Is the problem with wildfires a lack of trained firefighters, or that they can't stop the fires

Off topic but I’m tired of bloody rain. It is unrelenting (UK folk can laugh at this post).

mrAru is from the San Joachim Valley [Fresno, well actually Kerman] and we have occasion to drive past a ranger station here in Connecticut and they have a Smokey the Bear statue holding a sign that tells what the fire level is. He once commented as he looked around at the verdant green woods and pastures along that road, and the bear holding a ‘high’ sign that the farmers where he was from would love the CT version of a drought.

NSW has 6,800 full timers and 5,700 volunteers
Victoria has 1,900 full timers and 20,000 volunteers.

So the number of 2,700 seems a bit light on I think.
On the climate change thing Australia’s alliance of former emergency services chiefs has warned Prime Minister Scott Morrison that a bushfires royal commission will fail unless it focuses on climate change.

Bushfires in Australia are literally hell.

With the Australian fire warning levels displayed regularly along the roadsides, High is the second lowest level…
After High there is Very High, Severe, Extreme and Catastrophic.

Amost none of the full-timers will be active in bush fires: they are trained and reserved for town fires.

Around half of the volunteers active seems reasonable to me. They don’t go out-of-area for long periods, when they are out-of-area they get pulled back as fast as possible.

NSW Rural Fire Service today reported that for the first time since July 2019, there are no active bush or grass fires burning in NSW.

The season is not yet over but general rain and cooling temperatures with the imminent end of summer are causes for optimism. Of course, it only takes 3 days of 40C temps to turn Victoria and South Australia back into tinderboxes

Do you have a cite for that? I have a friend in Sydney who is traveling internationally I’d like to send to her since she probably isn’t keeping up with the fire news right now.

Late to the party here, but something about those figures looked odd to me - how come Victoria would have four times the volunteer numbers of NSW, when NSW is bigger than us?

NSW RFS actually counts 72,000 volunteers, though I’m sure not all of them are active firefighting vollies.

That just re-emphasises your ultimate point, of course