Fact 006
RMES has the best rating a volunteer fire service can obtain in terms of insurance classifications.
RMES has the best rating a volunteer fire service can obtain in terms of insurance classifications.
Between 1993 and 2009, RMES built its own fire trucks, saving the townsite a significant amount of money. Some trucks were refurbished units from other cities, while others were built from non-fire truck equipment such as utility vehicles, garbage trucks, and bulk oil transports. The finished vehicles were certified by professional emergency vehicle mechanics before being pressed into service.
The first “firehall” in Redwood Meadows was the golf course maintenance shed, which housed a 1962 fire engine retired from the City of North Vancouver. The existing station was built in the late 1980s, with the hose tower built in 1997 and the “back hall” (a second building shared with town public works) in 1998.
RMES has contracts to provide emergency response to several regions. We are the primary responders for the area of Rockyview County surrounding Bragg Creek, as well as Kananaskis Country accessible from Highway 66; and the west side of the Tsuu T'ina First Nation. We'll also respond anywhere another emergency service requests us, and have gone into the Municipal District of Foothills, the Municipal District of Bighorn, the City of Calgary, and the Town of Cochrane, among other places.
Redwood Meadows Emergency Services is now known as Station 120 in the Calgary area regional response plan, but was known as Station 50 from 1996 to 2013. The numbering change was done to allow the City of Calgary to expand its station numbers.