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Proudly Serving Bethesda & Chevy Chase, MD NW Washington, DC |
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Click on the following links for more information: "One of the Best Trained, Best Equipped Rescue Squads in the Nation" |
Fact Sheet
The Bethesda-Chevy Chase Rescue Squad At A Glance
Our Mission
Now in its 70th year, the Bethesda-Chevy Chase Rescue Squad (BCCRS) is a philanthropically operated organization that provides our community with the security and peace of mind of high quality fire, rescue, and emergency medical services. The Rescue Squad provides its services at no cost to the recipient and is dedicated to using the utmost care, professionalism, and ethics. (For more about our founding date and number of years of service, click here).
How We Accomplish Our Mission
BCCRS is a national leader in the recruitment, retention, and training of volunteer personnel. Using 150 professionally-trained volunteers, BCCRS staffs seven “night crews” that respond to incidents during evenings, nights, and weekends. BCCRS also employs a daytime staff who, with the assistance of a group of daytime volunteers and two Montgomery County Paramedics, staff our emergency vehicles on weekdays. This system ensures that personnel are available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week to respond to emergencies. BCCRS’s fleet, with a replacement cost of over $3 million, includes 7 ambulance/medic units, 2 heavy rescue squads, 1 medic chase car, 2 air support units for refilling firefighters’ breathing apparatus at fire scenes, as well as utility and command vehicles.
BCCRS does not receive regular appropriated funds from any government. Instead, BCCRS raises almost all of its $2 million operating budget from individual donors, foundations, businesses, and occasional state and federal grants. BCCRS is registered under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, and contributions are tax-deductible as permitted by law.
Highlights Of The Last 20 Years
1990: The Rescue Squad celebrates its 50th anniversary with a visit
by President George H.W. Bush, who designates the Rescue Squad as
a “Point of Light” for its outstanding service to the
community.
1993: The Rescue Squad’s Bicycle Emergency Response Team (BERT)
begins service at special events requiring Emergency Medical Services
coverage by highly mobile personnel.
1994: The Rescue Squad forms a Confined Space Rescue Team, as Squad volunteers and staff continue to hold their place at the leading edge of rescue technology.
1996: The Rescue Squad responds with multiple units to a fatal collision (with fire and passengers trapped) of an Amtrak train and a MARC commuter train in Silver Spring during a major snowstorm.
1997: Rescue Squad personnel use a first-generation thermal imaging system to make the nation’s first human “save” of a victim in a fire.
2001: The Rescue Squad is the first department from Montgomery County to send units to the scene of multiple fatalities after an aircraft hijacked by terrorists crashes into the Pentagon.
2002: The Rescue Squad responds with twelve units and 28 volunteer and career personnel–the single largest unit response from any station in Montgomery County–to an Amtrak train derailment in Kensington, Maryland, as part of a response by several Montgomery County fire/rescue departments.
2009: The Rescue Squad responds to 9,963 calls in calendar year 2009, including injuries, heart attacks, illnesses, vehicle collisions, house fires, and many other emergencies.
2010: The Rescue Squad responds to scores of emergencies during back-to-back snowstorms in January and February that left the area paralyzed under 36 inches of snow.
Come visit the Bethesda-Chevy Chase Rescue Squad the first Saturday in October for our annual “Rescue Day” Open House, held in conjunction with the Taste of Bethesda, the outdoor food festival held just two blocks away in Bethesda's restaurant district.
Rescue Day will feature free fire and rescue activities and displays for all ages, including tours of the statio and live demonstrations of emergency medical, rescue, and firefighting equipment. The Rescue Squad’s most advanced firefighting and rescue equipment will be on display, including emergency vehicles and a thermal imaging camera that is used to help locate fire victims in blinding smoke.
For more information on this and other Rescue Squad events, visit www.bccrs.org.
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