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New Jersey Forest Fire Service

New Jersey Forest Fire Service
logo of New Jersey Forest Fire Service, featuring a blue shield in which is a green silhouette of a tree on a goldenrod yellow background with the works "New Jersey N.J. Forest Fire Service"
Operational area
Country  United States
State  New Jersey
Agency overview
Established 18 April 1906 (1906-04-18)
Annual calls 1,063 FY2014
Employees 85 (full-time)
approx. 2,000 (part-time)
Annual budget $8,775,000 FY2014
Fire chief William P. Edwards (state firewarden)
Facilities and equipment
Divisions 3
Tenders 6
Wildland 109
Bulldozers 23
Helicopters 5
Website
Official website

The New Jersey Forest Fire Service (NJFFS) is an agency within the New Jersey Division of Parks and Forestry, a division of the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection. Founded in 1906 with a focus on wildland fire suppression and fire protection, the Forest Fire Service is the largest firefighting department within the state of New Jersey in the United States with 85 full-time professional firefighting personnel (career civil service positions), and approximately 2,000 trained part-time on-call wildland firefighters throughout the state. Its mission is to protect "life and property, as well as the state's natural resources, from wildfire".

The New Jersey Forest Fire Service covers a primary response area of approximately 3.72 million acres comprising 77% of the state's land area and administered by three regional divisions. These three divisions are divided into 29 sections, and further into 269 districts overseen by a trained firewardens (both full-time and part-time employees) where they can exercise law enforcement powers pursuant to state law. These powers include broad authority to compel actions for fire prevention, to investigate a wildfire's cause (accidental or intentional), and exercise arrest and citation powers in matters involving criminal and civil liability. Firewardens are qualified incident commanders and direct operations of fire crews in suppression efforts. This primary response area includes the state's rural and suburban areas, as well as its public state parks and forests.

Because of the extent of suburban development in New Jersey, many of the state's residents live within a transition zone known as the wildland-urban interface which provides both increased challenges to fire suppression tactics and increased risk of fires causing damage to homes and property. In 2014, the New Jersey Forest Fire Service responded to 1,063 wildfire events that damaged 6,692 acres of wildlands. As a preventative measure, the service conducted controlled burns or prescribed burns on 15,326 acres statewide.


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