Dallas Fire-Rescue, Worried About Attrition, Has Plan For Getting Warm Bodies on Engines
| Dallas-Fire Rescue |
The way Fire-Rescue operates, recruits go to the Fire Academy, then train as emergency medical technicians, then attend paramedic school -- all of which takes a year, year and a half. The new plan would expedite getting rookies on fire trucks, while at the same time allowing them to finish their advanced life-saving classes. (Rookies wouldn't be allowed on ambulance runs till they've finished EMT training.) Far as Fire-Rescue's concerned, there are myriad benefits to the plan, which would, for starters, cut down on overtime and allow "recruits [to] receive on the job training."
Not coincidentally, on Tuesday the council will also hear about Fire-Rescue's 8-year-old Explorer Program, which "targets students from ages 14 to 20 ... who are interested in firefighting and emergency medical services." Bummer, though: "NO active firefighting activities at structure fires."






















