Katana VentraIP

Chicago Fire Department

The Chicago Fire Department (CFD) provides firefighting services along with emergency medical response services, hazardous materials mitigation services, and technical rescue response services in the city of Chicago, Illinois, United States, under the jurisdiction of the Mayor of Chicago. The Chicago Fire Department is the second-largest municipal fire department in the United States after the New York City Fire Department (FDNY). It is also one of the oldest major organized fire departments in the nation. It has numerous general purpose and specialized vehicles and equipment to accomplish its missions.

Operational area

United States

August 2, 1858 (1858-08-02)[1]

888,110 (2018)[2]

5,173 (2017)[2]

Annette Nance Holt

Advanced Life Support (ALS) & Basic Life Support (BLS)

Local 2

"We're There When You Need Us"

5

25

96

61

4

2

2

The Chicago Fire Department is led by the Fire Commissioner, currently Annette Nance-Holt. The Fire Commissioner is appointed by the mayor of Chicago, is confirmed by the Chicago City Council, and is assisted by the First Deputy Commissioner, who oversees the department's bureaus. There are four bureaus under the command of the First Deputy Commissioner: Operations, Fire Prevention, Administrative Services, and Logistics.


The Chicago Fire Department receives over 800,000 emergency calls annually.[3]

Operations[edit]

The Bureau of Operations is one of four Bureaus within the organization of the Chicago Fire Department. Like the other Bureaus, the Bureau of Operations is commanded by a Deputy Fire Commissioner, who reports to the 1st Deputy Commissioner, who in-turn reports to the Fire Commissioner. The Bureau of Operations is currently the largest Bureau within the Chicago Fire Department and is organized into four Divisions: Fire Suppression and Rescue, Emergency Medical Services (EMS), Special Operations (including the Technical Rescue Unit, the Hazardous Materials Unit, and the Air-Sea Rescue Unit), and the Office of Fire Investigation (OFI). The Fire Suppression and Rescue Division is commanded by an Assistant Deputy Fire Commissioner. The Special Operations Division and the EMS Division are also commanded by an Assistant Deputy Commissioner. The Office of Fire Investigation (OFI) is under the command of the Commanding Fire Marshal, equivalent to the rank of Deputy District Chief. [5][9]

Fire station locations and apparatus[edit]

The Chicago Fire Department is organized into 5 Districts, which command a total of 24 Battalions and a Special Operations Battalion.[10][11]

In popular culture[edit]

The Chicago Fire Department cooperated with film director Ron Howard on making the 1991 film Backdraft, starring Kurt Russell, William Baldwin, and Robert De Niro.


The NBC television show Chicago Fire, centers on a group of fictional firefighters and paramedics at a firehouse that is the headquarters of the fictitious Engine Company 51, Truck Company 81, Rescue Squad Company 3, Battalion Chief 25 (formerly, now reassigned to another firehouse), Deputy District Chief 2-2-6, and Ambulance 61 (represented by the headquarters for real Engine Company 18).[12]


The arcade game Emergency Call Ambulance takes place in Chicago. Players would take the role of an unnamed Chicago Fire Department Paramedic and ambulance driver, as they race through Chicago streets to save lives in 4 different cases.

Quarters of Engine 38, Truck 48, and Ambulance 77 in the North Lawndale area

Quarters of Engine 38, Truck 48, and Ambulance 77 in the North Lawndale area

Ambulance 77 & Engine 38 responding to a medical emergency on Roosevelt Ave.

Ambulance 77 & Engine 38 responding to a medical emergency on Roosevelt Ave.

Scuba Team vehicle on Lake Shore Drive in Hyde Park

Scuba Team vehicle on Lake Shore Drive in Hyde Park

CFD 1st Battalion Chief's Ford Explorer SUV

CFD 1st Battalion Chief's Ford Explorer SUV

CFD Tower Ladder Company 10

CFD Tower Ladder Company 10

CFD Truck Company 58

CFD Truck Company 58

CFD Haz-Mat. Incident Team (H.I.T.) Unit 5-1-1

CFD Haz-Mat. Incident Team (H.I.T.) Unit 5-1-1

Ambulance 77 at St. Anthony's Hospital

Ambulance 77 at St. Anthony's Hospital

Great Chicago Fire

Edit this at Wikidata

Official website