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Brenda

(1,069 posts)
Tue Apr 16, 2024, 07:38 PM Apr 16

Low Wages and Health Risks Are Crippling the U.S. Wildland Firefighting Forces

Burning Up: In March, ProPublica published a sprawling investigation about how top federal agencies are failing U.S. wildland firefighters. The main issues boil down to low wages and a lack of support for job-related health threats, of which there are many.
Beyond the obvious hazards of clocking into work in an active fire zone, wildland firefighters are exposed to a variety of long-term threats—from carcinogens in the smoke and ash to “forever chemicals” in firefighter foam known as PFAS, which has been linked to various types of cancer.
But another threat is silently simmering among the people who fight the flames: suicide risk. In 2022, my colleague Liza Gross wrote about the rising reports of suicide and depression among wildland firefighters—and the need to better study these risks.
It’s a job skill to be able to manage personal discomfort, physical discomfort, emotional discomfort and stress while working in high-demand, high-consequence occupations,” Patricia O’Brien, who worked as a wildland firefighter for 15 years and now oversees the Bureau of Land Management’s mental health program, told Inside Climate News. “But it can be really difficult to shift gears and switch that off.”


Despite the high health costs associated with this job, compensation remains low, starting at around $15 an hour for permanent firefighters employed by the U.S. Forest Service, which manages the majority of the country’s wildfire response efforts. Now, the Forest Service is struggling to hold the frontlines of its firefighting brigades, with a 45 percent attrition rate among its permanent employees in the past three years and fewer new individuals applying, according to ProPublica’s analysis.


https://insideclimatenews.org/news/16042024/todays-climate-firefighters-climate-change-health/

If only we could take some of the money that the Pentagon fucking "loses," wastes and outright overpays and use it to pay for firefighters.

If only.
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Low Wages and Health Risks Are Crippling the U.S. Wildland Firefighting Forces (Original Post) Brenda Apr 16 OP
It used to be like the military. SarahD Apr 16 #1

SarahD

(1,199 posts)
1. It used to be like the military.
Tue Apr 16, 2024, 08:34 PM
Apr 16

Most people did it for two or three seasons and then moved on to something else. Same way most military members finished one enlistment and moved on. The job has evolved, with longer fire seasons, more extreme fire behavior, and more people returning year after year. It's more like a real, professional career, but not always with the pay and advancement opportunities you would associate with fire departments or police forces.

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