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The Current

Burned out: Former B.C. wildfire fighters worry safety at risk as experienced workers leave

At a time when B.C. needs wildfire fighters most, the service is struggling to retain people with experience amid longer and harsher fire seasons. Some who have left the service saythatas experienced firefighters burn out, unseasoned onesmust take their place, increasing the danger to everyone.

Close calls, mental fatigue push veteran firefighters to leave, increasing burden on everyone

At night, a woman holds a hose over her shoulder as water streams from it. Flames are smoke are visible in the background.
Wildfire fighter Rose Velisek is silhouetted against flames in this undated photo as she battles a B.C. wildfire. She left the B.C. Wildfire Service in 2023 and warns about a lack of resources and experience. (Submitted by Rose Velisek)

One part gasoline, three parts diesel is a common mixture in a drip torch thatsteel, spouted can firefighters use to start controlled burns anddeprivewildfiresof fuel.

B.C. wildfire fighter Dylan Bullockdidn't like the look of his mixture on July 7, 2021 the day of what the 34-year-old referstoas "the incident." It was the sort of mishap where fatigue plays a role, something former firefighters fear will increase as people grow weary and leave the B.C. Wildfire Service, as the 10-year veteran Bullock did in 2023.

"I don't feel good about that," he told CBC Radio. "But I also know how I felt at the end of last season."

At a time when B.C. needs wildfire fighters most, the service is struggling to retain experienced workers amid longer and harsher fire seasons. Some who have left saythatas seasonedfirefighters burn out, neweronesmust take their place, increasing the danger to everyone.

'Oh, maybe I'm not OK'

It had beena tough few daysfor Bullock. He was working his ninth seasonwith the B.C. Wildfire Service, during the summer of 2021, the deadly heat dome in Western Canada. The town of Lytton his home base for years had burned to the ground a little over a week before. The scorching workdays stretched past 12 hours;meaningful breaks were few.

The day of the incident, he was "probably not in the best mental capacity," but he noticed that whatever was in the drip torch didn't look right. A crew member later recounted hearing Bullock say it "looked clean."

Bullock asked a crew member to fetch a new drip torch, and he opened his to dump the bad fuel.But a patch of grass nearby was still burning.

"Boom."

Bullock's protective clothing was no match for the blaze.

"I'm now on fire," he recalled. The radio around his neck was melting.

A man in a red shirt smiles as he holds a red canister with a long nozzle. The brush behind him is on fire.
B.C. wildfire fighter Dylan Bullock holds a drip torch in this undated photo. An incident with a drip torch during the 2021 wildfire season left him with serious injuries. He left the B.C. Wildfire Service after the 2023 season. (Submitted by Dylan Bullock)

Bullock pulled off his shirt, and two crew members helped douse the flames.

"I think I'm OK," Bullock said. "And I look down and all of my fingertips have these blisters on them. And there's a massive blister on the front of my chest that looks like somebody taped a water balloon to my chest.... And I can smell burning hair. And then I'm like, 'Oh, maybe I'm not OK.'"

Bullock was airlifted to a Vancouver hospital and put on life support before hewoke up about six days later, disoriented and hallucinating from painkillers. His long recovery included multiple skin grafts.

Investigators concluded the fuel was probably contaminated with water. WorkSafeBC, the provincial agency that promotes safe workplaces, saidresources and response workers at the time were "stretched beyond capacity."

Despite his ordeal, Bullockwasn't ready to leave firefighting just yet.

Eager for the fray

Like Bullock, Rose Velisekloved being a firefighter.

"It was just very romantic to me," said Velisek, who had dreamed of the job since she was 14. She was accepted into the service in 2021 at the age of 20.

"I loved it. I loved how backbreaking it was."

But by the end of the 2023 fire season British Columbia's worst both Bullock and Velisek had left behind the jobs they had lived for.

People stand and sit at the edge of body of water. A fire rages across the water and the sky is dark with smoke.
Residents watch the McDougall Creek wildfire in West Kelowna, B.C., in August 2023. (Darren Hull/AFP/Getty Images)

Bullock says after initially enjoying his return post-accident, he was soon overcome with the persistent feeling his crewwasunder-resourced not enough people, pumpsor helicopters.

"I just felt kind of paralyzed."

He also saw a few close calls, like when a firefighter took a wrong turn directly into the path of afire. The firefighterditched hiscar, fleeing to safety on foot, as the heat melted the side mirror.

