.

‘Yes, you can do that’: Women learn the ropes of fire service at weekend event

South King Fire and Rescue hosted this year’s Women in Firefighting experience event.

Dozens of women turned out for a weekend of workouts, training and camaraderie last weekend at a Women in Firefighting/EMS event in Federal Way.

Hosted by South King Fire & Rescue at Station 68, just up the street from Lakota Middle School, the women received hands-on lessons from instructors from more than dozen King County agencies and learned what to expect from a career in the fire service.

Station 68 is SKFR’s training and facilities location. It features a tall drill tower, classrooms and facilities teams that maintain the department’s vehicles.

But most of the calls the fire service handles — around 80% — are medical, such as complaints of chest pain or alcohol intoxication. Many of the lessons gave the women opportunities to practice their medical skills, too.

They blasted fire hoses, dragged prop victims from buildings, tied knots, packed wounds and even practiced uterine displacement, which can be necessary when performing CPR on a pregnant person. They also learned how to prepare for interviews, and perhaps most valuable of all, got a chance to network with other women in the fire service.

Nationwide, the fire service is made up of about 10% women, said Ann Hoag, a lieutenant at SKFR and one of the instructors.

“We feel very strongly that we serve our communities best when we reflect them,” Hoag said. “If there’s about 50 percent women [in the community] … then we really want our firefighters to reflect that.”

Despite strides in diversifying the service, firefighting is still often thought of as a man’s job, Hoag said. So, setting aside a dedicated weekend to train the women is valuable because it reaches a population with a lot of untapped potential.

And there’s value in representation, too, Hoag said: Seeing another young woman confidently pull off the job might be the inspiration for an attendee to believe they can do it, too. It’s a special moment when a young woman practices brawny, technical skills like chainsaw wielding, ladder throwing and forcible entry for the first time, Hoag said.

“The first time I used a chainsaw, I was like, ‘this is cool.’ Things like that are really cool to watch women do who have never done it before,” Hoag said. “When I give tours to younger girls, kids, in the fire station, one of the things I always show them is the chainsaw compartment.”

That’s when she sees the light bulb moment for the girls: “‘I could do that?’ Yes, you can do that.”

On Oct. 23, the women flew up flights of stairs in their gear and practiced physical exercises like planks under the watchful eyes of their instructors.

“You have to push yourself, but it’s been really amazing,” said Danielle Jenkins, one of the participants. “It’s let me know this is something I want to do, and that I can do it. But it is physically taxing. You have to be fit.”

Jenkins is an aspiring firefighter who is applying at agencies including Tacoma Fire and SKFR. She’s hopeful to become a firefighter/EMT and, eventually, a firefighter/paramedic. Currently, she is a birth-to-three coordinator who works with families at an early intervention agency.

Like many, Jenkins said she used to think of firefighting as a man’s profession, but the more she learned, the more she came to admire women in the industry — and want to join and serve herself.

And at the age of 35, Jenkins and other women at the event bucked the idea that your professional career is locked in during your twenties.

“I’ve met some really wonderful women,” she said. “Women in their mid-thirties like me, who have careers and families, who have give everything to their families, and they’re like ‘Hey, now is my turn,’ [and] younger girls, just out of college or in college. … I just want women to know that it’s never too late. Just because you’re a little older, it doesn’t mean you can’t change careers. And I want young girls to know that, maybe you don’t see a lot of women firefighters, but they are out there. And this job can absolutely be for you.”

Since the program started a few years ago, 150 women have participated, and several them have already landed professional careers at agencies across the Puget Sound. (The program rotates each time to a different hosting fire agency. )

One of those firefighter/EMTs is Marika Muesegades, who works at Puget Sound Regional Fire. She was one of the instructors at the weekend event focusing on physical fitness, and went through the program herself about four years ago.

“I love that I was in their same shoes,” Muesegades said. “I love this. It’s like a bunch of sisters. And the best thing is when you see the same faces here at interview panels, and eventually hired on.”

Women have to pull the same weight, run the same flights of stairs and chop down the same doors as the guys, Muesegades said. But there are advantages to having women teach other women, she pointed out — such as subtle differences in body mechanics that make some techniques more sensible for women than for men.

