sv-wolf wrote:Hey Loonette! Congratulations! That's truly brilliant!
It can't have been easy beating down the doors of male privilege. You're a gutsy lady!
Thanks for the kudos!
In actuality, our fire department (much like our village itself) is about as unique of a department as you can get. Not in how we fight fires or provide EMS care, but in the general makeup of our members. Unlike the rest of this nation, where females account for only about 10% of firefighters, our department is at roughly 30% females. So being a female in this department is more of a normal thing. Also, we'll take new firefighter recruits up to the age of 55 (EMS recruits up to the age of 65). This is virtually unheard of in most departments.
I don't think I'd want to work for most departments out there. Here, we get the same training as any other firefighter and we face the same sorts of dangers as other departments (well, maybe with the exception of larger city departments like New York City - they do receive a different level of training for things like high rise buildings and whatnot). We just don't put up barriers when it comes to age or gender (or sexual preference or religion or any of it).
Incidentally, I had my first real fire just last night. When I got to the station to put on my gear, I pulled my coat off its hook, and underneath was my brand-spankin' new fire helmet. Nobody had a camera handy last night, or I would have gotten a pic of me after the fire. In any case, today our township is mourning the loss of two out buildings and a couple dozen chickens. That's right folks - you might think twice about using a propane heater to keep your chickens warm (the chicken building actually exploded before we even arrived on scene - sorry chickens...). The other out building was only 10 feet from the main house (and it was stuffed full with just about anything and everything you could imagine), but we were able to knock the fire down before it became a threat the house. I spent most of my time swinging a pick axe to expose the walls as well as inspecting the roof for hot spots. Lots of fun!
Cheers,
Loonette