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hatrack

(60,827 posts)
Wed Mar 20, 2024, 06:52 AM Mar 2024

If Wildland Firefighters Are "Essential", Why Do They Make $15/Hour? "Exodus" Underway

EDIT

But at exactly the time when the country needs wildland firefighters more than ever, the federal government is losing them. In the past three years, according to the Forest Service’s own assessments, it has suffered an attrition rate of 45% among its permanent employees. Many people inside and outside the fire service believe this represents one of the worst crises in its history. Last spring, as the 2023 fire season was getting started, I asked Grant Beebe, a former smokejumper who now heads the Bureau of Land Management’s fire program, if there had been an exodus of wildland firefighters. He initially hesitated. “‘Exodus’ is a pretty strong word,” he said. But then he reconsidered. “I’ll say yeah. Yeah.” “The ship is sinking,” Abel Martinez, a Forest Service engine captain in California and the national fire chair for the National Federation of Federal Employees, the union that represents wildland firefighters, told me. (For this story, almost every wildland firefighter who agreed to use their full name has an official role with the union; the one firefighter identified by their middle name does not.)

Although nobody could provide precise numbers, leaders like Beebe are especially concerned that the attrition has been particularly acute among those with extensive experience — those like Elkind. It takes years and hundreds of thousands of dollars to train a wildland firefighter capable of overseeing the numerous resources — engines, helicopters, smokejumpers — that are deployed on large fires. As Beebe put it, “You can’t just hire some person off the street into one of our higher-level management jobs.”

The reasons for the exodus are many, but fundamentally it reflects an inattentive bureaucracy and a culture that suppresses internal criticism. Only in 2022 did the fire service acknowledge an explicit link between cancer and wildland firefighters, even though officials have long expressed concern about the connection. And it was only last year that the fire service held its first conference on mental health, even though officials have been aware for decades of the high incidence of substance abuse and divorce among wildland firefighters. But more than anything, wildland firefighters are leaving because they’re compensated so poorly, the result of a byzantine civil service structure that makes it extremely hard to sustain a career. The federal fire service is responsible for managing blazes on nearly 730 million acres of land — an area almost the size of India. Among the five agencies, one dominates in terms of influence and size: the Forest Service, which employs more than 11,000 wildland firefighters, most of whom work from roughly April to October. The hiring system dates to the early years of the agency, when it often recruited from bars and relied on volunteers to suppress wildfires by 10 a.m.

About one third of the workforce is temporary — firefighters who are automatically laid off at the end of each season. Even those who are permanent receive compensation starting at $15 per hour until they accumulate overtime and hazard pay. Because of the way the government classifies their work, it’s extremely difficult for wildland firefighters to increase their base salaries unless they frequently move around the country. Altogether, it’s a pay structure that incentivizes risk taking and a nomadic existence.

EDIT

https://thinc.blog/2024/03/19/low-wages-driving-wildland-firefighters-from-the-field/

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If Wildland Firefighters Are "Essential", Why Do They Make $15/Hour? "Exodus" Underway (Original Post) hatrack Mar 2024 OP
Not to put too fine a point on it, but .. Bo Zarts Mar 2024 #1
Pay structure for firefighters has to change. 2naSalit Mar 2024 #2
Thank you so much Traildogbob Mar 2024 #3

Bo Zarts

(25,593 posts)
1. Not to put too fine a point on it, but ..
Wed Mar 20, 2024, 07:06 AM
Mar 2024

There were substantial raises for US Forest Service firefighters in my region .. the Pacific Northwest .. in 2022. I assume all other regions got the raise also. It’s still too low, and we are indeed losing good people. But the raises came under Biden, and the sentient ones aren’t soon forgetting that.

2naSalit

(92,491 posts)
2. Pay structure for firefighters has to change.
Wed Mar 20, 2024, 07:16 AM
Mar 2024

I know a bunch of the USADFS wildland firefighters, smokejumpers, AIRTAC and pilots; the AIRTAC and pilots are paid well, the personnel on the ground make the same as the NPS ranger who tells you not to pet the bears or try to ride the bison.

GS05 is a slight pay grade, a single person can qualify for medicaid and SNAP while employed at that pay grade. Mind you, the national minimum wage is less than $8/hr.

The folks who are out there 12+ hrs a day for 14 dys straight (with only a 48 hour break) should make more for risking their lives to protect us and our property in such extreme conditions. They should be making as much as a House Rep., they sure as hell do 1,000 times more work and they are also civil servants.

Traildogbob

(9,915 posts)
3. Thank you so much
Wed Mar 20, 2024, 08:57 AM
Mar 2024

For bringing this to light. My entire career as College faculty, was teaching and training students to become County, State and Federal Rangers, with 90 percent of them on Wildland Fire crews.
Many came to our school and other colleges that taught Forest Management because of a love and desire to be fire fighters. We have lost alum to fires.
But they are brave hero’s that know that is possibility.
Yet they still come with eagerness to do the job.
This needs to be known by the public that depend on their homes being saved and our resources protected.
NEVER in my career has the dangers been higher for these exception people, willing to die for the love of the job they do, for barely hamburger flipping salaries.
And the future looks to be even more dangerous.
PAY these hero’s. If the Boebert’s and MTG’s can make $200,000 for nothing, pay these brave people what they deserve. And many of them have college tuition debt.

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