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Being a Firefighter in the Public and Private Sector (page 5)

By Ronald R. Spadafora
McGraw-Hill Professional
Updated on Jun 25, 2011

Firefighters in the Private Sector

Fewer than 10 percent of firefighters are employed in the private sector, working in chemical or oil processing plants, large industrial facilities, or airports.

Industrial Fire Brigades

In the private sector, some chemical plants, airports, and large industrial facilities train personnel and establish industrial fire brigades. These firefighters may be responsible for incipient firefighting activities only or for interior structural firefighting, depending on their training. Sophisticated industrial fire brigades may perform exterior firefighting, using apparatus-generated water streams or stationary large-volume manifold nozzles. These firefighters are trained to wear self-contained breathing apparatus (SCBA) and operate hose lines for both interior and exterior operations. The emergency work they perform may include rescue in confined spaces, mitigating the risks presented by hazardous materials, decontamination, trench rescue, and medical care.

Hellfighters

Hellfighters are firefighters hired by oil well control companies, based primarily in Texas, to extinguish oil well fires. These firefighters are specially trained to close supply-line valves and use large-volume water streams from the perimeter of a flaming oil well to put out fires. They also detonate explosives to displace oxygen in the atmosphere surrounding the fire, thereby smothering it. Hellfighters work not only in the United States (Texas, Oklahoma) but also in other countries.

Wildland Firefighting Companies

Wildland firefighting companies contract out paid firefighters to public agencies to supplement local fire department manpower and equipment during major wildland fires. These companies are located mainly in the northwestern United States. Company crews perform work similar to that of wildland firefighters.

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