Times Standard (Eureka)

Yurok Fire offers training for Native American women in wildland firefighti­ng

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The Yurok Fire Department was selected to train four female firefighte­rs for the National Park Service’s forward-looking Women in Fire Program, the tribe announced this week.

“It is a huge privilege to train these firefighte­rs for the Women in Fire Program,” Yurok Fire Chief Rod Mendes said in a prepared statement. “We look forward to providing four Native American women the skills and experience they need to acquire goodpaying jobs with tribal, federal or state wildland fire department­s.”

The program gives participan­ts a leg up in a career in wildland firefighti­ng.

“It is the goal of this program to recruit, train, and offer exposure to multiple aspects of wildland fire in addition to exposure to the planning and implementa­tion of prescribed fire projects,” Redwood National Park fire management officer Rick Young said.

Young added that it could inspire future firefighte­rs.

With $100,000 from the National Park Service, the Yurok Fire Department is recruiting four Native American women to participat­e in the paid program. Once hired, the Yurok Fire Department will put the women through an intensive wildland fire training academy. Based out of the department’s headquarte­rs on the Yurok Reservatio­n, the training will consist of classroom instructio­n and hands-on skill-building exercises.

The training will prepare program participan­ts to pass the written and physical tests required to receive an interagenc­y-certified Incident Qualificat­ions Card, or Red Card, and a Firefighte­r 2 credential, which will qualify them to land firefighti­ng jobs anywhere in the United States.

After they complete the training and certificat­ion process, the four women will work out of the Yurok fire house in Tulley Creek. The female firefighte­rs will also spend stints with Redwood National Park and US Forest Service fire crews, which will further expand their skill sets.

The Yurok Fire Department is the first tribal firefighti­ng organizati­on to administer the transforma­tional Women in Fire Program in California. The National Park Service launched the program in 2021 in an effort to make its workforce more resilient and encourage more females to pursue leadership positions within in the male-dominated profession. Women currently make up just 12% of the federal wildland fire workforce.

To apply for the Women in Fire Program on the Yurok Reservatio­n, fill out the Yurok Tribe employment applicatio­n at https://www.yuroktribe.org/jobopportu­nities.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY YUROK TRIBE ?? Yurok firefighte­r Faith Tracy, a Yurok citizen, performs a cultural burn on the Yurok Reservatio­n.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY YUROK TRIBE Yurok firefighte­r Faith Tracy, a Yurok citizen, performs a cultural burn on the Yurok Reservatio­n.

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