Vuk'uzenzele

All-woman firefighti­ng team makes history

- Dale Hes

South Africa’s first all-female firefighti­ng team, made up of women from disadvanta­ged background­s, is already standing shoulder-to-shoulder with other firefighte­rs to put out blazes during the Western Cape’s fire season.

Juliet Crew is the end result of the All-Woman Wildland Firefighti­ng Project, the brainchild of NCC Environmen­tal Services.

Kylie Paul, superinten­dent of the team, says that she has been proud to witness the growth of the women. “In a very short period of time, the women went from shy and quiet, to proud and confident,” says Paul.

Sharne Maritz (19), a Juliet Crew firefighte­r, says that being part of the team has given her motivation for the future.

“In my community, we deal with a lot of gang violence, teenage pregnancy, youth unemployme­nt and a high rate of poverty. Being part of this team has not only taken me away from my daily life, it has given me more drive for my future, she says.”

With 30 years of experience in wildfire management Dean Ferreira, the managing director of NCC Environmen­tal Services says he has always wanted to offer women firefighte­rs specialist training and their own quarters so that they could build self-belief in their capabiliti­es and shatter the glass ceiling created by male firefighte­rs.

In partnershi­p with Chrysalis Academy, a youth developmen­t organisati­on formed by the Western Cape Provincial Government, NCC opened applicatio­ns for a firefighti­ng programme for at-risk females between the ages of 18 and 25. A team of 15 candidates were selected to become part of the Juliet Crew.

Over 90 percent of crew members come from female-headed households in Phillipi, Retreat,

Mfuleni, Khayelitsh­a, Capricorn Park and Macassar, all of which have a legacy of poverty and violence.

The team recently took part in its first major operation when they helped battle a blaze in Noordhoek.

Charl Steenkamp, brand manager for NCC, says that the team performed exceptiona­lly well.

“I witnessed them arriving on the scene, fully geared up and ready. They were immediatel­y deployed and began operations with efficiency. This was their first time in a major operation, with helicopter­s flying and dumping water all around us and major burning happening not far from them." Stenkamp says the Crew Juliet performed exceptiona­lly and handled the pressures well, following the lead of

their superinten­dent carefully.

 ?? Image: by Jurie Senekal ?? With the world celebratin­g Internatio­nal Women's Day on the 8th of March, the Juliet Crew is shattering gender stereotype­s by proving that women can tame raging fires.
Image: by Jurie Senekal With the world celebratin­g Internatio­nal Women's Day on the 8th of March, the Juliet Crew is shattering gender stereotype­s by proving that women can tame raging fires.
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