[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 44, Volume 1]

[Revised as of October 1, 2005]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 44CFR152.1]



[Page 388-389]

 

              TITLE 44--EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AND ASSISTANCE

 

 CHAPTER I--FEDERAL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY, DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND 

                                SECURITY

 

PART 152_ASSISTANCE TO FIREFIGHTERS GRANT PROGRAM--Table of Contents

 

Sec. 152.1  Purpose and eligible uses of grant funds.









Sec.

152.1 Purpose and eligible uses of grant funds.

152.2 Definitions.

152.3 Availability of funds.

152.4 Roles and responsibilities.

152.5 Review process and evaluation criteria.

152.6 Application review and award process.

152.7 Grant payment, reporting and other requirements.

152.8 Application submission and deadline.

152.9 Reconsideration.



    Authority: Federal Fire Protection and Control Act, 15 U.S.C. 2201 

et seq.



    Source: 68 FR 12547, Mar. 14, 2003, unless otherwise noted.





    (a) This competitive grant program will provide funding directly to 

fire departments of a State for the purpose of enhancing departments 

abilities to protect the health and safety of the public, as well as 

that of firefighting personnel, facing fire and fire-related hazards. 

Eligible applicants can submit only one application per application 

period. Departments that submit multiple applications in one application 

period will have each of their applications deemed ineligible.

    (b) Eligible applicants are fire departments or fire departments of 

a State which is defined as an agency or organization that has a 

``formally recognized arrangement'' with a State, local or tribal 

authority (city, county, parish, fire district, township, town, or other 

non-Federal governing body) to provide fire suppression services within 

a fixed geographical area. A fire department can apply for assistance 

for its emergency medical services unit provided the unit falls 

organizationally under the auspices of the fire department. A 

municipality or fire district may submit an application on behalf of a 

fire department when the fire department lacks the legal status to do 

so, e.g., where the fire department falls within the auspices of the 

municipality. When a municipality or fire district submits an 

application on behalf of a fire department, the fire department is 

precluded from submitting an



[[Page 389]]



additional application. Non-Federal airport and/or port authority fire 

departments are eligible, but only if they have a formally recognized 

arrangement with the local jurisdiction to provide fire suppression, on 

a first-due basis, outside the confines of the airport or port 

facilities. Airport or port authority fire departments whose sole 

responsibility is suppression of fires on the airport grounds or port 

facilities are not eligible for this grant program. Fire departments 

that are Federal or contracted by the Federal government and whose sole 

responsibility is suppression of fires on Federal installations are not 

eligible for this grant program. Fire stations that are not independent 

but are part of, or controlled by a larger fire department or agency, 

are typically not eligible. Fire departments that are for-profit 

departments (i.e., do not have specific non-profit status or are not 

municipally based) are not eligible to apply for assistance under this 

program. Also not eligible for this program are ambulance services, 

rescue squads, auxiliaries, dive teams, urban search and rescue teams, 

fire service organizations or associations, and State/local agencies 

such as a forest service, fire marshal, hospitals, and training offices.

    (c) Congress included in the legislation a list of fourteen 

activities eligible for funding under this program. Those activities are 

as follows:

    (1) To hire additional firefighting personnel;

    (2) To train firefighting personnel in firefighting, emergency 

response (including response to a terrorism incident or use of a weapon 

of mass destruction), arson prevention and detection, or the handling of 

hazardous materials, or to train firefighting personnel to provide any 

of the training in this paragraph (c);

    (3) To fund the creation of rapid intervention teams to protect 

firefighting personnel at scenes of fires and other emergencies;

    (4) To certify fire inspectors;

    (5) To establish wellness and fitness programs for firefighting 

personnel to ensure that the firefighting personnel can carry out their 

duties;

    (6) To fund emergency medical services provided by fire departments;

    (7) To acquire additional firefighting vehicles, including fire 

trucks;

    (8) To acquire additional firefighting equipment, including 

equipment for communications, monitoring, and response to a terrorism 

incident or use of a weapon of mass destruction;

    (9) To acquire personal protective equipment required for 

firefighting personnel by the Occupational Safety and Health 

Administration, and other personal protective equipment for firefighting 

personnel, including protective equipment to respond to a terrorism 

incident or the use of a weapon of mass destruction;

    (10) To modify fire stations, fire training facilities, and other 

facilities to protect the health and safety of firefighting personnel;

    (11) To enforce fire codes;

    (12) To fund fire prevention programs;

    (13) To educate the public about arson prevention and detection; and

    (14) To provide incentives for the recruitment and retention of 

volunteer firefighting personnel for volunteer firefighting departments 

and other firefighting departments that utilize volunteers.

    (d) The specific activities that will be eligible for funding will 

be announced in the Notice of Funding Availability (NOFA) that we will 

publish pursuant to the program's annual appropriation.