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Tualatin Valley Fire and Rescue

Coordinates: 45°26′00″N 122°44′58″W / 45.4334°N 122.7494°W / 45.4334; -122.7494
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tualatin Valley Fire & Rescue
Operational area
CountryUS
StateOregon
CountiesWashington
Clackamas
Multnomah
Yamhill
45°26′00″N 122°44′58″W / 45.4334°N 122.7494°W / 45.4334; -122.7494
Agency overview
Established1989
Employees500
Annual budget$197 million (2017)[1]
StaffingCombination
Fire chiefDeric Weiss
EMS levelALS and BLS
Facilities and equipment
Divisions2
Battalions3
Stations28
Engines37
Trucks6
Squads4
Rescues1
Ambulances13
Tenders11
HAZMAT5
Wildland16
Fireboats3
Website
www.tvfr.com

Tualatin Valley Fire & Rescue (TVF&R) is a special-purpose government fire fighting and emergency services district in the Portland metropolitan area of Oregon. Established in 1989 with a merger between Washington County Fire District 1 and the Tualatin Rural Fire Protection District, it primarily provides fire and emergency medical services in eastern Washington County, but also provides services in neighboring Multnomah, Clackamas, and Yamhill counties. It serves unincorporated areas along with the cities of Beaverton, Tigard, Tualatin, West Linn, Wilsonville, and Sherwood, among others. With over 450 firefighters and 28 fire stations,[2] the district is the second largest fire department in the state and has an annual budget of $197 million.

History

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Beaverton incorporated in 1893, and by 1914 had a volunteer fire department.[3] To the south, Tualatin incorporated in 1913 and on February 2, 1935, formed the Tualatin Fire Department.[3][4] Residents of unincorporated West Slope contracted with Beaverton’s fire department to have the latter provide service starting in 1941, but created their own West Slope Rural Fire Protection District in 1949.[3]

One of two stations in Wilsonville

In 1946, the Tualatin department became the Tualatin Rural Fire Protection District and opened a new station on Boones Ferry Road,[3] and in 1948 the Stafford-Wilsonville Fire Department merged into the new rural district.[5] Also in 1946, the Cedar Mill Rural Fire Protection District was created, followed by the Beaverton Rural Fire Protection District in 1947 that covered the Aloha area.[3] The Beaverton Rural district contracted with Beaverton for services, with the original station on 185th at Blanton across from the post office.[3] A second station was opened in 1965 in the Progress area, with a third opening adjacent to Tektronix on Jenkins Road in 1967.[3]

Sherwood merged their fire department with Tualatin Rural in 1968.[6] Municipal fire departments in Tigard and King City, and Sherwood later joined the Tualatin Rural Fire Protection District.[3] In 1972, Washington County Fire District 1 was created with the merger of the Beaverton Rural, Cedar Mill Rural, and the West Slope Rural fire districts.[5]

Washington County Fire District 1 and the Tualatin Rural Fire Protection District began discussing a merger in 1985, and in November 1988 the two districts signed off on the plan with a preliminary name of as Consolidated Fire and Rescue District.[7] The name Tualatin Valley Fire & Rescue was adopted by the new entity in January 1989, and the district was officially created in February 1989.[8] The new district covered 225 square miles (580 km2) with 176,040 residents and had 17 fire stations.[8][9] WCFD1 covered 110 square miles (280 km2) with about 122,040 people in eastern and northern Washington County including Beaverton, Metzger, Garden Home, Aloha, Reedville, Bonnie Slope, Oak Hills, West Slope, Raleigh Hills, Rockcreek, and part of Tigard.[8] Tualatin Rural covered 115 square miles (300 km2) with about 54,000 people in southern Washington County and western Clackamas County including Tualatin, Wilsonville, King City, Sherwood, Durham, Rivergrove, as the rest of Tigard.[8] WCFD1 had eight fire stations with 126 firefighters, while Tualatin Rural had seven fire stations with 100 firefighters.[8]

Training Center on Tonquin Road between Sherwood, Wilsonville, and Tualatin

Prior to the merger, Washington County Fire District 1 signed an agreement with Hillsboro in 1987 in which TVF&R would not oppose annexations by the city that would remove properties from the district.[9] The agreement also could have led to a merger with the Hillsboro Fire Department.[9] The next year the district and Hillsboro agreed to have WCFD1 continue providing service in the recently annexed Tanasbourne neighborhood for five years.[10][11]

