The Bucks County Commissioners last month voted to establish the Bucks County Fire Service Advisory Board (FSAB), creating a board of career and volunteer fire chiefs to provide feedback to the Commissioners on the most pressing issues facing the county’s fire service.
The group, which organized prior to its official establishment this week, consists of seven voting members – four volunteer fire chiefs and three career fire chiefs. Board members were chosen by their peers to represent distinct districts and aspects of the County’s fire community.
“We’re proud to represent the entire fire service of Bucks County,” said Adam Selisker, FSAB chair and chief of the Northampton Township Fire Department. “We believe that it’s critical to the ongoing success of the fire service in Bucks County to have a unified voice.”
The board’s creation comes at a time of significant change for Bucks County’s fire service at the urging of local fire officials.
“With the changing landscape of the fire service across Bucks County, we have seen a decline in the volunteer service and an increase in some career staffing throughout the county,” said George Wilson, Bucks County’s interim Director of Emergency Management.
Wilson said the FSAB will address a wide range of issues including strategic planning, firefighter training and improving coordination with County resources to better support fire companies.
The County Commissioners voted unanimously during their public meeting Wednesday to establish the FSAB as an official County advisory board.
“For all the board members who are putting in extra time now on top of everything else that you already do, it means a lot,” said Commissioner Vice Chair Bob Harvie, “and we are looking forward to working with you to make sure we can do everything that we need to do to support the fire service throughout this county.”
The FSAB’s seven voting members are: