Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 49— - FIRE PREVENTION AND CONTROL › § 2206
FEMA must set up a National Academy for Fire Prevention and Control as soon as possible to train fire service workers and others who work on preventing and fighting fires. The Academy will be led by a Superintendent chosen by the FEMA Administrator and who follows the Administrator’s direction. The Superintendent can make courses, set admission rules and certificates, hire staff and teachers with flexible hiring rules, run training across the country, set or waive fees, make contracts, and work with fire officials. A Site Selection Board made up of the Superintendent and two others will help pick the location, and the FEMA Administrator must pick a site no later than two years after October 29, 1974. Up to $9,000,000 of authorized money may be used to build Academy facilities on that site. The Academy will teach many firefighting and fire-safety topics, including prevention, inspection, arson investigation, command and management, aircraft and ship rescue, collapse and hazardous material rescue, wildland and large-scale fires, emergency medical services, technology and terrorism response, leadership, and instructor training. The Superintendent must create and share model curricula and correspondence courses for free, make sample exam questions, and promote fire safety education in design and planning fields. FEMA can give technical help and strengthen local and school programs and can fund state and local training, but such assistance is limited to 7.5 percent of the money authorized under section 2216 each year. The Superintendent may give student stipends up to 75 percent of Academy attendance costs, up to 50 percent for approved college nondegree courses, and loans up to $2,500 per year for full-time students in Superintendent-certified fire research or engineering programs. The Superintendent must run a placement center open to all fire service personnel. The FEMA Administrator will pick eight experts to serve on a Board of Visitors that reviews the Academy each year and has expenses reimbursed. The Superintendent will chair a Committee on Fire Training and Education with 18 appointed members to study accreditation and report within two years; the committee ends after it reports and members are reimbursed. FEMA may contract with national organizations for on-site training only if the training leads to accredited certification or is judged equivalent, and spending for such contracts is also capped at 7.5 percent of the section 2216 authorization. In the first annual report filed after the 18-month period beginning October 8, 2008, and in every third annual report after that, the Administrator must explain any changes to the Academy curriculum, why they were made, and the training results expected.
Full Legal Text
Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 2206
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73