Paris Fire Brigade
Brigade des sapeurs-pompiers de Paris | |
---|---|
Active | 1793–present |
Country | France |
Branch | French Army |
Type | Firemen |
Size | 8,500 |
Motto | "Sauver ou périr" (Save or Perish) |
Colors | Red & black |
The Paris Fire Brigade (French Brigade des sapeurs-pompiers de Paris, BSPP), is a French Army unit which serves as the primary fire and rescue service for Paris and certain sites of national strategic importance.
The brigade's main area of responsibility is the City of Paris and the surrounding départements of Seine-Saint-Denis, Val-de-Marne, and Hauts-de-Seine. It also serves the Centre Spatial Guyanais in Kourou, the Military Rocket Test Centre in Biscarosse, and the gas plant of Lacq-Artix.
The brigade is a unit of the French Army's Engineering Arm (Génie) and the firefighters are therefore sappers (sapeurs, thus sapeurs-pompiers). With 8,550 firemen, it is the largest fire brigade in Europe and the third largest urban fire service in the world, after the Tokyo Fire Department and New York City Fire Department. The brigade is placed at the disposal of the Paris Prefecture of Police in an arrangement similar to that of the French Gendarmerie. Its motto is "Save or Perish" (French "Sauver ou périr").
Another military force responsible for firefighting in France is the Marseille Naval Fire Battalion (BMPM). The remainder of France has civilian fire and rescue services (services départementaux d'incendie et de secours). See: Fire service in France
Contents
Mission
As any French firefighter, their missions are
- Fire Suppression
- Emergency Basic Life Support ambulance
- Utility Safety – Gas Leaks et al.
- Personal Assistance – Victims services, SAR lost persons
- Motor vehicle collision response
- Protection of beings
- Patrol, Reconnaissance and Research
- Animal rescue
- Pollution control and HAZMAT Response
- Alarm response
They defend Paris and its "little crown" (close suburbs), but also specific sites:
- Guiana Space Centre of Kourou Guyane.
- test field for missiles in Biscarosse.
- site for extraction and processing of natural gas in Lacq-Artix.
Special missions for Bastille Day
Traditionally,[1] the Paris Fire Brigade parades twice during the Bastille Day military parade: once on foot, and a second time with its vehicles. During the parade members are armed with the FAMAS, the famous French bullpup-style assault rifle, reminding them of their membership in the armed forces. Different fire stations of the Paris Fire Brigade organize each July 13th or 14th an evening dance party within the walls of the barracks, called Bal des pompiers[2] (firemen's ball in English).
History
Founded in 1793 as the Corps des gardes-pompes de la ville de Paris and following the 23 hour Austrian Embassy Fire in 1810 became a military organisation by imperial decree by Emperor Napoléon. On 18 September 1811, it became the Bataillon de sapeurs-pompiers de Paris and was expanded to the Régiment de sapeurs-pompiers de Paris in 1867. On 1 March 1967 became the Brigade des sapeurs-pompiers de Paris.
Selection and training
The operational personnel (hommes du rang i.e. privates) are usually engaged for five years. They must have French nationality, be between 18 and 25 years old, have a clean criminal record and have at least a vocational training certificate (CAP). The selection is three days long, with sports tests, psychomotor tests, medical examination, etc.
Training takes place in the Instruction Grouping (Groupement d'instruction, GI), at the fort of Villeneuve-Saint-Georges. The first period lasts two months, with the first aid and first responder training, and basic military instruction (including shooting).
The sapper then undertakes practical training of four months in an operational fire company (compagnie d'incendie); he takes part in personal assistance and utility safety operations.
The sapper then returns to the Instruction Grouping for two further months for his fire training. He is then permanently attached to a fire company.
Resources
The BSPP consists of 8,550 personnel with 81 stations and facilities who conduct 1200 operations daily.
