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    National Interagency Fire Center

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    NIFC logo

    The National Interagency Fire Center (NIFC) in Boise, Idaho, is the physical facility that is home to the National Interagency Coordination Center (NICC), and the National Multi-Agency Coordination group (NMAC or MAC).

    The center works closely with and is an arm of the National Fire and Aviation Executive Board (NFAEB), which provides unified guidance for fire agencies in the United States, and handbooks and guidelines to provide common procedures. It was created to implement the Federal Wildland Fire Management Policy. The NFAEB has created the Federal Fire Policy Directives Task Group, which coordinates with state agencies in order to implement cooperative agreements. [1]

    The center's mission is the complex interagency co-ordination of wildland firefighting resources in the United States. Although NIFC was founded to manage firefighting resources throughout the western states, the center is now designated as an "all-risk" co-ordination center and thus provides support in response to other emergencies such as floods, hurricanes and earthquakes for the entire United States. it helps to establish the National preparedness level, to help establish priorities and allocate some resources.

    Contents

    [edit] Escalation of fire coordination

    Part of a series on
    Wildland
    Firefighting
    Main articles

    Wildfire  · Bushfire
    Wildland fire suppression

    Agencies

    National Interagency Fire Center
    USFS  · BLM
    CALFIRE  · CALFIRE Aviation
    New South Wales Rural Fire Service  · Country Fire Authority, Victoria  · Country Fire Service, South Australia

    Tactics & Equipment

    Incident Command System
    Hotshots
    Controlled burn
    Firebreak  · Fire trail
    Fire lookout tower
    Fire-retardant gel
    Fire-fighting foam
    Fire retardant  · MAFFS
    Helicopter bucket  · Driptorch

    Aerial firefighting

    Aerial firefighting
    Helitack  · Smokejumper

    Lists

    List of wildfires
    Glossary of wildland fire terms

    [edit] Tier 3 - Local Control

    A wildland fire is initially managed by the local agency that has fire protection responsibility for that area. Engines, ground crews, hotshots, smokejumpers, helicopters with water buckets, and airtankers may all be used for initial suppression. Various local agencies may work together, sharing personnel and equipment, to fight both new fires and those not contained by the initial response.

    [edit] Tier 2 - Geographic Area Coordination Center(s)

    The United States is divided into 11 geographic areas. If a wildland fire grows to the point where local personnel and equipment are insufficient, the responsible agency contacts the Geographic Area Coordination Center (GACC) for help. The GACC will dispatch a Type 2 Incident Management Team (IMT) and they will locate and dispatch additional firefighters and support personnel throughout the geographic area at risk.

    When the emergency exceeds the resources of the GACC, a call is then made to the National Interagency Coordination Center at the National Interagency Fire Center (NIFC).

    [edit] Tier 1 - National Interagency Coordination Center

    NIFC is the home of the National Interagency Coordination Center (NICC). If a fire exceeds the level of local control and all the resources in its geographic area, NICC will call dispatch a type 1 Incident Management Team and additional national resources from multiple agencies as required.

    [edit] National Multi-Agency Coordination Group

    The National Multi-Agency Coordination Group (NMAC or MAC) also resides at the NIFC; it is used to allocate and prioritize personnel and equipment if several simultaneous national emergencies are straining the support system.

    MAC also establishes the National Preparedness Levels throughout the calendar year in order to help assure that firefighting resources are ready and able to respond to probable new incidents (a form of risk management). Preparedness Levels are dictated by burning conditions, fire activity, and (especially) resource availability.

    [edit] Participating agencies

    Several national and state assets are involved at NIFC:

    And the non-profit organization:

    [edit] Location

    National Interagency Coordination Center National Interagency Fire Center 3833 S. Development Ave., Boise, Idaho, 83705

    [edit] See also

    [edit] References

    1. ^ Federal Fire Policy Directives Task Group Charter, accessed 5/13/08.

    [edit] External links

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    Autorem skryptu AdWiki v0.8 (2007) jest husky83
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