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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
fire chief
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Brown swore in his new fire chief, Bob Demmons, during a ceremony Tuesday morning.
▪ Higuchi, a deputy fire chief for Los Angeles County since January 1994.
▪ No one the fire chief was.
▪ The bowling alley fire in a neighboring town that killed five firemen when my father was deputy fire chief.
Wiktionary
fire chief

alt. A leader of a fire station; an officer in charge of fireman and fighting fires n. A leader of a fire station; an officer in charge of fireman and fighting fires

WordNet
fire chief

n. the head of a fire department [syn: fire marshal]

Wikipedia
Fire chief

Fire Chief (or Chief Fire Officer in England and Wales; or Fire Master in Scotland) is a top executive rank or commanding officer in a fire department (either elected or appointed) who is responsible for carrying out the day-to-day tasks of running a firefighting organization. Such tasks include supervising other officers and firefighters at an emergency scene and recruiting, training, and equipping them for their respective duties. Depending upon local needs and organization, the Chief may also be involved in fire prevention, fire inspection, disaster preparedness, emergency medical services, and related disciplines, as well as administrative duties such as budgets and personnel issues, research into safety and regulations, and liaison with other agencies.

In larger departments, a Fire Chief is often assisted by one or more assistant fire chiefs, deputy fire chiefs, district fire chiefs, division chiefs, and/or battalion chiefs. Collectively, these are known as chief officers, to distinguish them from company officers.

The Chief may report to the fire commissioner, the mayor, or a governing body (such as a board of selectmen).

During an emergency incident, the first qualified officer on the scene may "establish command", and then transfer command to the Chief when he or she arrives, as circumstances warrant. The chief may delegate some statutory powers to qualified officers, such as the ability to enter or use private property as reasonably necessary to stop a fire, or to order people or property seized as may be essential to preserving safety or investigating the cause of an incident.

A valuable chief will have many years of experience at all levels of firefighting, as well as superior management skills, especially under the stress of emergency situations.

Suitable fire chief's vehicles can be valuable as an Incident Command Post and also for public relations during emergencies and other public events.

Fire Chief (magazine)

Fire Chief is a magazine that was established in 1956. The magazine examines issues that are of particular importance to managers of fire departments. It was published in Chicago by Penton Media until 2013; in 2014 it was sold to Praetorian Group. The volumes for May 1968-Nov. 1991 were called also whole no. 134-415.

Usage examples of "fire chief".

The fire chief gauged the path of the beam and meticulously examined the obstacle course ahead.

He saw in the packed bleachers the faces of school-board members, city-council members, policemen, the fire chief: people elected or appointed to positions of power.

He smacked the fire chief's report dismissively with the backs of his fingers.

Assistant Fire Chief Charles Gaines told Glenn Wilburn, who lost two grandsons in the blast, that there was never any warning.

The Mayor pretended to grimace, but McCafferty knew him to be a former fire chief.