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IAFF Testifies Before House on Improving FIRE Act and SAFER
July 9, 2009 – The IAFF testified before a House Subcommittee July 8 regarding
the need to amend the Assistance to Firefighters (FIRE) and Staffing for
Adequate Fire and Emergency Response (SAFER) grant programs to enable more
communities to take full advantage of the programs.
IAFF Assistant to the General President Kevin O’Connor identified the current
uneven distribution of funds as the number-one problem facing the FIRE grant
program. “The overwhelming majority of FIRE grants are awarded to
departments that protect a relatively small percentage of the population,”
testified O’Connor. “We fully support ensuring that communities of every size
receive a fair share of FIRE grants. However, the current distribution of
funds is an inefficient use of scarce federal resources.”
To address this disparity, the IAFF proposed that professional fire departments
receive a guaranteed percentage of total grant funding to better allocate funds
among those departments that serve a majority of the nation’s population.
O’Connor also called for raising the current funding caps on FIRE grant
awards to provide sufficient resources for larger jurisdictions to improve
preparedness, and proposed that the local match be reduced from 20 percent to 15
percent while allowing for exceptions in case of substantial need.
Amendments to the SAFER program were also discussed at the hearing. Although the
IAFF recently succeeded in enacting temporary measures to waive the local match
for SAFER and provide the Secretary of Homeland Security the authority to waive
some of the other restrictions for the 2009 and 2010 grants, O’Connor
noted that a permanent change in law is needed to help local communities meet
safe staffing levels. In addition to making permanent the waiver authorities,
O’Connor argued that the rules governing SAFER must be simplified by shortening
the grant period from five to three years, implementing an across-the-board 20
percent local match and eliminating the current funding cap.
The IAFF was joined by the International Association of Fire Chiefs (IAFC) and
the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) in advocating for the
amendments.
Subcommittee members, including Chair David Wu (D-OR) and Ranking Member Adrian
Smith (R-NE), will be drafting legislation to reauthorize the FIRE and SAFER
grant programs in the coming weeks. The IAFF will continue working closely with
its congressional allies to ensure that its recommendations are incorporated
into the Subcommittee’s bill.
IAFF Testimony: Reauthorizing
the FIRE Act and SAFER
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