- 463 pieces of equipment
- 130 Pumpers
- 63 Aerial Devices
- 66 Ambulances
- 71 Command and Patrol vehicles
- 133 Special Engines
Corporate Organisation
The brigade is commanded by a Brigade General as part of the French Army's engineering arm. The brigade commander directly controls the Information and Public Relations Bureau, and who is assisted a Colonel-Adjutant, a General Council called a Cabinet and a Chief of Staff who controls the following Bureaus:
- General Studies Bureau
- Financial Programs and Budget Bureau
and three Assistant Chiefs of Staff:
- Assistant Chief for Employment
- Operations Bureau
- Formation and Instruction Bureau
- Prevention Bureau
- Assistant Chief for Logistics
- Techniques Service
- Infrastructure Service
- Administrative Service
- Telecommunications and Information Service
- Assistant Chief for Human Resources
- Human resources Bureau
- Personnel Welfare Bureau
- Chief Doctor
- Emergency medical service/SAMU
- Chief of the Health Service
Field Organisation
- First fire group – Northeast Paris and Seine-Saint-Denis
- Second fire group – Southeast Paris and Val-de-Marne
- Third fire group – west Paris and Hauts-de-Seine
each contains eight Fire companies and an Emergency medical service
- Training group
- Services group
First fire group (Premier groupement d'incendie)
The First fire group of the Paris Fire Brigade covers Northeast Paris and Seine-Saint-Denis and is Headquartered at:
- 12 rue Carpeaux 75018 Paris tel: 01.42.26.83.18
and consist of the following units:
and 8 Fire Companies (CEI)
- 7th at Blanche
- 9th at Montmartre
- 10th at Landon
- 12th at Ménilmontant
- 13th at Aulnay-sous-Bois
- 14th at Clichy-sous-Bois
- 24th at Montreuil
- 26th at Saint-Denis
Second fire group (Deuxième groupement d'incendie)
The Second Fire Group of the Paris Fire Brigade covers Southeast Paris and Val-de-Marne and is Headquartered at:
- 16 avenue Boutroux 75013 Paris Tel: 01.45.82.58.18
and consist of the following:
and 8 Fire Companies (CEI)
- 1st at Chaligny
- 2nd at Massena
- 8th at Rousseau
- 11th at Sévigné
- 15th at Champigny
- 17th at Créteil
- 22nd at Rungis
- 23rd at Saint-Maur
Third fire group (Troisième groupement d'incendie)
The Third Fire Group of the Paris Fire Brigade covers Western Paris and Hauts-de-Seine and is Headquartered at:
- 14 rue Henry Regnault 92400 Courbevoie. Telephone: 01.49.04.74.18
and consists of the following units:
and 8 Fire Companies:
- 3rd at Port Royal
- 4th at Colombier
- 5th at Champerret
- 6th at Grenelle
- 16th at Boulogne
- 21st at Plessis Clamart
- 27th at Gennevilliers
- 28th at Puteaux
Training Group (Groupement d'instruction)
The Training Group of the Paris Fire Brigade provides education and training to all Paris firefighters. It consists of the following:
- Group Staff
- EMS/SAMU
- Center for Formation and Cadres
- Center for the Instruction of Recruits
- Basic Training Company
- Auto School, driving and repairs
- Support Company
Special Services
Controlled by Headquarters
- Divers/SCUBA
- Search and Rescue
- Canine Service
- Music
- Gymnastic Team
- Air Service
- Boat Service
Frequency of Operations
The BSPP performs about 1200 interventions per day. During 2001:
- 1st fire group: 163,081 interventions, including 9,606 fires
- 2nd fire group: 136,078 interventions, including 5,583 fires
- 3rd fire group: 150,376 interventions, including 5,234 fires
There are 6.16 million inhabitants in the BSPP zone (1999). This represents:
- per day: 19 interventions per 100,000 inhabitants
- per year: 7,300 interventions, including 331 fires, per 100,000 inhabitants
Hazing rape in May 2012
In May 2012, thirteen Paris firefighters were arrested after a recruit claimed he was raped in an initiation ceremony filmed with a telephone.[3]
See also
References
- ↑ (French)http://www.avionslegendaires.net/2012/07/actu/14-juillet-2012-le-bonheur-simple-du-defile-militaire/
- ↑ (French)http://www.pompiersparis.fr/actualites/info-brigade/liste-des-bals-du-13-et-14-juillet-2013
- ↑ Thirteen Paris firefighters held over 'hazing rape', BBC News, 9 May 2012
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.. |
- Articles with French-language external links
- Use dmy dates from October 2011
- France articles missing geocoordinate data
- Fire departments of France
- Military fire departments
- Ambulance services in France
- Government of Paris
- French Army
- Engineering units and formations
- Military units and formations established in 1793