Menu

Welcome

Mission Statement

The objectives of this Division shall be to further enhance the education of all Fire Service Administrative Support by conducting workshops and seminars; to increase the proficiency of Fire Administrative Support by establishing a network sharing of information systems through various channels of communication; and to faciliate a statewide standardization wherever possible in all phases and aspects of the Fire Administrative Support field for the benefit of the Fire Service.

Recent Fire Administrative Support News

Posted: Oct 26, 2016
Comments: 0

Hi Everyone,

The WFAS Section now has a Facebook group for our members! Be sure to check it out and add yourself to the group and help us spread the word!

Click here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/wafireadmin/?ref=aymt_homepage_panel

Read more
Posted: Aug 17, 2016
Comments: 0

Thank you to everyone that completed our recent WFAS Survey on the 2016 Conference. We use that information to make each year's conference better than the last! 

Congrats to Cari Ross-Koler from Stevens 1 Fire Rescue as the survey drawing winner!

Read more
Posted: Jun 15, 2016
Comments: 0

If you have pictures from the 2016 Conference in Leavenworth, we would love for you to share them on our website!

Once logged in, click on Photo Gallery and scroll to the bottom of the page. There is an easy-to-use photo uploader for you to send us your pictures!

A tutorial has also been uploaded to our Documents, Website Tutorials folder.

Read more
Posted: Jun 14, 2016
Comments: 0

Thank you to all our WFAS members that were able to attend this past year's conference in Leavenworth! For those of you that missed out, a few highlights included lessons learned from a number of local Fire Chiefs on recent Washington State disasters we have encountered, tips for adapting to change, {WOODY}, and the highly popular casino night!

Your 2016 WFAS Board is already hard at work planning for the 2017, 2018 and even 2019 conferences! We will be meeting this friday in Cle Elem to gather our ideas and put our heads together. 

We have put together a survey for all members, to gather feedback on the recent conference, as well as overall suggestions. If you have not already, please follow this link to fill it out: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/8V3LBDJ. The deadline is this Friday, June 17th to be entered in the drawing for WFAS merch for filling out the survey. 

If you missed out in Leavenworth, don't forget to Save the Date and put the 2017 WFAS Annual Conference on your calendars for May 8-10 in Olympia.

Read more
Posted: Apr 9, 2015
Comments: 0

2015 NOMINATIONS/POSITIONS

Do you want to get involved? Do you seek out opportunities to impact change? WFAS has many ways to get involved and each year we have Board positions that are vacated.  Click to find out more!
Read more
Posted: Mar 10, 2015
Comments: 0

WFC Fire Administrative Support (WFAS) recognizes that some departments do not have the budget available for their administrative staff to attend section functions.  Knowing the benefits of continuing education, increasing workplace proficiency and the value of network sharing, we have created a scholarship fund to assist these individuals. Money collected from the raffle at our annual conference each year funds this program.  The scholarship is designed to cover, or assist with, registration fees and/or travel & lodging costs for the recipients to attend section functions.

The following is a guideline for disbursement of these funds:

  1. Interested WFAS members shall fill out the application and forward it to the Scholarship Chair.
  2. The application shall include a written summary as to the reason for the request.
  3. Priority for funds usage will be toward registration; if scholarship funds are still available after grants are made, funds will be applied to other conference costs, ie. lodging, travel expenses, etc, dependent upon need and availability. 
  4. The Chair will appoint a committee to review all applications and select an applicant(s) to receive scholarship funds.
Read more
Posted: Jul 1, 2014
Comments: 2
Read more
RSS
12

Theme picker

FIRE ADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT SECTION UPCOMING EVENTS

Upcoming Events

Theme picker

FIRE ADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT BOARD & COMMITTEES

New ‘State-of-the-Art’ Fire Station in Norfolk (VA) Will Replace Nearly 100-Year-Old Building

Gavin Stone
The Virginian-Pilot
(TNS)

Norfolk’s Fairmont Park neighborhood will soon have a “state-of-the-art” fire station to take the place of its current one, which was built in 1925.

Fire Chief John DiBacco said the old Fire Station 11 building, situated on Verdun Avenue almost inconspicuously among houses roughly the same size and style — apart from the big red trucks in the garage — has served the community “with pride and dedication” over the years, but the neighborhood has outgrown it.

“Streets are getting narrower as the houses are getting larger, public service vehicles have grown in size as well, new utility lines and public services compete for limited space between homes, the sidewalks and the roadways,” DiBacco told the audience of public officials and community members present for the new station’s groundbreaking ceremony Tuesday morning. “Over the years the demand for service has increased, and Norfolk Fire & Rescue has answered the call continuously for the last century from our home on Verdun Avenue.”

“Now it’s time for a well-deserved improvement for both our citizen neighbors and our firefighters,” he added.

The new station will be at 2601 Lafayette Blvd., a vacant lot just a block over from the current building, and its planned completion is April 2024. At a $7.1 million price tag for the full project, according to project manager John Alford, the building will be 14,000 square feet. Construction will begin within the next month.

In addition to a new building, Station 11′s firefighters will have a new fire engine at an $843,000 cost — already scheduled as part of the Fire & Rescue’s equipment replacement plan — and an additional response unit comprised of another battalion chief and lieutenant to support the station’s EMS operations, city spokesperson Kelly Straub said in an email.

Because of its central location within the city, Station 11 has historically played a major supporting role in other districts. Its response area won’t change with the new building, according to Straub. It’s unclear whether the new facility and equipment will affect the department’s ISO rating, which helps determine the neighborhood’s insurance rate, when the city undergoes a new evaluation.

Among the new features are about a dozen separate bunks meant to help with sleep deprivation and the changing gender makeup of fire departments. The station is designed in a way to help prevent cancer among firefighters by allowing them to clean off before they return from a call, according to Mark Manetti, an architect and partner with BKV Group which designs fire stations across the country.

“We know that this fire station will be able to support this community for the next 20, 30, 40, 50 years — maybe even 100,” Manetti said.

The building will be two stories due to the space limitations on the 0.6-acre parcel, which means it must have a fire pole, according to Manetti. The community was consulted during the planning process, which resulted in several modifications — including a nautical touch to the design and a change to the orientation of the building to have the broad side running along Lafayette Boulevard. It will have folding doors opening onto Lens Avenue and Argonne Avenue on either side of the facility.

“We listened to some of the recommendations (that the community) had and we tried our best to incorporate them into the design,” he said. “Overall I think it’s going to be an enhancement of what the goals were for Lafayette Boulevard.”

Firefighters had heard talk of a new station being on the way dating back to the 1960s, the chief said, but it wasn’t until just before the pandemic that the wheels started turning to make it a reality. The project was spearheaded at the city level by councilwomen Mamie B. Johnson and Danica J. Royster.

Johnson, representing Ward 3, explained that the city’s fire and rescue services were among the City Council’s “greatest concerns” — which helped get the project approved. She said the city will be looking for a way to make the old Station 11 serve the community in a positive way.

“We really would like to see it be an economic generator for the community and for Ward 3,” Johnson said.

Gavin Stone, 757-712-4806, gavin.stone@virginiamedia.com

©2023 The Virginian-Pilot. Visit pilotonline.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Print
Posted: Mar 25, 2023,
Categories: Fire Mechanics,
Comments: 0,

Theme picker