New South Wales State Emergency Service


The New South Wales State Emergency Service, an agency of the Government of New South Wales, is an emergency and rescue service dedicated to assisting the community in times of natural and man-made disasters. The NSW SES is made up almost entirely of volunteer members, numbering over 9,000 as of June 2018. Members are easily identified by their distinctive orange overalls.
The agency is led by its Commissioner who reports to the Minister for Emergency Services, presently David Elliott.

History

1955 - State Emergency Service Founded

Following the devastating Hunter Valley floods of 1955, which no single agency was equipped or designated to manage, the NSW State Emergency Service was founded.

1989 - Renamed to NSW State Emergency Service

Following the enactment of, the New South Wales State Emergency Service was established.

Leadership

The current Commissioner of the NSW SES is Carlene York who took up her appointment on 28 October 2019. The Minister for Police and Emergency Services, David Elliott, is responsible to the NSW parliament for the emergency services portfolio which includes NSW SES.
Prior to 1989 the NSW SES reported through a Pro-Director to the Commissioner of Police
NameTitleTerm StartTerm EndPostnominalsCommentsNotes
Major General Brian 'Hori' HowardDirector GeneralLate 198927 August 2001AO, ESM, MC
Brigadier Philip McNamaraDirector General27 August 2001September 2008CSC, ESM
Murray KearDirector General / CommissionerSeptember 200807 November 2013AFSMOfficially resigned 12 June 2014
Jim SmithActing Commissioner07 November 201305 January 2015AFSMFire and Rescue NSW Deputy Commissioner
Adam DentCommissioner05 January 201530 January 2016
Greg NewtonActing Commissioner30 January 201627 February 2017NSW SES Deputy Commissioner
Mark SmethurstCommissioner27 February 201708 March 2019DSC, AM
Kyle StewartActing Commissioner08 March 201930 October 2019APMNSW Police Force Assistant Commissioner
Carlene YorkCommissioner30 October 2019IncumbentAPM

Emergency support

The major responsibilities of the NSW SES are for flood, tsunami and storm operations. The NSW SES also provides the majority of General Land Rescue effort in the rural parts of the state. This includes road crash rescue, vertical rescue, general rescue, bush search and rescue, evidence searches and other forms of specialist rescue that may be required due to local threats. The Service's trained rescuers also support the full-time emergency services during major disasters.
The NSW SES also assist other emergency services when they are performing major operations. These services include the New South Wales Police Force, the NSW Rural Fire Service, the Fire and Rescue NSW and the New South Wales Ambulance.
During the 17/18 Financial Year, NSW SES Personnel answered 81,197 calls at the State Operations Centre, including 36,169 calls to the Flood/Storm assistance line and its volunteers responded to 18,040 Requests for Assistance.

Organisational Structure

State Level

The State Headquarters of the NSW SES is located in Burelli Street, Wollongong.
At a state level, Directors are responsible for key functional areas each Director is appointed to the rank of Assistant Commissioner. All these positions are based at NSW SES State Headquarters in Wollongong.
With 5 zones located across the state, Zone boundaries are generally based on river catchments, reflecting that floods are a major part of their work. The boundaries for the NSW SES's 240+ units are based broadly on local government boundaries, each unit is grouped with 2-7 other units to form a cluster.

Zone Level

As part of the Organisational Restructure project, on 2 October 2018, Regions were replaced with Zones. The previous 17 Regions had been based on river catchment areas, inline with the NSW SES responsibility to manage flood events, however an analysis of the demands placed upon the service indicates that a more effective way to organise Units would be based around areas which both reflected historic trends in terms of affected areas, and the distribution of the population across the state.
This resulted in the formation of 5 Zones.
Zone offices are managed by a Zone Controller and the Zone Business Support Services Manager, together form the Zone Management Team. Each Zone office could house a number of different staff roles including Zone Volunteer Communications & Engagement Officer, Zone Capability Officer, Zone Training & Delivery Officer, Zone Training Adviser, Zone Operational Readiness Officer, Financial Services Officer, Administrative Support Officer, additionally Zone offices can also accommodate some state wide staff roles, traditionally located at the state headquarters, these positions include, Coordinator Exercise Planning & Design, Planning & Research Officer, Safety, Health & Wellbeing Officer, Manager Hazard Planning, Coordinator Community Capability, Manager Capability & Resource Planning.
Zones may also have a number of volunteer capability units to support the Zone.

Cluster Level

Dependent on factors such local operational demands, local Unit sizes, etc. Units can be grouped into Clusters. A cluster may contain 2-7 Units.
NSW SES Clusters are managed by a Local Commander. Local Commanders oversee operations at a scale between localised events which can be managed at a Unit Level, and larger scale events which require management at a Zone Level.

Unit Level

There are more than 240 SES Units forming the NSW SES. Most are based on former local government boundaries, although the NSW SES now also allows for the formation of Units which are not bound to geographic boundaries, such as the NSW SES Bush Search and Rescue Unit.
NSW SES Units are completely staffed by volunteers managed by Unit Commanders.
Old RegionRegion CodeNew ZoneZone Code
Sydney Northern RegionSNRMetro ZoneMTZ
Sydney Southern RegionSSRMetro ZoneMTZ
Sydney Western RegionSWRMetro ZoneMTZ
Central West RegionCWRWestern ZoneWTZ
Far West RegionFWRWestern ZoneWTZ
Macquire RegionMQRWestern ZoneWTZ
North West RegionNWRWestern ZoneWTZ
Namoi RegionNMRWestern ZoneWTZ
Lachlan RegionLARSouthern ZoneSHZ
Murry RegionMYRSouthern ZoneSHZ
Murrumbidgee RegionMERSouthern ZoneSHZ
Hunter RegionHURNorthern ZoneNHZ
Clarence-Numbucca RegionCNRNorthern ZoneNHZ
Mid North Coast RegionMNRNorthern ZoneNHZ
Richmond-Tweed RegionRTRNorthern ZoneNHZ
Southern Highlands RegionSHRSouth East ZoneSEZ
Illawarra South Coast RegionISRSouth East ZoneSEZ

State Units

There is a number of state based units outside of the zone structure. These units generally have a state wide focus or report directly to the state capability team.
Unit NameUnit Code
Alpine Search & RescueASR
Aviation ManagementAMU
Bush Search & RescueBSR
Corporate & SpontaneousCOS
Operational SupportOSU

Rank and Insignia

In January 2018 the NSW State Emergency Service commenced a review of the rank and insignia structure within the organisation. Between October and December 2018 all members of the NSW State Emergency Service transitioned to the new rank structure.

Honours and awards

Funding and support

The NSW SES receives funding primarily from the NSW Government. Resources are often obtained through numerous grants provided by public and private entities.

Photos