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Ramsey, Nowthen, St. Francis, Oak Grove, and Bethel, Minnesota <br />Feasibility Study for Shared or Cooperative Fire and Emergency Services <br />Figure 49: Geographic Service Demand <br />NORRIS' <br />KERCNW <br />Nowthenl <br />Ramsey FD <br />e I' Nowthen <br />1R3-S:t <br />Nowthenj <br />Ramsey <br />Ramsey FD <br />St. Francis FD <br />to) <br />I <br />0G2 <br />1 <br />Bethel <br />•IFD <br />B di) <br />Bethel <br />to <br />OG2 <br />VIKING <br />BLVO NE <br />Oak <br />Grove <br />Study Area Geographic <br />Demand- <br />2011 and 2012 <br />Structure Fires <br />• All Incidents <br />_ �IYr i—I 1 1 1 ot_CY <br />N <br />Study Area <br />do? Fire Station <br />Study Area Municipality <br />Miles <br />2 3 <br />Distribution <br />Distribution analysis is an evaluation of how well physical resources (facilities) are deployed across a <br />specific geographic area. For medical incidents there is little in the way of guidance on how well <br />resources should be distributed because these incidents are primarily driven by human activity. For fire <br />protection, however, there are several industry standards that specify how fire stations should be <br />distributed. NFPA recommends that fire departments serving urban areas with career personnel be able <br />to respond to 90 percent of emergency incidents within five minutes of total response time or four <br />page 54 <br />Emergency Sern.ce= Consuiceng, <br />.'J <br />