In April 1989, the new district opened a training facility.[12] Washington County Fire District 2 (WCFD2) started negotiations in October 1989 with TVF&R for a partial merger, though the merger never occurred.[9] At that time TVF&R maintained WCFD2’s equipment, along with Hillsboro’s equipment.[9] Multnomah County Fire Districts 4 and 20, plus the Valley View Water District, merged into TVF&R in 1995.[3] Beaverton voters finally approved an official merger into the district in 1996.[3]

Headquarters in Tigard

West Linn contracted TVF&R for fire services in 1998, and then joined the district in 2004.[3] Oregon City contracted with TVF&R from 1999 to 2003.[3] In 1999, TVF&R was awarded the International Association of Fire Chiefs' Fire Service Award for Excellence for its Community Assistance Program.[13] The district achieved national accreditation in August 2000 by the Commission on Fire Accreditation International.[13] Rosemont Fire District in West Linn became part of the district in 2001.[5] In 2006, its Apartment Program led to the International Association of Fire Chiefs' awarding the Fire Service Award for Excellence to TVF&R.[13]

Apparatus and stations

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Apparatus operated by the district includes 37 engines, 6 trucks, 11 water tenders, plus specialty equipment such as 5 HAZMAT trucks, 3 rescue boats, 13 EMS units, 4 technical rescue vehicles, and 4 elevated waterway units.[14] In 2017, TVF&R responded to 1,362 fires and 33,390 medical emergencies, among the 49,211 total calls for service.[14]

Station 61, one of five in Beaverton, was opened in 2000.

The district operates 28 fire stations across the area.[13][15] This includes two in Wilsonville, two in West Linn, one each in Tualatin and Sherwood, two in Tigard, one in King City, five in Beaverton, one in the Stafford area, one on Cooper Mountain, one in Aloha-Reedville, one each in the Rock Creek and Bethany areas, two in the West Hills, one in North Plains, and two in Newberg.[16] In October 2015 TVF&R added its first mini-station in Raleigh Hills.[15] In addition to the fire stations, the district operates a training center between Tualatin and Wilsonville and three operations centers, of which the one in Tigard also serves as the main command center.[14] In January 2019, TVF&R started construction of a new station, located in the Rivergrove area just north of Meridian Park Hospital. Station 39 was completed in January 2020.[17]


Fire stations and offices

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List of fire stations & offices of Tualatin Valley Fire and Rescue
Fire Station # Location Address Engine Company Truck Company Rescue Units Special/Support Units Chief Units Ref.
17 North Plains 31370 NW Commercial Street, North Plains, OR
19 Midway 15200 SW Midway Road, Hillsboro, OR
20 Newberg 414 E 2nd Street, Newberg, OR
21 Newberg 3100 Middlebrook Drive, Newberg, OR
33 Sherwood 15440 SW Oregon Street, Sherwood, OR
34 Tualatin 19365 SW 90th Court, Tualatin, OR
35 King City 17135 SW Pacific Highway, King City, OR
39 Lake Oswego 7080 SW McEwan Road, Lake Oswego, OR Squad 39 Battalion Chief 6 [17]
50 Tigard 12617 SW Walnut Street, Tigard, OR
51 Tigard 8935 SW Burnham Street, Tigard, OR
52 Wilsonville 29875 SW Kinsman Road, Wilsonville, OR 97070
53 Beaverton 8480 SW Scholls Ferry Road, Beaverton, OR 97008
54 Wilsonville 8995 SW Miley Road, #105, Wilsonville, OR 97070
55 West Linn 20790 Hidden Springs Road, West Linn, OR 97068
56 Wilsonville 8445 SW Elligsen Road, Wilsonville, OR 97070
57 West Linn 24242 SW Mountain Road, West Linn, OR 97068
58 West Linn 6050 Failing Street, West Linn, OR 97068
59 West Linn 1860 Willamette Falls Drive, West Linn, OR 97068
60 Beaverton/Portland 8585 NW Johnson Street, Portland, OR 97229
61 Beaverton 13740 SW Butner Road, Beaverton, OR 97005
62 Aloha 3608 SW 209th Avenue, Aloha, OR 97007
64 Beaverton/Portland 3355 NW 185th Avenue, Portland, OR 97229
65 Beaverton 3425 SW 103rd Avenue, Beaverton, OR 97005
66 Beaverton 13900 SW Brockman Road, Beaverton, OR 97008
67 Beaverton 13810 SW Farmington Road, Beaverton, OR 97005
68 Beaverton/Portland 13545 NW Evergreen Street, Portland, OR 97229
69 Aloha 9940 SW 175th Avenue, Aloha, OR 97007
70 Beaverton/Portland 8299 SW Beaverton-Hillsdale Highway, Portland, OR 97225
72 Portland 11646 NW Skyline Boulevard, Portland, OR 97231
CBOC

