Singapore Civil Defence Force

Singapore Civil Defence Force
Pasukan Pertahanan Awam Singapura
சிங்கப்பூர் குடிமைத் தற்காப்புப் படை
新加坡民防部队

Crest of the Singapore Civil Defence Force
Agency overview
Formed 1982
Preceding agency
  • Singapore Fire Service
Jurisdiction Government of Singapore
Headquarters 91 Ubi Ave 4, Singapore
Employees 6,000
Minister responsible
Agency executives
  • [1], Commissioner SCDF
  • Eric Yap Wee Teck
Parent agency Ministry of Home Affairs
Website www.scdf.gov.sg

The Singapore Civil Defence Force (abbreviation: SCDF; Malay: Pasukan Pertahanan Awam Singapura; Chinese: 新加坡民防部队; Tamil: சிங்கப்பூர் குடிமைத் தற்காப்புப் படை) is the main agency in charge of the provision of emergency services in Singapore during peacetime and emergency.

A uniformed organisation under the purview of the Ministry of Home Affairs, the main role of SCDF is to provide fire-fighting, rescue and emergency ambulance services; mitigating hazardous materials incidents, as well as formulate, implement and enforce regulations on fire safety and civil defence shelter matters.[2] It also plays a major role in the Republic's disaster relief operations. SCDF was classified as a heavy urban search and rescue (USAR) team by INSARAG on 18 January 2009, the highest level possible for any USAR team.[3]

History

Statue of firefighters in front of the Civil Defence Heritage Gallery, co-located with Central Fire Station

As early as 1855, Singapore's first Fire Committee was formed after a fire in Kling Street destroyed S$13,000 worth of property on 7 November 1855. Prior to this, fires were attended to by uniformed groups which included the police, sepoys, marine soldiers and even convicts. On 7 September 1869, the Governor Major-General Sir Harry St. George Ord enacted the Fire Ordinance and appointed the Colonial Engineer as Chairman of the Fire Commission for Singapore. In 1888, the Singapore Fire Brigade was established and with sufficient funding, gained recognition as a fully equipped professional brigade. By 1909, there were a total of three built stations servicing Singapore, namely Central Fire Station at Hill Street, Cross Street and Kallang Fire Stations.[4]

Over the early years of independence, the Singapore Fire Brigade faced several major incidents, such as the Bukit Ho Swee Fire of 1961, the Robinson Fire of 1972, and the Spyros explosion and fire of 1978. In 1980, the Singapore Fire Service (SFS) became the official name for the brigade. In 1982, the National Civil Defence Plan was launched which spearheaded the emergency preparedness for the nation. With the enactment of the Civil Defence Act in 1986, the SCDF was established as an independent organisation under the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA). In the same year, the Hotel New World disaster paved the way for joint operations between the SCDF and Singapore Fire Service (SFS). Due to the similarity in roles and functions, the SCDF and SFS were formally integrated on 15 April 1989.[5]

The newly integrated SCDF mainly used facilities which were handed over from the Singapore Armed Forces or the Singapore Police Force. Since the early 2000s, its headquarters and territorial divisions have all moved into purpose-built facilities. SCDF's involvement in regional disaster relief operations has also raised its profile significantly.

Organisation structure

The SCDF is branched into seven Operational and Training Divisions beneath the Headquarters Element. Of these, four are Territorial Divisions, each covering a section of Singapore corresponding roughly to the four cardinal points of the compass. Each division possesses its own bunkered and mobile Command Centres, Hazmat response capabilities, as well as full internal administration structures.

The two core training establishments, namely the Civil Defence Academy (CDA) and National Service Training Institute (NSTI), while not covering any territory or have any primarily operational concerns, are recognised as divisions unto themselves with full administration, supply and support units. These units become operationally active as the 5th and 6th SCDF Divisions respectively in times of emergency or war.

Since 1 April 2012, the SCDF Marine Command (SCDF MC) has been set up and possesses the capability and capacity to respond to marine fire and rescue incidents.

Headquarters

The administration office tower of HQ SCDF

The Headquarters complex of SCDF contains the Command Centre for all operations nationwide. It is co-located with the DART (Disaster Assistance and Rescue Team) Base, Central Supply Base and Paya Lebar Fire Station in a secured compound on Ubi Avenue 4. In addition to command and control, logistics, and operational facilities, HQ SCDF is also made up of an administration structure consisting of numerous staff departments. These staff departments, listed below, co-ordinate and carry out the administration of various key aspects of the force, under the command of the Commissioners and Department Directors.

