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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  





2 Forms of Fire services in Russia  





3 Divisions of State Fire Service  



3.1  Federal Fire Service  





3.2  Fire Service of the Russian Federation  







4 Ranks  





5 Appliances  



5.1  Operational categories  







6 See also  





7 Notes  





8 External links  














Russian State Fire Service






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Russian State Fire Service
Государственная противопожарная служба
Operational area
CountryRussia
City Moscow
Agency overview
EstablishedApril 30, 1649 as Moscow Municipal Rescue
Employees220,000 (approx)
Facilities and equipment
Stations30,000 (approx)
Trucks18,500 (approx)
The emblem fire service of the Arkhangelsk region

Russian State Fire Service (Russian: Государственная противопожарная служба, Gosudarstvennaya protivopozharnaya sluzhba) is the highest fire service body of Russian Federation. A part of the Ministry of Emergency Situations since 2001, the State Fire Service is divided into the Federal Fire Service and the Fire Service of the Federal subjects of Russia.

The State Fire Service's 220,000 personnel operate out of 13,600 buildings and structures, including 4000 plus fire stations containing 18,634 fire apparatus and 49 fireboats.[1]

State Fire Service divisions participate in over two million operations a year, rescue over 90,000 lives, save property evaluated as high as 120 billion rubles.[1]

The Institute for Fire Defense and Scientific Research and 70 special laboratories are responsible for the SFS scientific support, new technologies and methods of work.

History[edit]

The first fire service in Russia was established by Czar Alexey Mikhailovich under signed decree named "Direction on Municipal rescue", which signed on April 30, 1649, in Moscow.

Six months after the October Revolution, on April 17, 1918 Vladimir Lenin signed a decree on organisation of activities for firefighting, which was considered the birth date for the Soviet State Fire service. Up to 2001 the Fire Service was part of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia.

By 1927, the heterogeneity in uniforms and insignia in the republics practically disappeared and the uniform of firefighters of the RSFSR came to be used as a model for introduction for a long time. Fire protection was provided by both professional and voluntary fire brigades (1927-1932), subordinate to the NKVD of the RSFSR.

In 1930, the militarization of the transport fire department was carried out, on the basis of which the militarized fire department of the People's Commissariat of Communication Routes of the Soviet Union of the USSR was created[2][3]. The service life of paramilitary personnel was at least two years. At the end of 1930, the Main Directorate of Public Utilities and the Police Department were separated from the NKVD and transferred to the direct subordination of the Council of People's Commissars of the RSFSR. On March 4, 1931, the Council of People's Commissars of the RSFSR issues a document on the centralization of the republic's fire service. The departmental ones remained: the fire protection of the NKPS, the Navy and the People's Commissariat of Water Transport.

July 20, 1931 By resolution of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee and the Council of People's Commissars of the RSFSR, fire protection was transferred to the People's Commissariat of Public Utilities (NKKH). The Central Fire Department (TsPO) of the NKVD was transformed into the Central Fire Department (TsUPO) of the NKKH.

Between 1934 to 1946 the fire services were under the Main Directorate of Fire Security (Russian: главное управление пожарной охраны (ГУПО)) of the NKVD. Simultaneously with the transfer of the fire department to the jurisdiction of the NKKH, a militarized fire department is being organized under the OGPU to protect strategic facilities[4].

In 1934, the Main Fire Department was formed as part of the NKVD of the USSR. The City Fire Department was responsible for ensuring fire safety in populated areas, while the departmental fire department was responsible for enterprises and transport. To protect fire-hazardous and especially important industrial facilities and large administrative centers, the militarized Fire Protection Service of the NKVD was created.[5]

In 1957, the Faculty of Fire Safety and Safety Engineers was opened at the Higher School of the Soviet Ministry of Internal Affairs. Fire testing stations were established in large cities.

Since 1958 the fire services became a member of the International Technical Committee for the Prevention and Extinction of Fire.

Since 1966, the management of fire protection was carried out by the General Directorate of Fire Protection (Russian: Главное управление пожарной охраны) in the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the USSR, which included the State Fire Supervision, which carried out work on the prevention of fires in buildings and structures under construction and in operation, as well as units of paramilitary fire protection and professional fire protection, which extinguished fires in cities, industrial and other objects of the national economy. Some ministries and departments such as the Ministry of Railways of the Soviet Union, the Ministry of Forestry and Glavneftesnab company had their own departmental fire protection[6].

Militarized fire protection was organized in cities that were the most important administrative centers of the USSR, as well as at industrial and other facilities of particular importance or increased fire and explosion hazard. Professional fire protection was created in cities, urban-type settlements, regional centers, as well as at national economic facilities[7].