(Command & Business Operations Center)

11945 SW 70th Avenue, Tigard, OR 97223
Logistics Service Center 9941 SW Avery Street, Tualatin, OR 97062
SOC

(South Operating Center)

8455 SW Elligsen Road, Wilsonville, OR 97070
TVF&R Training Center 12400 SW Tonquin Road, Sherwood, OR 97140

Organization

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TVF&R serves about 520,000 people in Washington, Clackamas, Multnomah, and Yamhill counties on Portland’s Westside, mostly in the Tualatin Valley.[13] The district is the second largest fire department in Oregon after Portland's Fire Bureau,[18] and is the largest fire district in Oregon.[19] Cities in the district are Beaverton, Durham, King City, Newberg, North Plains, Rivergrove, Sherwood, Tigard, Tualatin, and West Linn.[13] It also covers unincorporated areas such as Aloha, Cedar Mill, Bethany, Rockcreek, including most of eastern Washington County. Accredited by the Commission on Fire Accreditation International (CFAI), TVF&R has a five-member board of directors elected by residents that govern the district.[13] As of 2018, the district had 416 paid fire fighters and paramedics, 67 volunteers, 16 prevention and 7 training staff, and 108 administration and support personnel.[14]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Financial Overview". Annual Budget. Tualatin Valley Fire & Rescue. Retrieved March 21, 2018.
  2. ^ "Services". About TVF&R. Tualatin Valley Fire & Rescue. Retrieved November 26, 2024.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Pitz, Ray (2012). Tualatin Valley Fire & Rescue. Arcadia Publishing. pp. 8–9. ISBN 9780738593043. Retrieved March 22, 2014.
  4. ^ Kansaku-sarmiento, Alana (February 29, 2012). "Tualatin celebrates original fire department's 75th anniversary". The Times. Retrieved March 17, 2014.
  5. ^ a b c "History". Document Center. Tualatin Valley Fire & Rescue. Retrieved March 17, 2014.
  6. ^ "Firemen slated for Sherwood". The Oregonian. August 31, 1973. p. 51.
  7. ^ Olmos, Robert (November 8, 1988). "Washington County, Tualatin Fire districts merge". The Oregonian. p. West Zoner B7.
  8. ^ a b c d e Ostergren, Jack (January 16, 1989). "Boundaries adopted for merger of two fire districts Washington County, Tualatin Rural districts will serve 176,040". The Oregonian. p. West Zoner B5.
  9. ^ a b c d e "Spreading fire district continues its growth, Tualatin Valley Fire mulls improving ties with other districts". The Oregonian. October 24, 1989. p. West Zoner B2.
  10. ^ "Fire engine company moves to Orenco". The Oregonian. July 13, 1988. p. West Zoner B4.
  11. ^ Hill, Jim (November 19, 1987). "Hillsboro, Fire District 1 consider pact". The Oregonian. p. West Zoner 1.
  12. ^ Bodine, Harry (April 12, 1989). "First phase of fire training center finished". The Oregonian. p. West Zoner C2.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g "About TVF&R". Tualatin Valley Fire & Rescue. Retrieved March 21, 2018.
  14. ^ a b c d "Fact Sheet". Documents. Tualatin Valley Fire & Rescue. January 25, 2018. Retrieved March 21, 2018.
  15. ^ a b Owen, Wendy (November 25, 2015). "First mini fire station: Customized for calls, improved response time". The Oregonian/OregonLive. Retrieved November 25, 2015.
  16. ^ "TVF&R Facilities". About. Tualatin Valley Fire & Rescue. Retrieved March 25, 2014.
  17. ^ a b Roney, Luke (February 2, 2020). "New TVF&R Station Opens in Tualatin - Tualatin Life". Retrieved August 19, 2024.
  18. ^ Mortenson, Eric (March 12, 2009). "Tualatin Valley Fire & Rescue adapting aggressively to changes". The Oregonian. Retrieved March 14, 2014.
  19. ^ International Association of Fire Chiefs. Turner Publishing Company. 2000. p. 154. ISBN 9781563116797.
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