Helping Local Youth Find a Purpose
Rehabilitation and second chances are foundational goals at Firestorm. The people who might not be “hirable” with the Forest Service or Bureau of Land Management are given a chance at Firestorm. The company invests thousands of dollars in training and safety gear before an employee even steps foot on the job. Once on the job, they gain skill sets and leadership qualities that stay with them for life. Young people in Firestorm are also getting opportunities to see the country. Prescribed burning takes crews annually to Nebraska. Hurricane Sandy and the Columbia Shuttle disaster provided months of employment and the chance to see new places. With these acquired skills, confidence, and experience, many go on to earn top dollar wages at state and federal agencies.
Jess Wills, Jim’s oldest son, is Firestorm’s president and runs the company with his wife, Leah. The two shine when it comes to business and staying organized. Good thing, because the new fire culture requires a lot of paperwork compared to Jim’s glory days on the fire line. The ongoing joke then was “safety never got anything done,” but now, without strict safety guidelines, you won’t be allowed to get anything done. In Jim’s time, the guys would work through most injuries while chasing fire all night and putting in 24-hour days. They had to hustle to keep the fires small.
Firestorm is part of the private industry which makes up a third of the nation’s wildland resources. There are 150 members in the National Wildfire Suppression Association, representing thousands of resources available to assist federal, state, and local agencies. These numbers don’t include the private contractors who supply food, showers, toilets, tents, and laundry facilities. In many states 85 percent of the personnel on any given fire is private, and they are all there to assist the state and federal agencies.
Aside from supporting the agencies, private contractors are a benefit to taxpayers. When not under hire these contractors are not charging the government. At the end of the season, they continue with other successful businesses such as logging, prescribed fire, mastication work, and urban interface. Theirs is a common goal to continue cleaning forests, helping to prevent destructive wildfires.
On average Firestorm puts in half a million labor hours and drives a million miles in a season. They are employing around 300 with 80-100 full-time workers. The trickle-down into the local economy is huge. The millions of dollars in payroll that Firestorm is paying out is getting spent locally by the Firestorm families. Firestorm currently has 100 vehicles that were either bought or rented locally. During a busy season, like 2018, they are spending $50,000 on tires and $300,000 in fuel. This is just a small example of how their money goes back into the local economies.
Firestorm employees also suffered locally with the Carr and Camp Fires last summer. Thirty-two Firestorm employees lost homes in the Camp Fire. These employees had literally just fallen into bed after an already very busy season, with many days spent away from their families, only to be awakened with evacuation orders. About 100 Firestorm personnel worked on the Camp Fire. Crews worked to suppress the fire and also with the Butte County Sheriff’s office during the search and rescue effort—sifting through debris and assisting in the search for the missing.
Every year, Jess and Leah rent the Lariat Bowl in Red Bluff to provide food and entertainment for their fire families. That’s because each crew truly becomes family over the course of a season, and last year the bonds were stronger than ever. Each year, the five hand crews compete over who’s Number 1 and, to show crew pride, one crew proudly dons their ugly Christmas sweaters.
The legacy of hard work and family, first kindled by Jim, is still burning strong, and Jim loves to light fires—prescribed of course! His wild years chasing fire in the mountains show up these days in aches and pains. But even with a knee replacement and a recently blocked artery, Jim can still haul up a mountain faster than anyone, whether it be on foot or a bike. Last May I watched Jim complete a 100-mile long gravel-grinding bike ride, no sweat, and no excuses. It’s true that “they don’t make them like they used to,” but the Wills family will keep doing their best to raise generations of courageous, hardworking youth.
And for all the young people looking for a purpose, Jim advises, “Follow your dreams, stay focused and do the next right thing. Good things will come.”
Posted in: Community
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Great article and depiction of Firestorm.
Thank you, Ben!