Fire & EMS

A Modern, People-First Vision for Public Safety

Baltimore County’s Fire and EMS Department is more than engines, ladders, ambulances and stations. At its core, it is people; highly trained men and women who run toward danger while others flee, who save lives in minutes that matter and who anchor the public’s trust in moments of crisis.

But the system supporting them is stuck in another era. Funding lags far behind peer jurisdictions. Training facilities are outdated. Collaboration with Baltimore City is nearly nonexistent. Morale has deteriorated across both career and volunteer ranks. And a generation of firefighters and medics is being asked to serve longer, with fewer benefits and fewer tools, than the job safely allows.

It’s time to modernize a department that has served this County with courage for decades—and to build a future that matches the caliber, dignity and professionalism of its people.

This is our commitment: a 5-year plan to double departmental resources, rebuild aging facilities, strengthen recruitment and retention, modernize operations and restore pride to a proud profession.

A Five-Year Plan for a Stronger, Safer County

Funding the Future

Baltimore County spends less per resident on fire and rescue than nearly every comparable jurisdiction in Maryland. Howard County— about one third our size—spends triple what we do per capita.

That gap comes at a cost: slower training pipelines, aging stations, overworked personnel and a shrinking applicant pool.

We will double the Fire Department’s funding within five years by leveraging:

This long-term commitment ensures our County is never again outcompeted for talent or unprepared for crisis.

Modernizing the Backbone of Safety

For decades, recruits and volunteers have trained in facilities that no longer meet the demands of modern fire service. There are no locker rooms or showers, classroom and scenario spaces are cramped, and parking is scarce. A 3,500-member system is supported by only a dozen full-time instructors, forcing class sizes so small that the department can’t keep pace with turnover or advancement needs.

Nick’s plan will:

Firefighting has changed. Training and our facilities must change with it.

Modernizing Fleet & Infrastructure

Already there are efforts to rebuild the apparatus fleet with new engines, ladder trucks, rescues and medic units. Beyond supporting these efforts, we will:

Every dollar invested in these modern tools is well worth it because these tools not only save the lives of our residents, but they protect our first responders and boost their morale.

Building a Fire Service That Attracts and Keeps the Best

Recruitment that Competes

Today’s applicant pool is shrinking nationwide. To hire the best, Baltimore County must become the employer of choice.

We will:

The message to future applicants must be clear: Baltimore County is where you build a career.

Retention that Respects the Profession

Firefighting is grueling, dangerous work. Asking responders to serve 30 years before retirement is out of step with industry norms and human limits.

We will:

Rebuilding Our Relationship with Baltimore City

A region as interconnected as ours cannot afford fire and EMS systems that operate in isolation. Baltimore City and Baltimore County share borders, neighborhoods, transportation corridors, hospital networks, and emergency response patterns. Fires, overdoses, medical calls, and large-scale incidents do not stop at jurisdictional lines—and yet, for years, our collaboration has been minimal, inconsistent, or purely transactional.

We must restore a functional, modern partnership with Baltimore City by:

Together, both jurisdictions will save money, improve outcomes and strengthen regional resilience.

Restoring Honor, Pride & Morale

In the 1980s and 1990s, this department was one of the most respected in the state. Today, morale is in the basement—because too many leaders asked firefighters to do more with less for too long.

This plan changes that equation.

When we invest in people via modern equipment, competitive benefits, fair retirement and world-class training, morale doesn’t just improve; the entire community becomes safer, stronger, and more united.

The Next Chapter of Public Safety

Our firefighters and emergency medical professionals carry the weight of our most vulnerable moments. They deserve a department that serves them as faithfully as they serve us.

By modernizing training, rebuilding infrastructure, doubling funding, and restoring pride, we can build a department worthy of its people—and capable of meeting the future with strength.