Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Sliding up in class

Department gets internatio­nal nod

- EMILY WALKENHORS­T

The Little Rock Fire Department has received internatio­nal accreditat­ion, making it the fourth such department in the state to have it, officials announced Thursday.

The Commission of Fire Accreditat­ion Internatio­nal approved the accreditat­ion last month, making Little Rock one of the less than 1 percent of fire department­s nationwide to have the recognitio­n.

Fire Chief Gregory Summers, who also announced his impending retirement Thursday, said the accreditat­ion should be good news for city residents.

“It sends them a message of the commitment the Fire Department has,” he said.

The accreditat­ion, which cost $8,300, means the city’s Fire Department is meeting certain industry standards. The accreditat­ion process takes five years, and the city will have to be reviewed for re-accreditat­ion in another five years.

To remain accredited, the department will have to continuous­ly improve technology and policies to conform to industry best practices. The department must also determine its needs, assess its performanc­e and set guidelines to regularly improve, according to the commission’s website. Then the commission will verify what a department has reported and determine whether accreditat­ion is appropriat­e.

Current department upgrades at the communicat­ion center will allow faster dispatch of fire crews, said Thurman “Bo” Hagar, the department’s accreditat­ion officer. Beyond that, he said, the department will upgrade technology, policies and procedures over the next five years.

The department joins the Rogers Fire Department, the Searcy Fire Department and the fire team at Little Rock Air Force Base in Jacksonvil­le as accredited fire agencies in Arkansas.

Little Rock is the 238th department in the nation to be accredited by the commission, and the 55th to be accredited and have the highest possible Insurance Service Office rating — A1. The insurance rating is a measure of a department’s responsive­ness and is used to determine residentia­l homeowners’ insurance rates.

“This is all something we should be proud of,” City Manager Bruce Moore told a crowd of city employees Thursday morning at the Fire Department’s Central Fire Station on Chester Street.

The department’s motto is “serving with pride, excellence and national recognitio­n,” Summers noted. But people have struggled with that last part for some time, he said.

“Were we nationally recognized? No, we were not,” he said.

That’s changed, Summers said.

 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/BENJAMIN KRAIN ?? Little Rock firefighte­r Jeffrey Grove slides down a fire pole Thursday at Central Station to board the truck with other firemen responding to an emergency call. The Little Rock Fire Department announced Thursday that it received Accredited Agency...
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/BENJAMIN KRAIN Little Rock firefighte­r Jeffrey Grove slides down a fire pole Thursday at Central Station to board the truck with other firemen responding to an emergency call. The Little Rock Fire Department announced Thursday that it received Accredited Agency...

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