Why do firemen sleep on the job?

Aren’t they also just people who live in remote, small towns where they can’t afford to have someone paid and on duty 24 hours a day? If there is a structural fire in town, a certain group of people have trained to be able to put it out. For a forest fire or a brush fire, the Forest Service handles it. In California, the pyromaniacs typically start a brushfire in the hills, and then go away, come back, join in the firefighting in order to be a “hero.”

Sort of. Bear in mind that we don’t have “city” or “county” positions in the Australian emergency services (fire/police/ambulance). The official “New South Wales [or other state] Fire Brigade” are the guys that come out in their shiny red truck when your house is on fire, be it in a city metropolitan area or a large town. They are paid professionals employed by the state. Then there is the “Volunteer Rural Bush Fire Service”. These guys just do bush fires (forest fires), and could care less if your house is burning down and the NSWFB are attending. I assume they’d help out in building fired in remote areas, though.

Volunteer firefighters are very common in the U.S. as well. I would guess that they are in the vast majority of firefighters nationwide. They aren’t just found in remote areas either. My town in suburban Boston has one paid fire chief and the rest are volunteers. Volunteer firefighters are essential in rural areas. You never can tell when a giant blaze is going to break out and needs a fast response from lots of firefighters.

They reason they do it is basically the same reason that little kids tend to like toy fire trucks. Many people just love the idea of firefighting and that is a way to do it for real. It often costs the volunteers money to do it as well. They often buy their own equipment and pay for some of their own training. In a lot of places, the volunteer fire department doubles as a social club.

I remember attending fund-raising barbecues for the Volunteer Firemen in my little home town. What do you know–they became famous in 1971–just after I left.

It wasn’t really a Norman Rockwell town–more like a wide spot in the Old Galveston Road.

But we’ve got lots of volunteer firefighters in the USA, who mostly do good work; they handle medical & other emergencies, as well as fires. “Firefighter” is now preferred because many of them are women.

I don’t have a cite; I was just trying to think of the likely causes of fires, and most of them are either independent of people being awake (some electrical fires, for example) or are much more likely to happen while people are awake. I didn’t think of falling asleep smoking.

Volly v career or combination: According to the NFPA, approximately 800,000 volunteer firefighters nationwide protect the majority of the country’s geographical area. Of all the fire departments in the United States, an estimated 73% are all volunteer. In PA, of 2,448 fire companies, 2,354 (96.1%) are all volunteer, 72 (3%) are combination, and 22 (.9%) are all career. Source: PA Legislative Budget and Finance Committee Report 6/05.

As far as fires taking place at night, consider a few things. Most people who are employed outside the home work day shift. So, they usually go home after the work day is done, which means they are home at night. When they are home, they do lots of things which result in house fires, such as:

Smoking
Lighting candles
Cooking
Use space heaters
Light wood fires
Use household heaters
Use clothes dryers

Source: NFPA report ‘The US Fire Problem’ 6/03

Spoken like a city councilman in the making :dubious:

A little insight into real world 24 hour shift working conditions.

I was never employed as a firefighter but I was employed as an EMT/ambulance driver. 24 hour shifts could be brutal, its not horribly unusual to see an ambulance crew run 10-12 calls in a 24 hour shift (I did 17 once). When you start handing out duties for after hours they will quite often not get done, which results in people getting pissy about whos job it was on what day and are they dragging their ass in the feild to avoid doing their “chores”.

Also depending on your states labor laws there are ways to avoid paying for the whole 24 hours. For us, if we had at least 5 hours sleep straight through from 9pm-6am we got paid 16 hours flat time. If we managed to break it up to where there were no 5 hour blocks of sleep we got paid 8 hours regular 4 hours OT and 9 hours double time. Bet your ass on a slow day we were out combing the ER’s at 1230am begging for a gurney required ER discharge (like people going back to convalescent hospitals) so we would get the “21” as we called it.