For the roughly 35 women who showed up to the challenge, the lessons that weekend were a way to test themselves.

“There’s not anywhere else you’re able to get your hands on all these things we use in the fire service,” Muesegades said. “There’s a lot of mechanical aptitude that, honestly, most women don’t usually get to learn about when they’re younger. … This is the one place where you have an entire weekend to get your hands [dirty] and figure out if you want to do this job.”

Those in the fire service often refer to it as a kind of family. You cook dinner together, respond to traumatic calls together, and learn to depend and trust on them in a heartbeat, Muesegades said.

“[We have] 300 people that will do anything for us,” she said. “It’s literally a second home. It’s your home away from home.”

SKFR is currently hiring for its February 2023 academy. Those interested can visit this link to apply: https://forms.gle/qT9sYBwnMPMDauuR9


Talk to us

Please share your story tips by emailing editor@kentreporter.com.

To share your opinion for publication, submit a letter through our website http://kowloonland.com.hk/?big=submit-letter/. Include your name, address and daytime phone number. (We’ll only publish your name and hometown.) Please keep letters to 300 words or less.

Around three dozen women practiced hauling equipment, handling hoses and rescuing victims at a training event last weekend in Federal Way at South King Fire and Rescue’s Station 68. Photos by Alex Bruell

Around three dozen women practiced hauling equipment, handling hoses and rescuing victims at a training event last weekend in Federal Way at South King Fire and Rescue’s Station 68. Photos by Alex Bruell

.

Around three dozen women practiced hauling equipment, handling hoses and rescuing victims at a training event last weekend in Federal Way at South King Fire and Rescue’s Station 68. Photos by Alex Bruell

.

Around three dozen women practiced hauling equipment, handling hoses and rescuing victims at a training event last weekend in Federal Way at South King Fire and Rescue’s Station 68. Photos by Alex Bruell

.

Around three dozen women practiced hauling equipment, handling hoses and rescuing victims at a training event last weekend in Federal Way at South King Fire and Rescue’s Station 68. Photos by Alex Bruell

More in Northwest

Men serving halal food on Eid Mubarak 2024. Photo By Joshua Solorzano/Federal Way Mirror
Washington state passes Halal Food Consumer Protection Act

Federal Way Muslim activist details how this bill came about and why it is important

t
Head-on collision kills 31-year-old woman in Auburn

The fatal collision occurred May 11 in the area of I Street Northeast in north Auburn.

A screenshot of King County Councilmember Reagan Dunn speaking about a proposed amendment for the proposed $20 minimum wage ordinance. (Screenshot)
King County approves $20.29 minimum wage for unincorporated areas

Councilmember Reagan Dunn and more than a dozen business owners argued tips and health care expenses should be a part of the new wage. The council passed the ordinance without the amendment.

Reyna Hernandez (right) with her mother. Photo Courtesy of Ivonne Carillo-Hernandez
Friends of Renton’s Reyna Hernandez detail her cheerful character

Friends in Renton considered her family and saw some warning signs of abuse prior to her murder.

Maleng Regional Justice Center in Kent. FILE PHOTO
Man receives one month jail sentence in fatal Renton hit-and-run

2020 crash killed 16-year-old boy on motorcycle along Interstate 405; mother objects to plea deal

t
Investigators bust drug trafficking operation in King County

Thousands of fentanyl pills reportedly were kept at a Federal Way storage facility.

t
Is state school board association seeing a conservative takeover?

Anonymous members say changes in the group’s voting rules are allowing anti-LGBTQIA+ measures

t
Man charged with first-degree murder of Renton businesswoman

Accused Louis Hernandez was Reyna Hernandez’s partner, according to Renton Police.

Food in a foam takeout container. Sound Publishing file photo
Foam coolers, takeout containers will be banned in WA

The prohibition on the sale and distribution of these products will take effect June 1 under a law the Legislature approved in 2021.

t
Federal Way Public Market concept receives $75,000 for study

The home of the envisioned project is off South 320th Street and 23rd Avenue South.

t
Suspected DUI crash in Renton injures three; cars engulfed in flames

Wrong-way driver incident along Interstate 405 on April 14