Fires turn deadly

Velisek also felt overwhelmed by the enormity of the fires and what her crewhad at hand to fight them.

"There was a lot of pressure because there was a lack of resources, a lack of experience.... Can we complete the task we're given? And are we prepared to?"

(The B.C. governmentannounced a $56-million upgrade to the Ministry of Forest'sair fleet and $16 million for pumps and other equipment after the 2023 season.)

Veliseksays fatigue was a major factor in a vehicle collision on the job that left her "frozen and hyperventilating and panicking," as well as withwhiplash and a concussion.

Then came July 13, 2023. Bullockremembers his 20-person crew had just arrived at a hotel in Prince George, when they learned that B.C. wildfire fighter Devyn Gale, 19, had been killed by a falling tree.

"The entire crew was incredibly emotional."

WATCH | B.C. wildfire fighters remember their sibling killed on duty:

B.C. wildfire fighters remember their sibling killed on duty

1 year ago
Duration 8:06
Nolan Gale and Kayln Gale tearfully reflected on their sister Devyn Gale's life and legacy at a memorial service in Revelstoke, B.C.

For Velisek, the news was chilling. More than once while she was fighting afire, trees had fallen metres from where she was standing.

In all, eight firefighters died on the jobcountrywide last year, including six in B.C.

Riel Allain, a former smoke jumperwho quit the service after six years in 2022, voicedhis concerns ina then-anonymous letter to the executive director at the timeabout the lackof retention and experience.

"People are getting exhausted," he told CBCRadio. "And they need to look at this critically and really quickly, as well, because people are leaving. And we're hurting."

Allainalso hasconcerns about the $27-an-hourstarting pay, but it's the inexperience that troubles him most.

"If you don't have that, you erode the capability of the organization to actually put fires out and keep people safe."

'Moral liability'

David Greer, acting executive director of the B.C.Wildfire Service, says hefeels the weight of how to keep firefighters safe as seasons get longer and more complicated.

"I think there's a word for it," he told CBCRadio recently about the deaths."I think it's called moral liability, where everyone felt responsible in some way."

Greer, who was a wildfire fighter for a decade until 2006, says training and retention is his No. 1 mission. He says he understands the pressure on firefighters, especially as the fire season can now keep themfrom their families from April to November.

Five men in red shirts and orange helmets smile as they stand together in the woods. The two mid-frame stand with their right hands pointed toward each other in a fist.
Firefighters with the British Columbia Wildfire Service play rock-paper-scissors to determine assignments while working in the North Shuswap region of British Columbia of B.C. on Aug. 23 last year. (Jesse Winter/Reuters)

Because fatigue is an issue, hesays, the service has introduced mental health programs and expanded crew sizes from 20 people to 22.

Greer is also helping develop the programs that willbe taught at anew wildfire training centre being establishedin Kamloops. He hopes that intime, people will be able to earn a bachelor of science in wildfire. Courses could includewildfire weather, community healthand advanced technology.

Greer says there is no industry standard for experience that he knows of. The union that represents B.C. wildfire fighters says those with the highest level of training have about three seasons' worth.

'I need to get out of here right now'

Velisek, who was withthe service for three seasons,is almost apologetic about the incident that ultimately drove her to leave the job.

"Sometimes I don't feel like it was ... a big enough event," she said.

It was a day when she and three other crew members were using drip torches to burn off fuel in the forest.

"I couldn't see them," she said. "I could only hear their voices. And then as the flames behind us started to kick up, I couldn't hear them walking anymore."

A woman wearing protective gloves holds a canister. Trees and small flames are at her feet.
In this black and white, undated photo, Velisek uses a drip torch to start a controlled burn while battling a B.C. wildfire. (Ben Westerik)

Velisek, who had burned herself before using a drip torch, became very conscious of it in her right hand.

"If I step wrongly, it's so thick in here, I'm going to light myself on fire again. No one's going to hear me. What if I'm ahead of them and I cut them off with my flame because the trees are just taking off in no time at all?"

Shescreamed for someone to take her drip torch.

"I need to get out of here right now," she remembers thinking. "I just, I can't do this. I was a blubbering ball for about half an hour. I couldn't take in my surroundings. I couldn't take in what was happening.

"Just traumatized, I guess."

The next day, Velisek left theB.C. Wildfire Service.