Operational divisions

Central Fire Station, built in 1909, is Singapore's oldest fire station
Tampines Fire Station, co-located with the Headquarters of the 2nd SCDF Division
Sengkang Fire Station, under the 3rd SCDF Division

Training divisions

Both the CDA and NSTI complexes are co-located in Choa Chu Kang, along Jalan Bahar.

Appliances

SCDF contingent during NDP 10 mobile column
The Marine Firefighting Vessel of the SCDF Marine Command participating in a chemical spill simulation exercise

The Singapore Civil Defence Force maintains a large fleet of custom-made vehicles (referred to as appliances) to provide an emergency response force capable of mitigating any and all kinds of fires and disasters. Ranging from the generic fire truck and ambulance, to more sophisticated mobile command structures and disaster mitigation vehicles such as Hazardous Materials (Hazmat) Pods, many of the appliances were designed and commissioned by the Force itself which prides itself in customising its own fleet as opposed to obtaining ready-made designs from industries. This is directed towards improving the Force's response capability towards an increasingly large variety of emergency scenarios and threats, in addition to basic firefighting and paramedical services, particularly in the Singapore context.

The following list of appliances is not exhaustive, and is grouped according to application as well as the order of scale of response capability.

Paramedical response vehicles

Firefighting appliances

SCDF's new fleet of 3-wheeler Fire Bikes
SCDF's latest Red Rhino v2.1 on the left, and v2.0 on the right
Generation E of the SCDF Pump Ladder featuring a CAF pump
A Combined Platform Ladder (CPL)

Hazmat appliances

Command elements

A Forward Command Vehicle (FCV) belonging to the 1st Civil Defence Division

Special vehicles

Operation Lionheart

SCDF maintains a rescue contingent on 24-hour standby under the codename Operation Lionheart to provide rescue and humanitarian assistance and support to countries stricken by major disasters. Since its formation in 1990, the Operation Lionheart contingent had responded to 16 overseas missions.[6]

Below is the breakdown of the missions:

DisasterCountryYear
Baguio City EarthquakeBaguio City, PhilippinesJul 1990
Highland Towers CollapseKuala Lumpur, MalaysiaDec 1993
Tai Chung County EarthquakeTaiwanSep 1999
Asian Tsunami DisasterAceh, IndonesiaDec 2004
Asian Tsunami DisasterKhao Lak, ThailandDec 2004
Sumatra EarthquakeNias Island, IndonesiaMar 2005
Rokan Hilir Bush FiresSumatra, IndonesiaAug 2005
South Asian EarthquakeMuzaffarabad, PakistanOct 2005
Central Java EarthquakeCentral Java, IndonesiaMay 2006
Sichuan EarthquakeSichuan, ChinaMay 2008
Padang City EarthquakeSumatra, IndonesiaOct 2009
Christchurch EarthquakeChristchurch, New ZealandMar 2011
Japan EarthquakeSoma City, JapanMar 2011
Malaysia, FloodKelantan, MalaysiaDec 2014
Thailand, Forest FireChiang Mai, ThailandMar 2015
Nepal EarthquakeKathmandu, NepalMay 2015

Ranks and badges

Ranks

These ranks feature the following charges:

The ranks are displayed here in descending order from highest seniority at the top to lowest at the bottom.

Commissioners

Commissioned Officers (Senior Officers)

Warrant Officers

Specialists (Junior Officers)

Section Commander Course & Rota Commander Course

Non-Commissioned Officers

Badges

The above badges are worn above the left breast pocket, higher up from service medals or ribbons, and typically identify personnel with major specialist training and/or experience. As there are a number of SCDF officers who were from SAF, these officers continue to don their SAF service medals or ribbons.

Specialist tabs

These specialist tabs bearing the titles are worn on the uniform top left sleeve. Gold and Silver Individual Physical Proficiency Test (IPPT) Badges that signify personnel with outstanding physical proficiency are worn on the left sleeve, beneath any Specialist title decorations.

Fictional television programs:

See also

References

Citations
Bibliography
  • Joan Hon (1988). 100 Years of the Singapore Fire Service. Times Books International. ISBN 9971-65-513-6.
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