Anderson County Fire Department
Established in 1963, the Anderson County Fire Department provides 24 hour fire protection and emerge
The citizens of Anderson County are protected by over 800 volunteer firefighters manning 29 stations. These committed men and women answered over 4000 call for assistance in 2012. These calls range from public service calls, to extrication, to hazardous material spills, to structure fires. Support your local volunteer Fire Station by donating and volunteering!
06/17/2026
Anderson County Fire Department is now hiring a Fire Investigator!
See the flyer for additional details about the position and application requirements.
đź“© Submit your resume and cover letter to Chief Sutherland at [email protected]
05/25/2026
Freedom is never free. Today we remember and honor the courageous service members who gave their lives for our nation. We will never forget. 🇺🇸
04/29/2026
SCFC TO LIFT BURNING BAN FOR 12 UPSTATE COUNTIES WEDNESDAY
The South Carolina Forestry Commission will lift the State Forester's Burning Ban for 12 counties in the Piedmont region of the state, effective at 7 a.m., Wednesday, April 29.
The counties coming off the burning ban are Abbeville, Anderson, Cherokee, Chester, Greenville, Greenwood, Laurens, Oconee, Pickens, Spartanburg, Union and York (see map).
READ THE FULL RELEASE: scfc.gov/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/Advisory-BurningBanToBeLiftedFor12Counties-20260428.pdf
04/17/2026
Anderson County Fire Department is now hiring a Fire Investigator.
See flyer for additional details about the position and application requirements.
Submit your resume and cover letter to Chief Sutherland at [email protected]
04/17/2026
SC Forestry Commission to issue statewide burning ban; restriction on all outdoor burning goes into effect at 7 a.m. Friday
COLUMBIA—The South Carolina Forestry Commission is issuing a State Forester’s Burning Ban for all counties, effective at 7 a.m. Friday, April 17.
A State Forester’s Burning Ban prohibits all outdoor burning, including yard debris burning, prescribed burning, campfires, bonfires and other recreational fires in all unincorporated areas of the state.
Forestry Commission officials cite a particularly dangerous mix of elevated wildfire risk factors through the weekend that warrant limiting all ignitions in the interest of public safety.
Rapidly escalating drought conditions across the state, a critical decrease in relative humidities over the next several days and gusty winds that are expected to accompany an approaching cold front will combine to create extreme fire danger.
"When it’s this dry – energy release component values are at high-to-critical levels – we’re just as likely, if not more, to see wildfires that are fuel-driven rather than wind-driven. Add the other volatile conditions of increased wind and lower relative humidity, and it becomes an especially precarious situation,” said SCFC Fire Chief Darryl Jones. "These conditions not only increase the likelihood of wildfires igniting easily and spreading rapidly, but would also make them more difficult for firefighters to control.”
While the ban does not apply to fires used for the preparation of food or fires used in appropriate enclosures (portable outdoor fireplaces, chimineas or permanent fire pits constructed of stone, masonry, metal or other noncombustible material that conforms with all applicable South Carolina fire codes), Forestry Commission officials urge the utmost caution burning outdoors under these exemptions.
Likewise, citizens should exercise extreme vigilance operating any equipment that could create sparks, avoid parking on dry grass and refrain from using fireworks.
The ban will stay in effect until further notice, which will come in the form of an official announcement from the Forestry Commission.
Shareable release:https://www.scfc.gov/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/Advisory-StateForestersBurningBan-20260416.pdf
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210 McGee Road
Anderson, SC
29625