Los Angeles County Lifeguards
Watch the water, stay in shape, do the right thing | |
Agency overview | |
---|---|
Established | 1914 |
Employees | 782 lifeguards [1] |
Staffing | Combination (Recurrent & Career) |
EMS level | BLS & ALS |
Facilities and equipment | |
Stations | 4 Section Headquarters, 15 Substations, 158 Towers |
Website | |
fire.lacounty.gov |
Los Angeles County Lifeguards is a division of the Los Angeles County Fire Department. The lifeguard operations safeguard 31 miles (50 km) of beach and 72 miles (116 km) of coastline, from San Pedro in the south, to Malibu in the north. The Los Angeles County Lifeguard Service served as the model for the hit television series Baywatch which was created by recurrent lifeguard Gregory J. Bonann.
Lifeguards also provide marine firefighting and fire boat services to Catalina Island, with operations out of Avalon and the Isthmus. Other daily fire boat services operate out of Los Angeles Harbor (Baywatch Cabrillo), King Harbor (Baywatch Redondo), Marina Del Rey (Baywatch Del Rey and Baywatch Santa Monica) and Malibu Pier (Baywatch Malibu).
The Los Angeles County Fire Department Lifeguard Division is the largest professional lifeguard service in the world. Entering the year 2005, the Los Angeles County Lifeguard Service employs 132 year-round lifeguards (chiefs, captains and ocean lifeguard specialists) and over 650 seasonal lifeguards (recurrents). Operating out of four Sectional Headquarters, located in Hermosa, Santa Monica, Marina Del Rey and Zuma beach. Each of these headquarters staffs a 24-hour response unit, and are part of the 911 system.
In addition to providing marine firefighting, LA County Lifeguards have specialized training for fire boat operations.
Prior to July 1, 1994, Los Angeles County Lifeguards were part of the Department of Beaches and Harbors.[2]
Vehicles employed
- Ford Escape Hybrid (2008–2014)
- Ford Ranger (1994–2002)
- Ford Expedition
- Ford F350 SuperDuty
- Nissan Frontier (2003–2008)
- Toyota Tacoma (2015–present)
- Toyota Tundra (2015–present)
Lifeguard uniforms
The following categories of lifeguard clothing in sufficient quantities to fully annually outfit 760 male lifeguards and 136 female lifeguards, which numbers can change each agreement year based upon the workforce composition then in employment, as ordered by the county including the following:
- Short-sleeve and long-sleeve polo shirts;
- Volley swim trunks;
- Board shorts;
- One-piece and two-piece women's swimsuits;
- Micro-fleece with half-zipper;
- Windbreaker pants;
- Baseball caps, knit cap, and floppy hats
- Lightweight windbreaker jackets;
- Heavyweight jackets; and
- Rashguards
Badges and patches
Most lifeguards are wearing a departmental badge shall consist of a shield, surmonted a bear, and shall be of silver-colored metal unless otherwise specified. The words "County of Los Angeles" shall appear on a ribbon at the atop of the badge just under the bear, followed by ribbons with the words "Fire Department" will appear just above the seal of the county. Then the title of the position of the person authorized to wear such official badge shall be inscribe on a ribbon placed just below the county's seal and the serial number of the badge shall appeared at the bottom of the badge below the title of the position. The words "Ocean Lifeguard Specialist", "Ocean Lifeguard", "Captain" and "Chief" may also appear on the face of badges issued to employees or retired employees authorized by the Fire Department and board of supervisors to carry such badges.
Shoulder patches
Los Angeles County lifeguards wear a patch on their left sleeve that reads "County of Los Angeles Fire Dept. Lifeguard".[3] Lifeguards that are licensed as paramedics wear a similar patch that identifies them as such.[4]
Lifeguard vehicles
All Toyota Tacoma trucks are currently assigned a sectional beach in Los Angeles County since deploying its new vehicle since 2015.
References
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Los Angeles County Lifeguards. |
- Official website
- Los Angeles County Fire Department
- Watch the Water – a public safety program