BILL REQ. #: H-2250.1
State of Washington | 58th Legislature | 2004 Regular Session |
READ FIRST TIME 02/06/04.
AN ACT Relating to the occupational safety and health of fire department employees; and adding a new chapter to Title 49 RCW.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1 The legislature intends to set standards for
addressing the occupational safety and health of substantially career
fire department employees, and to specify performance measures
applicable to response time objectives for certain major services. The
legislature acknowledges the efforts of the national fire protection
association to develop standard 1710 for the organization and
deployment of substantially career fire departments. For these
reasons, this chapter contains performance measures, comparable to that
standard, relating to the organization and deployment of fire
suppression operations, emergency medical operations, and special
operations by substantially career fire departments. This chapter does
not, and is not intended to, in any way modify or limit the authority
of the department of labor and industries to adopt rules under chapter
49.17 RCW applying to fire departments or otherwise addressing the
occupational safety and health of fire fighters.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 2 The definitions in this section apply
throughout this chapter unless the context clearly requires otherwise.
(1) "Advanced life support" means functional provision of advanced
airway management, including intubation, advanced cardiac monitoring,
manual defibrillation, establishment and maintenance of intravenous
access, and drug therapy.
(2) "Aircraft rescue and fire fighting" means the fire fighting
actions taken to rescue persons and to control or extinguish fire
involving or adjacent to aircraft on the ground.
(3) "Fire department" means a fire protection district, or a
county, city, or other municipal fire department responsible for fire
fighting actions, emergency medical services, and other special
operations in a specified geographic area. The district or the
department must be a substantially career fire department, and not a
substantially volunteer fire department.
(4) "Fire suppression" means the activities involved in controlling
and extinguishing fires.
(5) "First responder" means provision of initial assessment and
basic first-aid intervention, including cardiac pulmonary resuscitation
and automatic external defibrillator capability.
(6) "Marine rescue and fire fighting" means the fire fighting
actions taken to prevent, control, or extinguish fire involved in or
adjacent to a marine vessel and the rescue actions for occupants using
normal and emergency routes for egress.
(7) "Response time" means the time beginning when units are en
route to the emergency incident and ending when units arrive at the
scene.
(8) "Special operations" means those emergency incidents to which
the fire department responds that require specific and advanced
training and specialized tools and equipment.
(9) "Turnout time" means the time beginning when units acknowledge
notification of the emergency to the beginning point of response time.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 3 (1) Every fire department shall maintain a
written statement or policy that establishes the following:
(a) The existence of a fire department;
(b) Services that the fire department is required to provide;
(c) The basic organizational structure of the fire department;
(d) The expected number of fire department employees; and
(e) Functions that fire department employees are expected to
perform.
(2) Every fire department shall include service delivery objectives
in the written statement or policy required under subsection (1) of
this section. These objectives shall include specific response time
objectives for the following major service components, if appropriate:
(a) Fire suppression;
(b) Emergency management services;
(c) Special operations;
(d) Aircraft rescue and fire fighting;
(e) Marine rescue and fire fighting; and
(f) Wild land fire fighting.
(3) Every fire department shall establish the following time
objectives:
(a) One minute for turnout time;
(b) Four minutes or less for the arrival of the first arriving
engine company at a fire suppression incident, or eight minutes or less
for the deployment of a full first alarm assignment at a fire
suppression incident;
(c) Four minutes or less for the arrival of a unit with first
responder or higher level capability at an emergency medical incident;
and
(d) Eight minutes or less for the arrival of an advanced life
support unit at an emergency medical incident, where this service is
provided by the fire department.
(4) Every fire department shall also establish a performance
objective of not less than ninety percent for the achievement of each
response time objective specified in subsection (3) of this section.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 4 (1) Every fire department shall evaluate its
level of service and deployment delivery and response time objectives
on an annual basis. The evaluations shall be based on data relating to
level of service, deployment, and the achievement of each response time
objective in each geographic area within the jurisdiction of the fire
department.
(2) Beginning in 2005, every fire department shall issue an annual
written report which shall be based on the annual evaluations required
by subsection (1) of this section.
(a) The annual report shall define the geographic areas and
circumstances in which the requirements of this standard are not being
met.
(b) The annual report shall explain the predictable consequences of
these deficiencies and address the steps that are necessary to achieve
compliance.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 5 Sections 1 through 4 of this act constitute
a new chapter in Title