From the CBC:
“Answering at a moment's notice: How volunteer firefighting
works in Canada”
(Firefighters in Kelowna, B.C., head out to work on the
McDougall Creek wildfire on Tuesday from a camp set up at UBC Okanagan by the
Salvation Army emergency services. As wildfires increase in Canada, fire chiefs
are worried about a shortage of volunteer firefighters.)
Summer 2023 in Canada has been marked by out-of-control fires
from coast to coast to coast, making it the worst wildfire season on record.
One line of defence against these worsening climate events is a network of
volunteers that is shrinking each year, say fire chiefs. According to a 2022
report from the Canadian Association of Fire Chiefs (CAFC), an estimated 90,000
out of 126,000 firefighters across the country are volunteers, making up over
70 per cent. A similar census in 2016 counted 126,650 volunteers out of a total
152,650. This year, over 13.6 million hectares have burned in Canada as of Aug.
16, blowing far past the 10-year average of 2.2 million hectares, with more
fires continuing to threaten parts of Northwest Territories and British
Columbia. With the shortage of
firefighters making an impact from New Brunswick to N.W.T., we spoke to fire
chiefs who discussed how volunteer firefighting works in Canada and ways they
envision addressing these gaps.
What does a volunteer firefighter do? Volunteer firefighters are typically
on-call at municipal fire departments, answering calls for service in their
region where structures are threatened. While some on-call firefighters are
truly volunteers — and not paid wages or expenses — others classified as volunteers
may be paid wages, on-call time, honoraria or expenses, depending on the
department. Wildfires that originate in forested areas are handled by
separate wildland teams that are hired and managed provincially. A Reuters
report found about 5,500 wildland firefighters are employed across Canada.
Municipal career and volunteer firefighters join the fight only when it
encroaches on a populated area. "The
rural teams are more [made up of] volunteers," said Brian Starkell,
president of the Canadian Volunteer Fire Services Association and former fire
chief in Nipawin, Sask. "They also have a full time job that they work at
and usually it's about half time that you're dedicating towards firefighting
and training." Increasingly, they are also called upon to respond
to medical emergencies as well. The CAFC report showed out of the two million
calls firefighters responded to last year, 44 per cent were medical
emergencies.
How does training and volunteering work when you also have a
day job?
(An aerial view of the wildfire threatening the Yellowknife
area from Aug. 17.)
The exact amount of training depends on the municipality, and
according to Starkell, volunteers receive the same amount as career
firefighters in the same department and it takes several years to complete. "A
lot of it is by correspondence and then there are scenarios that you have to do
to pass the course, so it's pretty intense," he said. Ken McMullen, chief
of emergency services in Red Deer, Alta., and president of the Canadian
Association of Fire Chiefs, said departments do not have enough younger people,
in the 18 to 25 year age group, joining as volunteers in recent years. Those who have jobs outside of volunteering
take time off to respond, answering calls at a moment's notice. McMullen and
Starkell both said this system has mostly worked well so far. "Where we're seeing struggles right now
is a fire season like this particular year, where people are gone for 30, 40,
[or] 80 days at a time," McMullen said, foreseeing challenges in the
future. "It's just not sustainable." The Assembly of First Nations is
calling for an immediate increase in support for communities and individuals
affected by the wildfires still raging across the country. AFN B.C. Regional
Chief Terry Teegee and AFN Northwest Territories Regional Chief Gerarld Antoine
tell CBC's Power & Politics what their communities need.
Why is there a shortage of volunteer firefighters?
(Motorcycle riders watch as the McDougall Creek wildfire
burns in West Kelowna, B.C., on Aug. 18.)
Retirement, family commitments, and people moving to
different municipalities that may have less need of firefighting, are all
reasons the fire chiefs cited, along with slower uptake from young people. "When we lose firefighters, we're
typically aging out, which means in a lot of municipalities, volunteers are not
covered by their insurance policy after the age of 60," McMullen said.
"That population that holds a large group of volunteer firefighters in
Canada, we're starting to lose at that end, and we can't recruit fast enough at
the other end." Both discussed an urgent need for better federal and
municipal support and compensation for firefighters, to help recruit with
wildfire seasons worsening.
What solutions are on the table? The national associations for
volunteer firefighters, fire chiefs, and search and rescue members, have all
lobbied to the federal government to increase the tax credit for volunteering
as a firefighter or search and rescue member. It currently stands at $3,000,
and they are seeking an increase to $10,000. The CAFC has made three other
recommendations as well, according to McMullen: provide volunteer firefighters
with better mental health support, hire a national fire advisor to coordinate
emergency teams at the federal level, and bring back a program that used to
give fire departments more training and equipment. "The joint
emergency preparedness plan allowed fire departments to apply for specialty
training and equipment in order to support different things that we don't do
regularly — and wildfire is not something that municipal firefighters do on a
regular occurrence," McMullen said. "That ended in 2013, and we've
advocated for that to come back." Some in B.C. have floated the
idea of having a national wildfire-fighting force in Canada, following models
like Australia. Currently the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre helps
provinces co-ordinate wildfire response and training. According to Starkell, municipalities
should be funding fire departments better. "A lot of firefighters are raising
funds themselves in their organizations to help buy equipment," he said.
"The RCMP don't raise money to buy bullets, so the firefighters shouldn't
have to raise money to buy equipment." Depending on the
municipality, a volunteer firefighter gets paid either hourly or with an annual
cheque, according to Starkell. Neither he nor McMullen could say how
much volunteers are paid on average. "The biggest thing that we can
say is that we're helping people," Starkell said, echoing a sense of pride
in the work. "We don't know these folks, they're complete strangers, but
we're out helping them at the worst time of their lives."
^ Firefighters are very important because they risk their
lives to save People, Animals and Property. Volunteer Firefighters do all of
that and aren’t paid. Canada (and the World) should pay and give more benefits to
all Firefighters (Volunteers and Professionals.) ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/climate/volunteer-firefighting-1.6947097
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