Since 1965, units and divisions of the Moscow paramilitary fire department began to be staffed by persons called up for active military service[8].

In 1991, following the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the firefighting service became part of the successor to the Soviet MVD, the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation.

On December 21, 1994, the Federal Law "On Fire Safety" was adopted, which laid the foundations for a unified fire safety system.[9]

In 17 April 1918 the decree "On the organization of state measures to combat fire" was issued and that date was considered as the unofficial professional holiday. In 1999 a presidential decree set the date on 30th of April.[10]

On April 30, 1999, Russian President Boris Yeltsin signed a directive that declared April 30th as the celebratory date for Fire Services in Russia, 350 years after their creation.

From 1st of January 2002 in accordance with a presidential decree issued on 9 November 2001, the Fire Service was transferred from the Ministry of Internal Affairs to the Ministry of Emergencies[11][12] with all 278,000 firefighters transferred after 84 years under the MVD.

Forms of Fire services in Russia[edit]

In Russia, there are 5 forms of Fire Services, established by Federal Law of the Russian Federation "About fire safety".[13]

Divisions of State Fire Service[edit]

Moscow fire station.

Federal Fire Service[edit]

The Federal Fire Service (Russian: Федеральная противопожарная служба, Federalnaya protivopozharnaya sluzhba), is an integral part of the State Fire Service and is part of the Ministry of the Russian Federation for Civil Defense, Emergencies and Elimination of Consequences of Natural Disasters (Russian Ministry of Emergency Situations).

Its basic functions are:

The treaty units of the Federal Fire Service are maintained by the protected objects. Buildings, structures, facilities, fire and other machinery, and equipment, gear and equipment transferred to the use of contractual unit FPS, are the property of the organization and remain on its balance sheet.[14]

Fire Service of the Russian Federation[edit]

Financial support of the Fire Service of the Russian Federation is carried out by means of:

Ranks[edit]

Russian Firefighter with a Head of duty shift fire station helmet.
Insignia of a helmet Federal Fire Service of EMERCOM

In Russia, the decals are applied symmetrically on both sides of the helmet (front and rear). The location of the decals on the special clothing and SCBA is established for each fire department of the same type within the territorial entity.

Rank Helmet colour/markings
Firefighter The all color helmet with the applied number, indicating the fire station
Head of fire brigade The all color helmet with the applied number, indicating the fire station, underlined by line 50 mm wide and 5 mm thick
Head of duty shift fire station The all color helmet with the applied a circle, inside which the applied number is indicating the fire station
Deputy Head of the fire station The all color helmet with the applied a triangle, inside which the applied number is indicating the fire station
Head of the fire station The all color helmet with the applied a square, inside which the applied number is indicating the fire station
Commanding staff of the fire department The all color helmet with the applied a circle, inside which the applied a rhombus

Appliances[edit]

Russian State Fire Vehicles are painted in accordance with GOST R 50574-2002 (ГОСТ Р 50574-2002 г)[16] which requires an overall flame-red (in practice red-orange) with contrasting white doors, white bumpers, white front and rear vertical stripes and white horizontal side stripes. Undercarriages are painted black. Auxiliary vehicles lack the white doors. Any writing or numbers are of the opposite color of the color it is on.

A unique feature is the mounting of canisters for suction hoses and ladders on top of the appliance.

The Russian Fire Service uses a number of different models of appliances which range greatly in age and technical abilities.

Firefighting vehicles are classified under the following categories:

Model Image Origin Notes
Fire Trucks
Fire truck ATs 1,5-40/2  Soviet Union Russia
Fire truck ATs-8-40  Russia
Fire truck ATs 2,0-40  Russia Most common fire truck.
Fire Truck ATs 2,0-20-2  Soviet Union Russia ZIL-4331A5 chassis.
Fire Truck ATs 2,5-40 (131Н)  Soviet Union ZIL-131 chassis.
Fire Truck ATs 6,0-40  Russia Ural NEXT chassis.
Fire Truck ATs-40/4  Russia MAZ-631708 chassis.
Fire truck on Mercedes-Benz Atego 1529 AF chassis  Russia
Utility Vehicles
Rescue vehicle APP-0,2-30/70  Russia
ASh-5 Utility van  Russia
Emergency vehicle PSA-MM  Russia MB Sprinter 515CDI chassis
Fire patrol vehicle LPA-3  Russia UAZ-31519 base.
Firefighting vehicle ATs 1,6-40  Russia
VIS-294601 Utility car  Soviet Union Few remain in service
Special Vehicles
Volkswagen Transporter (Command Vehicle)  Russia
Forest Firefighting Truck CCF  Russia France Renault MIDLUM 240.12 CCF-4x4 chassis
Iveco Eurocargo (Mobile Air Compressor)  Russia
Mobile airheater UMP Gorinich  Russia KAMAZ-4326 chassis
Volkswagen LT (Command Vehicle)  Russia
Liebherr Crane  Russia Switzerland
Rosenbauer Panther 6x6 CA5  Austria
KS-Fjord 620  Russia
Wheeled armored fire fighting shield BLS2-40.2K  Soviet Union
Ladder Trucks
Aerial ladder platform AKP-54  Russia
Fire fighting vehicle AKP-32  Russia
Fire fighting vehicle AL-30  Russia
Aerial ladder platform AL-50  Russia KAMAZ-65115 chassis
Fire fighting vehicle ATsL-30-40/4-24  Russia
Equipment Trucks
Iveco Eurocargo (Technical Rescue Truck)  Russia
Tankers
KAMAZ-43502 (Firefighting Tanker)  Russia
Firefighting pump station PNS-110  Russia

