Mutual Aid Box Alarm System -
Wisconsin
What is MABAS?
MABAS is a mutual aid organization
that has been in existence since the late 1960s. Heavily rooted throughout
northern
Illinois
,
MABAS now includes over 750 member fire departments organized within 75 divisions.
MABAS first came to
Wisconsin
in 1987 with the joining of the
Village
of
Pleasant Prairie
in
Kenosha
County
.
MABAS divisions geographically span the states of
Illinois
,
Wisconsin
,
Indiana
,
Missouri
,
Michigan
, and the other states, i.e.
Minnesota
,
Iowa
, and
Ohio
, are considering
joining. There are 16 established
Wisconsin
divisions (as of May 2008) who share MABAS with the 62 divisions established in
Illinois
.
MABAS includes over 25,000+
firefighters and daily staffed emergency response units including more than 950
fire stations, 1100+ engine companies, 375+ ladder trucks, 800+ ambulances
(mostly paramedic capable), 150+ heavy rescue squads, 135+ light rescue squads,
and 275+ water tankers. Fire/
EMS
reserve (back-up) units account for more than 600 additional emergency
vehicles. MABAS also offers specialized operations teams for hazardous materials
(HAZMAT), underwater rescue/recovery (DIVE) and above grade/below grade, trench
and building collapse rescues, a.k.a. Technical Rescue Teams (
TRT
). An additional element of resource are the
certified fire investigators which can be "packaged" as teams for
larger incidents requiring complicated and time-consuming efforts for any
single agency.
MABAS is a unique organization where every MABAS participating agency has
signed the same contract with their 750+ counterpart MABAS agencies. As a MABAS
agency, you agree to: standards of operation, incident command, minimum level
of equipment staffing, safety, and on-scene terminology. MABAS agencies,
regardless of their geopolitical origin, are able to work together seamlessly
on any emergency scene. All MABAS agencies operate on a common radio frequency,
Interagency Fire Emergency Radio Network (IFERN) and are activated for response
through pre-designed "run" cards each participating agency designs
and tailors to meet their local risk need. MABAS also provides mutual aid
station coverage to a stricken community when their fire/
EMS
resources are committed to an incident for an
extended period.
MABAS extra alarms are commanded by
the stricken community and dispatch control is handled through the stricken
community's MABAS division dispatch center. Over 950 MABAS extra alarm
incidents occur annually throughout the 75 divisions of MABAS. The expansion of
mutual aid to a statewide system doesn't require all municipalities and fire
districts to join MABAS as a member agency, however, MABAS is a recognized
response system by the State of
Wisconsin
when it was signed into law in April of 2006 by Governor Jim Doyle.
On a daily basis, communities face emergencies, which overtax their local fire/
EMS
and special operations capabilities. The fire
service in the State of
Wisconsin
recognizes that need and has begun the work on the Wisconsin Fire Service
Emergency Response Plan (WFSERP). The WFSERP was initiated by the
International Association of
Fire Chiefs
(IAFC) through the Intrastate Mutual Aid System (IMAS) Project. The IMAS Project is integral to the
development of interstate disaster response of the National Response Framework (NRF).
To become a MABAS Division/agency, all
that is required is a resolution or ordinance being enacted by the governing
body and signing the MABAS contract. Most MABAS agencies are comprised of a
number of geographically co-located municipalities or districts. However, one
community can also be its own MABAS division, e.g. the City of
Milwaukee
is MABAS Division 109. Some MABAS
divisions have nearly 30 member departments or districts. All it takes is
discussion, agreement and political commitment.
The Executive Board of MABAS routinely
provides assistance to interest agencies. MABAS will provide any and all
information to inquiring agencies including prepared ordinances, resolutions,
and the standard contract to communities who are seriously interested. There is
no cost to join MABAS and dues are self-imposed by and at the control of each
individual MABAS division. The MABAS Executive Board meets monthly and
functions as a coordinating agency.
Areas of
the state that are interested may inquire about MABAS by contacting:
Brian M. Satula
President, MABAS-Wisconsin
(see Current Officers link)