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Firefighter

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AVG. SALARY

$53,620

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EDUCATION

Post-secondary training +

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JOB OUTLOOK

Stable

Interviews

Insider Info

Picture running into a burning building. Flames are shooting out of the walls and ceilings. Thick, black smoke blinds your vision. The heat is so intense that you feel like you're on fire yourself.

This is exactly what firefighter Mike Smyrl does for a living. Believe it or not, this is not the hardest part of the job for him.

"When you're in this situation, you run on instinct, and so fighting the fire becomes a very impersonal thing," he explains.

It's the personal part of the job that is most upsetting. As a firefighter, Smyrl often gets called out to serious car accidents and medical emergencies.

"The worst part is when you get a call in the middle of the night to go to a car accident scene, and you just know someone has been really badly hurt -- or worse.

"I dread this more than anything, because it's our job to get the bodies out of the car. It's our job to unwrap the metal from around people who are screaming in pain. When you see that kind of pain on a person's face, you never forget it."

Much of a firefighter's time on duty is taken up by training and by maintaining firefighting equipment. "When we arrive at work, we spend the first part of our shift doing equipment checks and running through our drills," says Smyrl. "Then we start working on our various housekeeping duties."

Because firefighters live at the fire hall while they are on shift, most have kitchens, bedrooms or dorms, washrooms and living areas. It's the firefighters' responsibility to keep up with all of the domestic chores needed to keep everyday life running smoothly. In fact, Smyrl laughingly says these domestic duties point to the most important skill for firefighters: being a good cook.

"Firefighters never let you live down a bad meal. Burning a dinner is a fate worse than death," he says with a laugh.

While the personal side of being a firefighter can be frightening, Smyrl says this aspect of the job can also be the most rewarding. He remembers one occasion when he was called to a house fire in the middle of the night. By the time Smyrl's backup team arrived at the scene, the first unit had managed to get two of the people out of the house and down to safety. A child was still trapped in an upstairs bedroom of the home.

"When we got there, the house was already looking pretty bad. The whole structure was starting to crumble. We went in with the hoses and started searching upstairs for the boy. No one could seem to find him and the situation was getting worse by the minute."

Smyrl and the other firefighters were just about to give up hope. There was no sign of the child in his bedroom or the hall, and they were starting to think the child had been killed by smoke inhalation, or had tried to escape and failed.

"Then it occurred to me -- where would I have gone if I was that age and scared to death? I ran around checking for what looked like the parent's bedroom. It seemed like ages, but finally I found him hiding under his parents' bed."

By the time Smyrl got the boy out of the burning building, everyone else had just about given up hope, too.

"It was like a scene from a movie. I emerged from the house with the boy wrapped in my coat and everyone came rushing towards me. His parents took him from me and thanked me, over and over again.

"I was just doing my job. I know everybody says that, but it's true," says Smyrl. "But I have to admit, it's pretty great to have a job where doing your job well makes you a hero from time to time."

Contact

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    ndcrn@nd.gov | (701) 328-9733

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