Fire Department

Firetruck on the highway

The volunteer fire department is responsible for the prevention and suppression of land, vehicle and structural fires, and the response to requests for emergency medical aid and accidents.

The department is headed by a full-time Fire Chief, Steve Duncan, a full-time Assistant Fire Chief, Brian Carter, volunteer company officers and firefighters, and supplemented by temporary firefighters participating in the College of the Siskiyous Emergency Response Technology Program.

City of Weed Fire Department Facebook

City of Weed Fire Department Instagram

June 9, 2021 Fireworks Ban within the City of Weed

Firefighter chief Duncan

Steve Duncan

Fire Chief, Steve Duncan E-mail

Phone 530-938-5030

Firefighter Assistant Carter

Brian Carter

Assistant Fire Chief, Brian Carter E-mail

Phone 530-938-5030

Firefigthers and firetruck

Weed City Fire Department Resident Sleeper Program

If you are interested in a career in the fire service, the Weed City Fire Sleeper Program is the best place to start!

Firefighters working on the woods

Weed Fire Department hiring temporary positions for the 2024 fire season

The Weed City Fire Department is looking to hire three temporary firefighters for the 2024 fire season.  48/96 schedule. If you are interested, see the attached announcement and employment application. Applications due April 12th, 2024.  Contact the Weed Fire Station at 530-938-5030 if you have any questions.

Weed Fire Department Employment Application

2024 Job Announcement

Weed FD ISO Score = 3.

Your area's ISO fire score is a rating that determines how well your local fire department can protect your community and home. Insurance companies use the score to help set home insurance rates, as a home that is less likely to be severely damaged or destroyed by fire is cheaper to insure. However, the impact of your area's ISO score on your homeowners insurance policy varies by insurer. What's more, ISO does not publicly release scores, so it's not easy to look up your area's score or how it's impacting your insurance rates.

What Is an ISO Fire Rating?

A company called the ISO (Insurance Services Office) creates ratings for fire departments and their surrounding communities. The ratings calculate how well-equipped fire departments are to put out fires in that community. The ISO provides this score, often called the "ISO fire score," to homeowners insurance companies. The insurers then use it to help set homeowners insurance rates. The more well-equipped your fire department is to put out a fire, the less likely your house is to burn down. And that makes your home less risky, and therefore less expensive, to insure.

An ISO fire insurance rating, also referred to as a fire score or Public Protection Classification (PPC), is a score from 1 to 10 that indicates how well-protected your community is by the fire department. In the ISO rating scale, a lower number is better: 1 is the best possible rating, while a 10 means the fire department did not meet the ISO's minimum requirements.

According to the ISO's Fire Suppression Rating Schedule (FSRS), there are four main criteria to a fire rating score:

  • 50% comes from the quality of your local fire department including staffing levels, training and proximity of the firehouse.

  • 40% comes from availability of water supply, including the prevalence of fire hydrants and how much water is available for putting out fires.

  • 10% comes from the quality of the area's emergency communications systems (911).

  • An extra 5.5% comes from community outreach, including fire prevention and safety courses.

  • Any area that is more than 5 driving miles from the nearest fire station is automatically rated a 10.

Depending on your state, it's possible to get a maximum score of around 106% on the survey, although any fire department that scores above 90% receives the highest ranking, a 1. Very few fire departments receive that ranking--only 0.71% of all communities surveyed have a 1. A rating of 5 is both the median and most common rating fire departments received. In general, urban areas tend to have better PPC scores than rural areas, as urban fire departments are closer together and often receive better funding.

Burn Permit Applications

Burn Permits: 

If you plan on burning within the city limits, a Burn Permit is required. Burn Permits can be obtained in person at City Hall, or click on the "Burn Permit" PDF, fill it out, and email it. Once payment is received, your signed permit will be emailed to you. Payments can be made in cash, check, or card at City Hall or on the city's home page. Fee is $10/year and all proceeds go to fund public education.  Call (530) 938-5030 for more details. 

 

If you live in the county you need to obtain your Burn Permit from the Cal-Fire website. 

Fire Department Company Officers

Fire Department Company Officers

Not Pictured: Battalion Chief Darin Quigley, Battalion Chief Scott Tavalero, Captain Matt Hill, Captain Henry Ochs, Captain Tyler Sweet, and Captain Jon Quigley.