St. John's Regional Fire Department igniting a love of firefighting in young cadets - Action News
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St. John's Regional Fire Department igniting a love of firefighting in young cadets

St. John's Regional Fire Department is hoping to attract young Air Cadets to careers in firefighting through two weekends of hands-on training sessions.

Air Cadets participating in four days of firefighter training

The ladder climb was one of the most popular with the cadets at Camp Ignite. (CBC/Meghan McCabe)

Climbing a ladder attached to a fire truck 75 feet into the air may not be for the faint of heart, but it's exactly how someteenageAir Cadets in St. John's spent their time onSunday.

The St. John's Regional Fire Department is hoping to attract young members of the 508 Caribou RoyalAir Cadets to careers in firefighting through two weekends of hands-on training sessions in October, called Camp Ignite.

Halfway through day two, it may be working.

"I think I'll have to consider the option, yes," saidZach Pomroy, a sergeant in the 508 Caribou cadets. "Thisenticed me very much to really really think hard about it."

Zach Pomroy is a sergeant in 508 Air Cadets in St. John's, and participated in the Camp Ignite weekend. (CBC/Meghan McCabe)

The ladder was definitely a favourite part of the training weekend, with cadets like Pomroyeager to experience the thrill of being more than seven stories off the ground

"It's the highest I've been except in a glider," the cadet said.

Looking for tomorrow's recruits

The idea for a training camp for cadets camevery naturally for St. John's Regional Fire, as a relationship already existed between some of the retired firefighters and the 508 squadron, especially when it came to Duke of Edinburgh activities for the youth involved.

"The planets came into alignment, and we said, 'great, let's go with the concept," Chief Jerry Peach told CBC.

St. John's Regional Fire Department Chief Jerry Peach. (CBC/Meghan McCabe)

Peach says unlike a publictourof trucks and equipment, the cadets actually get the opportunity to get in behind the wheels of the trucks, and try doing some of the things real responders do every day.

The fire chief hopes allowing the cadets to get that exclusive experience means the groundwork may already be laid forfuture recruits who come looking to join.

"It is not difficult to recruit firefighters, we have a lineup at our doors," said Peach.

"But that's ok for today, we have to think further, we have to think abouttomorrowand we have to start getting our youth interested in our career early enough so that they can start making some choices."

At Camp Ignite, young cadets get to experience being 75 feet in the air on a fire ladder, something not offered in a standard tour for the public. (CBC/Meghan McCabe)