CORAL SPRINGS, FL (Boca Post) (Copyright © 2026) — A Broward County fire official known for public-facing safety programs was recognized this year by a regional inspector group, a reminder that the day-to-day work of fire prevention often happens long before a siren goes off.
Coral Springs Fire Department said Public Education Officer Daniel Chavez was named the 2025 Fire Inspector of the Year through the Fire Inspector’s Association of Broward County.
The department framed the award around outreach. Coral Springs Fire said Chavez helped deliver life-safety programs to more than 521,000 people through a mix of in-person events and online programming during 2025.
For Palm Beach County residents, the headline matters because prevention programs here often look the same, and families cross county lines for work, school, sports, and childcare. The hazards don’t stop at the Broward line. Pool safety, CPR training, bleeding control, and car seat checks are the same issues faced in West Boca neighborhoods, Delray Beach parks, and the daycares and schools spread across the county.
Coral Springs Fire credited Chavez with helping lead or support a slate of community events and trainings that are designed to reduce injuries and deaths before emergencies happen.
Those programs included Fire Prevention Week events, a yearly push that typically focuses on basic fire safety practices in homes and schools. The department also highlighted April Pools Day, a water-safety awareness effort that targets drowning prevention, particularly for children.
Other efforts cited by the department were Stop the Bleed trainings, which teach immediate bleeding-control steps used after serious injuries, and CPR and AED training aimed at boosting bystander response during cardiac emergencies. The department also listed car seat checks, a hands-on service that helps parents and caregivers confirm that child restraints are installed and used correctly.
In its announcement, Coral Springs Fire said Chavez “continues to expand access, build trust, and provide safety information to our community.” The department did not provide additional details on the selection process for the award, the criteria used by the Fire Inspector’s Association of Broward County, or how many candidates were considered.
Chavez’s role, as described by Coral Springs Fire, sits at the intersection of inspection work and public education, two areas that often operate behind the scenes but shape outcomes when emergencies hit. Public education officers commonly coordinate outreach events, schedule trainings, and work with schools, homeowner associations, and community groups to deliver prevention messaging and practical skills.
The department’s release focused on volume and reach. The stated total of 521,000 people reflects combined exposure across in-person and online formats, which can include everything from event attendance and training participation to digital engagement with safety content.
What happens next is largely internal. Coral Springs Fire did not announce a public ceremony, schedule, or future event tied to the award. Residents who want to access similar trainings typically watch their local fire department’s public education calendar, where offerings like CPR classes, car seat checks, and seasonal safety campaigns are posted as they become available.
For readers in Boca Raton and across Palm Beach County, the takeaway is simple. These programs exist, and they’re often free or low-cost. When they show up in a neighborhood, a school, or a community center, they’re meant to shrink the distance between a normal day and a crisis, and give residents something practical they can use.

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