Arborlook
Risk & Response by Arborlook Insights

Shavers Fork Fire Rescue

COMBINATION WV 1 Stations
Vision 20/20 Part of the Discovery Data Hub · Vision 20/20 + Arborlook Insights
3,125
Est. Population
66.4
Sq Miles
47
Density / Sq Mi
2
Census Tracts
Relatively Moderate
NRI Risk RatingiNRI Risk Rating. FEMA’s national-percentile bands on the composite Risk Score: Very Low (<20), Relatively Low (20-39), Relatively Moderate (40-59), Relatively High (60-79), Very High (80+). Composite combines all 18 hazards via Expected Annual Loss × Social Vulnerability ÷ Community Resilience.

Page generated April 2026 · Hazards: FEMA NRI v1.20 · Demographics: ACS 2024 (2020-2024 5-year) · Boundaries: NERIS Public · Disasters: OpenFEMA

Service Area Overview

Your department boundary, station locations, and overall NRI risk scores by census tract. Use the sections below to explore specific hazards, fire risk indicators, and EMS demand drivers across your service area.

Service area, population, and census tract assignments are based on department boundaries from NERIS Public. Boundary accuracy varies by jurisdiction.

Natural Hazard Risk

What this means for planning: With a risk score of 80.9 (Very High nationally), cold wave is your leading natural hazard. Focus on cold-exposure emergency response, warming center partnerships, and proactive wellness checks for vulnerable populations during extreme cold events.

Top Hazards in Your Service Area

Algorithmic top 5 by life-safety impact, plus regionally critical hazards for WV (shown with their NRI scores as-is, no adjustment). Life-safety loss uses FEMA’s Value of Statistical Life ($13.7M per fatality or 10 injuries). NRI methodology · Source: FEMA NRI v1.20 (Mar 2023)

Hazard Risk Score Rating Life-Safety Loss
$/yr
Total Loss
$/yr
Learn more
Cold Wave TOP LIFE-SAFETY HAZARD 80.9 Very High $270K/yr $276K/yr NWS cold safety
Lightning 89.7 Very High $69K/yr $70K/yr NWS lightning safety
Strong Wind 62.3 Relatively High $18K/yr $40K/yr NWS wind safety
River Flood 83 Very High $11K/yr $2.0M/yr FEMA flood maps
Landslide 97.9 Very High $10K/yr $17K/yr USGS Landslide Hazards

How to read this map: Colors show absolute national risk levels (red = Very High nationally, green = Very Low nationally). These are objective hazard comparisons across all U.S. communities.

Historical Disaster Declarations

Your county has experienced 4 FEMA disaster declarations in the last 10 years, and 14 declarations in the last 25 years.

5 most recent declarations shown. Source: OpenFEMA, current through April 2026. If your most recent listed declaration is older than expected, that reflects no newer county-level declarations on file (not stale data).

DateTypeTitle
2026-01-24Winter StormSEVERE WINTER STORM
2020-04-03BiologicalCOVID-19 PANDEMIC
2020-03-13BiologicalCOVID-19
2016-06-25FloodSEVERE STORMS, FLOODING, LANDSLIDES, AND MUDSLIDES
2012-11-27HurricaneHURRICANE SANDY

Demographics & Vulnerability

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey 5-year (2020-2024 vintage)

Why This Matters

Your community's demographics shape everything: from where you need smoke alarm programs to how many of your calls are EMS. The data below identifies who generates the most emergency demand, who faces the greatest barriers during emergencies, and who benefits most from targeted CRR outreach.

Age Distribution

Age drives EMS call volume (highest utilization: 65+ and especially 75+, with elevated rates also among children under 5), shapes fire safety education priorities, and determines evacuation assistance needs. The dark marker on each bar shows the national average.

Under 5
5.6% (176)
Ages 5-17
15.0% (468)
Ages 18-64
54.1% (1,692)
Ages 65-74
14.3% (446)
Ages 75-84
7.4% (230)
Ages 85+
3.6% (113)
Your Community
National Average

Community Profile

Who lives in your service area. Population composition shapes CRR messaging, outreach channels, and the language resources your crews may need in the field. Operational risk drivers (disability, poverty, uninsured, no vehicle) are covered in the Fire Risk and EMS Risk sections below.

