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Miami-Dade Fire Rescue adds two new units to improve emergency response.
Summary
Miami-Dade Fire Rescue held Push-In Ceremonies on April 3 to mark the addition of Rescue 211 and Engine 72 to its fleet; both units began service on March 30, with Rescue 211 based at Station 11 and Engine 72 temporarily at Station 66.
Content
Miami-Dade Fire Rescue formally added two new units, Rescue 211 and Engine 72, during Push-In Ceremonies on April 3, 2026. The vehicles entered service on March 30 and are intended to expand emergency response and transport capacity across Miami-Dade County. Rescue 211 is assigned to Carol City Fire Rescue Station 11 in the northwest area. Engine 72 is temporarily operating out of Station 66 to serve Homestead and Florida City.
Key details:
- The Push-In Ceremonies took place on April 3, 2026 and marked the official addition of the two vehicles to the department fleet.
- Both Rescue 211 and Engine 72 began active service on March 30, 2026.
- Rescue 211 is a three-person rescue unit based at Station 11 and will operate alongside Rescue 11, Engine 11 and Battalion 4 to address concurrent incidents in the northwest county area.
- Engine 72 is a four-person suppression unit temporarily stationed at Station 66 and is operating alongside Engine 66 and Rescue 77 to meet southern county needs.
- Engine 72 will remain at Station 66 until the planned Florida City Fire Rescue Station 72 is constructed.
Summary:
The addition of Rescue 211 and Engine 72 increases on-the-ground response capacity in both the northwest and southern parts of Miami-Dade County and is intended to help the department manage simultaneous emergencies. Engine 72’s placement is temporary pending construction of a new Florida City station, and the longer-term deployment of the units will follow the department’s facility plans.
