Woodfin Fire Department

Woodfin Fire Department Serving the community in Fire, Rescue, and EMS services. We are a non-profit organization that resides inside the Town Of Woodfin.

The Woodfin Fire Department is a combination department mixed with 20 paid staff and 2 volunteers under the leadership of our Fire Chief, Jeff Angel. We are contracted by the Town Of Woodfin and Buncombe County Government for fire protection services within our jurisdiction. We are staffed 24 hours a day with 4 shift Firefighters and our Fire Chief works 8-5 Monday through Friday. Our Apparatus Fl

eet consist of 3 Engines, 2 Tankers, 1 Rescue Truck, 1 Brush Truck, and 4 Service vehicles. We serve the community in a variety of ways such as Firefighting, EMS, Fire Prevention and Education, and routine assistance calls. All of our staff are Certified Firefighters and a minimum of EMT Basic. Here is a list of more certifications that our members hold. NC Technical Rescuer
-specialties-
***Water Rescue
***Heavy Machinery Rescue
***Structural Collapse
***Rope Rescue
***Trench Rescue
NC Driver Operator
NC Driver Operator Aerials
NC Driver Operator Mobile Water Supply
NC Instructor I,II
NC Fire Officer I, II, III
NC Fire Life Safety Educator I, II, III
NC Advanced EMT
NC Paramedic
Various FEMA Incident Management Courses

Yearly Call Volume :
2020 - 1214
2019 - 1358
2018 - 1374
2017 - 1313
2016 - 1145

Our local Woodfin Police are amazing! We can’t thank them enough for all they do for us!
05/14/2026

Our local Woodfin Police are amazing! We can’t thank them enough for all they do for us!

05/07/2026
We can’t thank our teachers enough!! Thank you for all you do!
05/07/2026

We can’t thank our teachers enough!! Thank you for all you do!

It is impossible to put into words just how grateful Woodfin Elementary School is for our incredible teachers. Every single day, the Woodfin Elementary School teachers pour their hearts into our students!
They stay late, show up early, cheer students on through challenges, celebrate successes big and small, and create classrooms filled with learning, kindness, and care. The impact they make reaches far beyond the walls of our school.
Our teachers are role models, encouragers, problem-solvers, and champions for children every day. We are so incredibly thankful for the dedication, patience, compassion, and love they give so freely to our students and school community. Happy Teacher Appreciation Week!

We are very saddened to hear about the loss of 6 Pigs BBQ trailer. Thankfully no one was hurt. 6 Pigs has supported emer...
05/07/2026

We are very saddened to hear about the loss of 6 Pigs BBQ trailer. Thankfully no one was hurt. 6 Pigs has supported emergency services as well as Woodfin with meals on multiple occasions. We can’t thank them enough for the support they have given us so it’s our turn to support them. If you can please consider helping!

Today our barbecue family needs us. My name is Ben Hooper with Ben’s Backdraft… Ben Hooper needs your support for Rebuild Six Pigs Barbecue After the Fire

05/07/2026

This morning around 1am, police and fire officials were notified of a structure fire behind the Mill at Riverside. High Five Coffee occupies a small building, alongside the French Broad River, in the rear parking lot of the Mill. Fire officials responded quickly and worked to suppress the blaze, but the building is a total loss. Fortunately, no one was injured during the incident.
Woodfin Detectives were able to identify a suspect through video surveillance. Following a brief foot chase, early this morning officers arrested Nicholas Hunter Grigsby, of Valley Park Dr. He is charged with a felony of Burning a Commercial Building and a Domestic Violence Protective Order Violation. He is currently being held in the Buncombe County Jail, under a $100,000 bond. Additional charges are expected.
Since reopening, High Five resumed serving residents, commuters, and visitors while helping to restore a sense of normalcy to the area’s small business community, on the heels of Helene. The Town of Woodfin is saddened by the loss of this Woodfin treasure and will do everything we can to support the owners and operators of High Five.

05/04/2026

When assessing the need for burn bans, the N.C. Forest Service evaluates several factors. Those factors include weather, fire danger, fuel conditions, fire activity and the difficulty to control wildfires. In general, a burn ban is considered when the long-range forecast indicates weather and wildland fire conditions are expected to worsen, and we don’t see improvement in conditions on the ground. Resource availability is also part of the decision-making process when it comes to determining when and where burn bans are needed. This is also the case when we look at lifting burn bans or removing restrictions on open burning.

Let’s dissect the statewide ban that was enacted March 28. The ban was lifted for 81 counties effective 8 a.m., Sunday May 3 and remains in effect for 19 counties. Why?

First, let’s talk about drought. It took us a long time to reach the drought severity we’ve arrived at. It will take us a substantial stretch of time to recover. The U.S. Drought Monitor provides a “snapshot” of current conditions. A new drought monitor is released every Thursday. The data captured in that monitor is from the week leading up to that Thursday. In other words, the drought monitor is not a forecast. It’s a snapshot, essentially looking back over the period of a week at drought conditions leading up to the date the drought monitor is released. For example, if you look at the current drought monitor that was released Thursday, April 30, the data you’re looking at reflects conditions that existed between April 21 and April 28.

Now, let’s talk about rainfall and how that shows up in the drought monitor. Knowing that the current drought monitor reflects conditions through April 28, none of the rain received May 2 has impacted the monitor yet. You should see those impacts when the new monitor releases Thursday, May 7. Additionally, if the rain forecast for midweek this week does indeed arrive, you shouldn't see those impacts show up in the drought monitor for another week – not until Thursday, May 14.

When we look at fire danger, we rely on tools like the Fire Weather Intelligence Portal to help look at lots of variables at the same time, precipitation being one. In general, an inch or two of rain over a 7–10-day period indicates a beneficial wet period rather than a single storm event. If this amount of rain falls within a few hours, it can cause localized flooding. When spread over 7-10 days, it is a soaking rain that is absorbed rather well. Looking at the rain we received Saturday and considering the rainfall received over the previous six days, most areas of the state had received nearly an inch or more, except for a doughnut hole in the Triad area. See the map we’ve included. This map shows total rainfall received statewide between April 25 and May 2. Many areas were pushing close to an inch received, and many areas were better than an inch. While this isn’t enough to be a drought breaker, it does help lower fire danger. The beneficial week of rain, increased humidity and better overnight recovery have moderated fire danger enough to lift the ban for 81 counties. That doughnut hole in the Triad area just isn’t there yet, which is why the state-issued ban remains in effect for those 19 counties until conditions improve enough.

05/03/2026
05/02/2026

Address

20 New Street
Woodfin, NC
28804

Telephone

+18282557561

Website

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