N.C. Forest Service - Wildland Fire

The North Carolina Forest Service has the responsibility of protecting state and privately owned forestland from wildfires. The Fire Control program is managed on a cooperative basis with all 100 counties. Areas of emphasis in the program include fire prevention efforts, preparedness activities including training of agency and nonagency personnel, mitigation, aggressive suppression efforts on all wildfires, and law enforcement follow-up.

Fire control assistance is provided to field units by the Forest Protection section's fire staff. This staff consists of a program head, senior staff forester for training, staff forester for operations and B.R.I.D.G.E, staff forester for research and development, and four law enforcement investigators.

The forest service uses a variety of tools and equipment required to manage prescribed fire and aggressively suppress wildfires across the state's diverse forest ecosystems, wide-ranging terrain and extensive Wildland Urban Interface (WUI). County forest rangers coordinate the use of hand crews, fire engines, dozers, tractor-plows, aircraft, helicopters, pumps and other resources.

The agency has an extensive training program in forest fire protection and is designated by the state as an emergency response agency. It is National Incident Management System (NIMS) compliant. All NIMS training courses are used in the fire organization and fire behavior training. The Incident Command System (ICS) is used to organize and manage all wildfires. The ICS is an all hazard organization designed for management of natural and human-caused disasters other than wars.

Maintaining a well trained, proficient forest fire control organization is very similar to maintaining a well trained army. New personnel are constantly being trained to preserve capabilities. Veteran firefighters regularly undergo refresher training in suppression tactics, strategy, organization and management.

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This page was last modified on 01/09/2025