Exclusive: Incoming NSW Rural Fire Service Commissioner Rob Rogers has spent 40 years in the service. He says there isn't a lot that could happen that would surprise him but acknowledges the next few months will be challenging | Laura_R_chung
Incoming NSW Rural Fire Service Commissioner Rob Rogers says the success of the next fire season will be measured in how many homes and lives the service saves.
"My sole role is to make sure the agency is ready and the community is as ready as we can get it to be. We are going to be working very hard," Mr Rogers said.He has spent 40 years in the service. He started as a volunteer when he was 15 years old and has spent the last nine years as the RFS's deputy commissioner.Given his experience, Mr Rogers said there wasn't a lot that could happen that would surprise him.
He is also aware that the next fire season could entail an increase in grass fires, particularly in the western parts of the ranges, while areas such as the Great Diving Range and the Hunter region remain relatively unburnt. Mr Fitzsimmons said on Monday the decision to take the role at the new Resilience NSW had been "deeply personal and difficult".
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