Community Factor Your Community Peer AverageiPeer Average. Average across up to 4 peer departments matched on size band, department type, density class, and Census region. Used in the “vs. Peers” column throughout the page. See the methodology page for full criteria. National Average vs. Peers
Minority Population
Residents who don't identify as non-Hispanic White. Useful as a quick read on community composition for outreach planning.
9.0% 25.8% 41.8% 2.9x lower
Limited-English Households
Households where no adult speaks English very well. Plan for translated materials and bilingual responders or interpreter lines.
0.0% 1.4% 4.2% Infx lower
Single-Parent Households
Households with children headed by one adult. Often correlated with tighter time and resource constraints, which affects how outreach gets received.
3.5% 4.3% 6.1% 1.2x lower
No High-School Diploma
Adults 25+ without a high-school credential. Use plain-language materials, short sentences, and visual cues to keep messaging accessible.
17.2% 10.0% 10.4% 1.7x higher
Unemployment Rate
Share of the labor force out of work. Higher rates often track with higher EMS demand for stress-related and untreated chronic conditions.
9.3% 4.6% 5.3% 2.0x higher
Group-Quarters Population
Residents in nursing homes, assisted living, dorms, or corrections. EMS demand from these sites is covered in the EMS Risk section below.
0.2% 1.7% 2.5% 7.4x lower

Economic Context

Median Household Income
$45,359
Peers: $64,124 · National: $89,581
Below 150% Poverty
33.0%
Peers: 25.3% · National: 20.2%
Median Home Value
$148,465
Peers: $236,953 · National: $402,955

Fire Risk Factors

What this means for planning: 63.1% of housing units are vacant, 6.1x the national average. Vacant properties have elevated fire risk due to lack of maintenance, unauthorized access, and delayed detection. Work with code enforcement on vacant property inspections and securing abandoned structures.

How to read this map: Colors show relative risk within your jurisdiction (red = highest-need tracts, green = lowest-need). Check the table below for overall levels vs. peers and national averages.

Risk Factor Your Community Peer Average National Average vs. Peers
Pre-1980 Housing
Built before modern electrical codes and smoke-alarm requirements. Expect older wiring, fewer hardwired alarms, and limited fire-stop construction.
38.0% 37.2% 50.3% ≈ average
Pre-1960 Housing
Built well before modern fire codes. Knob-and-tube wiring and balloon framing are common, both of which let fires spread fast through wall and ceiling cavities.
17.1% 17.9% 26.5% ≈ average
Vacancy Rate
Vacant buildings burn hotter and spread faster than occupied ones, and roughly a third of these fires are intentionally set. [USFA]
63.1% 28.4% 10.3% 2.2x higher
Mobile Homes
Lighter construction and small footprints mean fires reach flashover faster and residents have less time to get out.
9.3% 21.9% 5.8% 2.4x lower

EMS Risk Factors

EMS typically accounts for 60-80% of fire department call volume nationally. The demographics below are the strongest predictors of where that demand comes from in your service area.

What this means for planning: 26.4% of residents have a disability, 2.0x the national average. Residents with disabilities have higher EMS utilization and may require specialized evacuation assistance, accessible communication during emergencies, and coordination with social services. Consider functional needs assessments in pre-incident planning and partnerships with disability advocacy organizations.

How to read this map: Colors show relative risk within your jurisdiction (red = highest-need tracts, green = lowest-need). Check the table below for overall levels vs. peers and national averages.