Operational categories[edit]

Russian Fire appliances are operationally categorized as follows:[17]

ZIL-131 based АЦ-2,5-40(131Н)-6ВР (ATs-2.5-40(131N)-6VR) on outside display at the Technical Museum of Tolyatti, Russia.
GAZelle based APP in Saratov.
ZIL based APH
ZIL based ABG HAZMAT vehicle

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ a b "EMERCOM of Russia :: Forces and facilities - Fire Control in Russia". Archived from the original on 2011-08-31. Retrieved 2011-09-29.
  • ^ Приказ НКПС СССР от 24.07.1930 № 1668 «О порядке проведения военизации личного состава пожарной охраны транспорта с 1 августа 1930 г.»
  • ^ "(СЗ СССР 1930 г. № 3, ст. 35) О службе в пожарных организациях. Проект «Исторические Материалы»". istmat.info. Archived from the original on 2018-04-19. Retrieved 2019-01-04.
  • ^ "Форма одежды и знаки различия государственного пожарного надзора и коммунальных пожарных команд 1932-1936 гг. Л.Н.Токарь". Archived from the original on 2021-02-06. Retrieved 2021-02-01.
  • ^ "Пожарная охрана" (in Russian). Great Soviet Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2024-06-25.
  • ^ "Организация пожарной охраны в СССР и Российской Федерации" (in Russian). RIA Novosti. 5 August 2010. Archived from the original on 2010-09-20.
  • ^ "Постановление Совмина РСФСР от 06.07.1966 № 588 Об улучшении организации пожарной охраны в РСФСР — Законодательство СССР". Archived from the original on 2012-03-07. Retrieved 2010-09-24.
  • ^ Savelyev, Pyotr (9 February 2015). Противопожарный щит Москвы (in Russian). Moscow: Infra M. p. 196. Archived from the original on 2017-07-24.
  • ^ "Ъ-Деньги — Советская власть плюс сертификация всей страны". www.kommersant.ru (in Russian). 1998-08-26. Archived from the original on 2018-06-23. Retrieved 2019-01-12.
  • ^ "Пожарная охрана" (in Russian). fireman.club. 16 March 2018. Retrieved 2024-06-25.
  • ^ "РОВНО 90 ЛЕТ НАЗАД БЫЛ СОЗДАН ГОСУДАРСТВЕННЫЙ ПОЖАРНЫЙ НАДЗОР". 2017-07-18. Retrieved 2024-06-25.
  • ^ "Горим синим пламенем//Совершенно секретно № 12/223 2007 год" (PDF). www.webcitation.org (in Russian). Retrieved 2019-01-12.
  • ^ "О пожарной безопасности". Archived from the original on 2021-09-29. Retrieved 2021-09-19.
  • ^ Instruction on the treaty units of the Federal Fire Service, 2009. Section 7. Establishment, reorganization and liquidation of contractual FPS units
  • ^ "Деятельность". Archived from the original on 2013-10-29. Retrieved 2013-10-27.
  • ^ "ГОСТ Р 50574-2002 Автомобили, автобусы и мотоциклы оперативных служб. Цветографические схемы, опознавательные знаки, надписи, специальные световые и звуковые сигналы. Общие требования (с Изменениями N 1, 2, 3, 4) от 15 декабря 2002 - docs.CNTD.ru".
  • ^ "Стандарты за Апрель 2021 года | Страница 1 | НАЦИОНАЛЬНЫЕ СТАНДАРТЫ". protect.gost.ru. Retrieved May 18, 2021.
  • External links[edit]


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