POWELL — When a garage fire ignited in Powell in late May, firefighters rushed to the scene in their bunkers and fitted their personal protective equipment on scene, ready for any and all …
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POWELL — When a garage fire ignited in Powell in late May, firefighters rushed to the scene in their bunkers and fitted their personal protective equipment on scene, ready for any and all dangers to extinguish the fire. The volunteers didn’t know what was in the garage, but, if similar to most garages, it could have been filled with an assortment of dangerous chemicals, both stored on shelves and in the structure including building materials.
Firefighters don’t choose which fires to fight. They just fight.
Tee L. Guidotti, international consultant in occupational and environmental medicine, said it best: “They may be trained to manage these risks and to protect themselves, but the working environment cannot be made safe because they deal with situations that are inherently dangerous and may lose control. In the interests of society and as safety professionals, however, they essentially waive the right to refuse dangerous work and routinely accept the risk, like a soldier sent into battle to defend the country.”
Covered in burned insulation and soot, the volunteers eventually cleared the scene on Santa Fe Trail and returned their trucks to the station and removed their bunkers.
For the most part, they wear street clothes under their protective clothing. Then every volunteer returned to work or home.
But research shows that they are still carrying carcinogens with them in their clothes, absorbed in their skin, in their cars, at their work desks and in their homes.
The risks
Every first responder’s family members breathe a sigh of relief when their loved ones return home safely. But what the firefighters possibly bring home with them are carcinogenic particles.
“The biggest thing for me is my kids,” said firefighter Pete DiPilla, who attended Fire School in Riverton in January and took a class on the carcinogens firefighters face on the majority of their fire calls. “You know, I think about my girls going through the trucks during the July 4 parade or when I go hang the flag at the baseball field and my girls go with me.”
There was a time when melted face shields, dirty helmets and filthy bunkers were a badge of courage for the volunteers.
But when they hear the statistics of how many firefighters face cancer during and after their service, that badge isn’t quite so shiny anymore.
New legislation
“It is, by this logic, ultimately in society’s interest to compensate for this risk because the work has to be done,” Guidotti said.
That help has arrived.
The Aaron Booker Firefighter Cancer Screening Act, effective July 1, represents a significant advancement in protecting firefighters’ health. It mandates that firefighters with at least 10 years of service in the industry may be entitled to undergo cancer screenings covered by workers’ compensation. It also states firefighters will be presumed to have been exposed to cancer causing agents during the course and scope of their employment.
The initial bill was presented by Rep. Landon Brown (R-Cheyenne).
It was named after his friend Aaron Booker for his great fight against firefighter-related cancer.
Booker went in for a colonoscopy. It was negative. Nine months later he started having terrible diarrhea and blood in his stool. When he told his doctor he needed to have another colonoscopy, his doctor informed him his insurance only paid for one per year. So he waited 306 days, then went in.