Risk Factor Your Community Peer Average National Average vs. Peers
Population 65+
Older adults die in fires at about 2.5x the rate of the general population and drive a large share of EMS calls. [USFA]
25.2% 25.5% 17.4% ≈ average
Disability Rate
Physical disability is the second-leading human factor in U.S. residential fire deaths. These residents need pre-planned evacuation help. [USFA]
26.4% 17.5% 13.4% 1.5x higher
No Vehicle Access
Households without a vehicle skip or delay medical care more often, which translates to higher 911 use for issues that could have been managed earlier.
9.0% 4.7% 8.7% 1.9x higher
Uninsured Rate
Uninsured adults skip needed care about three times as often as the insured. Untreated conditions show up later as 911 calls. [CDC]
7.9% 10.1% 8.2% 1.3x lower
Poverty Rate
Lower-income residents have worse baseline health and less access to primary care, both of which raise EMS call volume.
26.3% 15.4% 12.5% 1.7x higher
Below 150% Poverty
A wider near-poverty band that often correlates with chronic-disease prevalence and frequent EMS use.
33.0% 25.3% 20.2% 1.3x higher
Group-Quarters Population
Nursing homes, assisted living, dorms, and corrections generate outsized EMS demand. Falls alone are about 3.5x more likely to result in transport from these facilities.
0.2% 1.7% 2.5% 7.4x lower
Limited-English Households
Language barriers slow 911 dispatch, telephone CPR coaching, and on-scene patient assessment. Stage interpreter services and translated materials early.
0.0% 1.4% 4.2% Infx lower

CRR Outreach Profile

These factors don't necessarily mean higher fire or EMS risk, but they shape how you reach residents: which messages, what channels, and how often to inspect.

How to read this map: Colors show where each housing or access factor is most concentrated within your jurisdiction (red = highest, green = lowest). Use the toggles to switch factors.

Outreach Factor Your Community Peer Average National Average vs. Peers
Multi-Family Housing
Apartments and condos with shared egress. Coordinate with property managers on annual smoke-alarm checks and posted exit routes; expect different demand patterns than single-family neighborhoods.
30.8% 2.1% 14.3% 14.6x higher
Renter-Occupied
Tenants don't control alarm batteries or appliance maintenance the way owners do. Work with landlords on alarms and provide tenant checklists in the languages residents read.
19.9% 15.4% 34.6% 1.3x higher
Crowded Housing
More than one person per room. Shared sleeping space and tighter egress paths change how you talk about escape plans and alarm placement.
1.9% 1.8% 3.4% ≈ average
No Home Internet
Households without internet won't see web alerts, social posts, or email outreach. Lean on radio, mailers, door-knocks, and in-person events.
24.2% 14.4% 6.7% 1.7x higher
Wood Heating
Solid-fuel heating drives chimney fires and hearth ignitions. Push annual chimney sweeps, hearth screens, and a three-foot clearance from anything combustible. [USFA]
22.0% 3.1% 1.4% 7.2x higher
Kerosene / Fuel Oil Heat
Portable and liquid-fueled heaters. Three-foot clearance, off when leaving the room or going to bed, and a working CO alarm.
7.7% 6.1% 4.2% 1.3x higher
Bottled / Tank LP Heat
Propane and LP tanks. Check for leaks, inspect regulators and connectors, and put a CO alarm on every level.
26.1% 15.7% 5.2% 1.7x higher

Peer Comparison

Departments similar to yours in size, type, density class, and region. Peer benchmarks contextualize your community risk profile and support “demonstrated need” narratives in grant applications.

Department State Population Risk ScoreiComposite Risk Score. FEMA NRI’s composite index combining all 18 hazards: Expected Annual Loss × Social Vulnerability ÷ Community Resilience, population-weighted across your tracts. Individual hazards may score higher than the composite; the composite reflects total expected impact across all hazards. FEMA methodology. 65+ % Multi-Unit % Stations
Shavers Fork Fire Rescue (You) WV 3,125 58.2 25.2% 30.8% 1
Beaver Dam Volunteer Fire Department NC 4,404 64.3 21.0% 0.0% 2
Dillon County Fire Department Station Nine SC 2,441 89.5 19.6% 0.0% 1
Lake Tillery Fire & Rescue, Inc. NC 3,533 49.9 30.6% 0.0% 1
Dunklin Fire Rescue District SC 3,732 31.4 15.0% 0.0% 3

Your Community Risk Profile Is Half the Story

This page shows what your community faces. Connecting your NERIS data shows the other half: where response is slowest in your highest-risk areas, whether you're meeting NFPA benchmarks, and how your CRR investments are performing against actual demand.

This free community risk profile is part of the Discovery Data Hub, a partnership between Vision 20/20 and Arborlook Insights to keep essential risk data in the hands of the fire service.

Start Your Free 30-Day Trial

See a live demo first →

Already a subscriber? Log in →