State Fire Service

State Fire Service
Państwowa Straż Pożarna
Operational area
CountryPoland
Agency overview
Established1 July 1992 (1992-07-01)
Chief CommandantAndrzej Bartkowiak
Website
National Headquarters (in English)
National Headquarters (in Polish)
Formal uniform of the Polish State Fire Service

State Fire Service (Polish: Państwowa Straż Pożarna, PSP) is a professional fire fighting service in Poland. It is subordinate to the Polish Ministry of Interior and Administration. The modern State Fire Service is based on the 1992 legislation.

State Fire Service covers the entire territory of Poland. In all the second-level units of local government and administration in Poland - powiat (county, district) -, fire brigades operate district headquarters (Komenda Powiatowa Państwowej Straży Pożarnej), city headquarters in bigger cities (Komenda Miejska Państwowej Straży Pożarnej) with command posts and dispatch centers alongside one or several fire stations (Jednostka Ratowniczo-Gaśnicza JRG). They are subject to 16 provincial headquarters (Komenda Wojewódzka Państwowej Straży Pożarnej).

Professional firefighters (PSP) respond immediately after the alarm and are often assisted by volunteers associated in Voluntary Fire Service (Ochotnicza Straż Pożarna, OSP) with more than 15,700 fire stations in nearly every bigger settlement.

History

Pursuant to Article 2 of the Act of February 4, 1950. on fire protection and its organization, for the first time in the history of Polish fire protection, the Voivodeship Fire Brigade Headquarters was established. The voivodeship level commands were headed by the Voivodeship Fire Comandants and the commanders of the Warsaw and Łódź fire brigades. These commanders, at the request of the Commander-in-Chief of the Fire Service, were appointed and dismissed (Article 4.2) by the Minister of Public Administration - then competent for internal affairs. Soon, however, the Legislative Sejm passed the Act of April 19, 1950. on changing the organization of the supreme state authorities in the field of municipal management and public administration. This act brought, among others, the abolition of the Ministry of Public Administration and the creation of the Ministry of Municipal Economy in its place. The competences of the new ministry were defined by the Council of Ministers in its regulation of June 3, 1950. They included e.g. matters belonging to the abolished Ministry of Public Administration, and thus in the field of fire protection.[1]

In 1972, parallelly with the administrative reform in Poland, field fire brigades, the most visible changes concerned the brigades gathered in the Association of Volunteer Fire Brigades (ZOSP). This was manifested in the creation, or in principle, in the reconstruction of the communal link of this association (Resolution No. 7 of the ZOSP ZG of November 6, 1972 on the appointment of commune boards) and the establishment of the function of the social commander of the commune fire brigade (based on the resolution of the Council of Ministers of September 25, 1974).[1]

In 1973 fire brigade commands were subordinated to voivodes, city presidents and heads of communes (Polish: Naczelnik gminy). These became units equivalent to the departments of voivodeship offices and poviat level offices. As a result, voivodeship and poviat commanders began to be responsible for the implementation of tasks in the field of fire protection before voivodes, presidents or commune chiefs. These changes entered into force on December 9, 1973.

Pursuant to Article 43.3. Act of June 12, 1975. on fire protection, changes were made to the content of Art. 2.3. Decree of December 27, 1974 on the service of fire officers and the procedure for appointing the voivodeship fire brigade commander was specified. It said that the state administration body of the voivodeship level, i.e. the voivode competent for the territory, appointed the voivodeship commander of the fire brigades from among the candidates presented to him by the commander in chief of the fire brigades. The essence of this procedure was the agreement of the parties.[1]

Structure

  • National Headquarters of the State Fire Service (Warsaw)
    • Voivodeship Headquarters in Białystok
    • Voivodeship Headquarters in Gdańsk
    • Voivodeship Headquarters in Gorzów Wielkopolski
    • Voivodeship Headquarters in Katowice
    • Voivodeship Headquarters in Kielce
    • Voivodeship Headquarters in Kraków
    • Voivodeship Headquarters in Lublin
    • Voivodeship Headquarters in Łódź
    • Voivodeship Headquarters in Olsztyn
    • Voivodeship Headquarters in Opole
    • Voivodeship Headquarters in Poznań
    • Voivodeship Headquarters in Rzeszów
    • Voivodeship Headquarters in Szczecin
    • Voivodeship Headquarters in Toruń
    • Voivodeship Headquarters in Warszawa
    • Voivodeship Headquarters in Wrocław

Each Voivodeship Headquarters supervises District Headquarters (335 in 2019) and fire-fighting units.

