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Contact Us 631 9th Street Arcata, CA 95521 (707) 825-2000 (office) (707) 822-7951 (fax) Mon-Fri 8:00 AM-5:00 PM Closed All Holidays |
The Arcata Fire Department was established on January 24, 1884 after the town experienced several major fires. Our first official name was “Arcata Fire Company No. 1”, which was promptly changed to “Arcata Hook and Ladder Company No. 1” less than one month later. Some of the first equipment the Fire Department acquired was a hose cart, ladder cart, lanterns, a tin speaking trumpet, and an axe. The fire department again changed its name to the “Arcata Volunteer Fire Department” and protected only the City of Arcata. The Arcata Fire Protection District came into existence on June 1, 1944 to protect the areas surrounding Arcata. The Fire District saw it’s first paid personnel in 1953 beginning with the Fire Chief. In September of 1960, the Fire District expanded to cover the town of McKinleyville, which neighbors Arcata to the North. The McKinleyville Fire Station was built and staffed that same year. The City of Arcata expanded and the Mad River Fire Station was built in 1975. Today Arcata Volunteer Fire Department no longer provides public safety services. It is now a 501c3 non profit orginization that is very active in the community supporting a number of civic events. The Arcata Fire Protection District is a combination department (career and volunteer firefighters) protecting 36,000 residents living amongst industrial, commercial, residential, agricultural, beaches, and Wildland Urban Interface areas. We are located on the remote and isolated coast of Northern California and protect the City of Arcata, the communities of McKinleyville, Bayside, Manila, Jacoby Creek, Bayside and other rural areas for a total service area of 63 square miles. We exist next to the Cascadia Subduction Zone, a seismically active area, which makes our Fire District vulnerable to significant earthquakes resulting in possible fires and natural disasters. The Mad River, one of the six major wild rivers on the North Coast, bisects the District into two potentially isolated geographic areas.
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