Marin County fire to establish diversity program
Apr. 28—Marin County Fire Chief
Weber previewed a program in development that would focus on recruiting people of color and women to become firefighters and supporting them financially while they complete the academic work necessary to qualify during a county budget session last month. He hopes to launch the program by
"Our vision is to institutionalize a community-driven wildfire prevention program that supports underserved, underrepresented and underfunded young adults in and around
"I'm pleased to announce today that we have 100% interest in participation from all of the fire agencies in
"Things changed with the George Floyd case," Bagala said. "I think every organization everywhere had to do a little internal soul searching and try to figure out what they could do better."
The initiative comes as the demands on
"It's absolutely a win-win," Weber said. "We can use the fire prevention work that the community as a whole has made a large investment in to give program participants a job as they're working on their education."
Weber provided statistics that illustrate his department has plenty of room for improvement when it comes to diversity. Nearly 83% of the department's 80 full-time firefighters are White men.
Approximately 7.5% are White women, and an equal percentage are Latino. Asians account for 2.2% of the firefighters. None of the department's full-time firefighters are
Three percent of
Weber said in past years fire departments across the nation tended to hire the relatives of existing firefighters.
"It was sons and nephews and brothers," Weber said. "That was not a fair and equitable recruiting process. It is important that we look at ways we can bring fairness and equity to our recruitment process."
Bagala said, "We do have second- and third- and maybe fourth-generation firefighters in this county."
He said, however, he believes the lack of racial diversity in
To qualify, applicants typically have to be certified as both an emergency medical technician and a paramedic in addition to earning an associate degree in fire science. All of which can take over three years and cost
In addition, applicants also need some relevant experience so they typically have to volunteer or do seasonal work as a firefighter before being hired full time.
"My experience has been you find a lot more diversity when you have an EMT requirement as opposed to a firefighter-paramedic requirement," White said. "Sometimes it is cost prohibitive for folks who are looking to become firefighters to become a paramedic before they can become qualified to test with an agency.
"Marketing may have a lot to do with it as well," White said. "How well an agency markets the fact that it is looking to embrace people of color and women in their organization. When individuals look at an organization and don't see a lot of diversity, it may not be an attractive option for them."
White said besides himself the
Tyler, however, said
"Because our entry-level requirements are higher than county fire's, there is a different pool of candidates for
"We have paramedics that are on every single engine," Tyler said. "If you're calling because your parent is having a stroke or heart attack, don't you want a paramedic on the fire engine to help save their life?"
Weber said, ""These individuals that we'd be targeting may need additional wrap-around services because of the situation they're in. That includes food security, housing security, and support around their education."
While the money to pay the participants for fire prevention work could come from Measure C proceeds, Weber didn't specify how the wrap-around services would be paid for, except to say, "We've started discussions with some generous individuals who are interested in potentially supporting this model."
Weber said the stress that
"We've had several people who have acknowledged they're having problems with mental health," Weber said. "One of them had to seek inpatient treatment. We've seen divorce rates increase. And we've seen other challenges, whether it be substance abuse or other things."
Bagala said individual firefighters are working 500 to 2,000 hours of overtime per year, giving them a 70-hour to 80-hour work week.
"That's a lot of sleep deprivation," Bagala said. "It's a lot of time away from families, a lot of opportunities to have occupational exposures to carcinogens and a lot of injuries."
For decades,
"That pool is drying up because of realignment and other criminal justice changes," Weber said. "Low level offenders aren't spending as much time in prison as they have historically."
As a result, the number of inmate firefighter crews has fallen from 196 to 53.
"Going into this fire season that is going to be very challenging," Weber said.
In September, 2020, Gov.
"I think that was a great decision," Weber said. "Often these are low-level drug offenses. These people can be rehabilitated, and they can go on to a lifetime of public service."
___
(c)2021 The Marin Independent Journal (Novato, Calif.)
Visit The Marin Independent Journal (Novato, Calif.) at www.marinij.com
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
Lima man pleads to reduced charge in fatal traffic mishap
Advisor News
Annuity News
Health/Employee Benefits News
Life Insurance News