The State Fire Service operates 5 fire academies:

  • Main School of Fire Service
  • Central School of State Fire Service in Częstochowa
  • School of Aspirants of the State Fire Service in Kraków
  • School of Aspirants of the State Fire Service in Poznań
  • Non-commissioned Officers School of the State Fire Service in Bydgoszcz

Voluntary Fire Service

Voluntary Fire Service of Zbludowice

In Poland local inhabitants may create a Voluntary Fire Brigade (Ochotnicza Straż Pożarna, OSP) under proper law. Such departments may receive financial assistance from the government for purchasing equipment or training the staff. In certain areas of Poland almost every town and village has a volunteer fire department. Volunteer fire departments are usually fully integrated into the National Fire and Rescue System (Krajowy System Ratowniczo-Gaśniczy, KSRG). Any call to the fire emergency number is routed to the nearest State Fire Service (PSP) station in powiat (Komenda Powiatowa PSP) that coordinates the forces in the area. After the alarm, the volunteers arrive to the fire station and then respond to the emergency.

Ranks and rank insignia

Service flag for Polish government vessels: Flag of fire-fighting vessels
I corps - enlisted rank
Strażak
Firefighter
Private E1
Starszy strażak
Senior firefighter
Private E2
II corps - non-commissioned officers
Sekcyjny
Squad Leader
Private First Class
Starszy sekcyjny
Senior Squad Leader
Specialist
Młodszy ogniomistrz
Junior Firemaster
Corporal
Ogniomistrz
Firemaster
Staff-Sergeant
Starszy ogniomistrz
Senior Firemaster
Sergeant 1st Class
III corps - aspirants
Młodszy aspirant
Junior Aspirant
Sergeant 1st Class
Aspirant
Aspirant
Master Sergeant
Starszy aspirant
Senior Aspirant
Sergeant-Major
Aspirant sztabowy
Staff Aspirant
Command Sergeant Major
IV corps - junior officers
Młodszy kapitan
Junior Captain
Second Lieutenant
Kapitan
Captain
Lieutenant
Starszy kapitan
Senior Captain
Captain
V corps - senior officers
Młodszy brygadier
Junior Brigadier
Major
Brygadier
Brigadier
Lieutenant Colonel
Starszy brygadier
Senior Brigadier
Colonel
VI corps - generals
Nadbrygadier
Chief Brigadier
Brigadier General
Generał brygadier
Brigadier General
Major General

Source:[2]

Firefighters from State Fire Service (PSP, JRG) use red helmets. Firefighters from Voluntary Fire Service (OSP) use white helmets.

See also

  • Ochotnicza straż pożarna w Polsce Volunteer Fire Brigade (Polish)
  • Warsaw Fire Guard (Defunct)
  • Zakładowa straż pożarna Factory Fire Guards (Polish)

References

  1. ^ a b c Roman Świst, Wałbrzych. "KOMENDANCI WOJEWÓDZCY STRAŻY POŻARNYCH W L. 1975-1992" (in Polish). Zarząd Główny Związku Emerytów i Rencistów Pożarnictwa RP. Retrieved 2023-04-12.
  2. ^ ROZPORZĄDZENIE RADY MINISTRÓW z dnia 24 kwietnia 2012 r. w sprawie stopni wojskowych, Straży Granicznej, Biura Ochrony Rządu, Służby Celnej, Państwowej Straży Pożarnej, Agencji Bezpieczeństwa Wewnętrznego, Agencji Wywiadu, Służby Wywiadu Wojskowego i Służby Kontrwywiadu Wojskowego odpowiadających stopniom policyjnym 2016-10-15.

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