changing world. The 2010 edition of NFPA 1710 Standard for the Organization and Deployment of Fire Suppression Operations, Emergency Medical Operations, and Special Operations to the Public by Volunteer Fire Departments addresses the organization and deployment of fire suppression operations, emergency medical operations, and special operations to the public by all volunteer fire departments.
Evaluate and improve the levels of fire fighter safety and service delivery within communities. In this edition
· Revisions clarify that arriving company resources should be able to handle an offensive attack on a low hazard occupancy, or provide emergency medical care to up to two patients.
· New definitions include specific time starts and ends that correlate with the 2010 NFPA 1221 Standard for the Installation, Maintenance, and Use of Emergency Services Communications Systems
· Turnout time -- or time from start of transmission of the alarm to incident response -- has been increased from 60 seconds to 80 seconds for fire and special operations responses.
The Standard also discusses incident management systems, training systems, and communications systems. (Softbound, 17 pp., 2010)