Discussion about this post

User's avatar
John David Truly's avatar

From 1980 to 1999 I was director of Dallas’ Civil Service Department responsible for selection testing for municipal employment During that period there was tremendous legal pressure to assure employment opportunities for women in public safety occupations. The physical ability evaluation was a huge obstacle in hiring for firefighters. We had staff embedded in fire stations meticulously documenting tasks routinely performed on the job. The result was the design of a physical ability exam that was fully job related. We went so far as to have only female staff members administer the exam. Lots of men but most women could not qualify. The few women who did qualify ultimately transferred out by their request. The stamina, strength and overall physical demands of the job place firefighting near the top of all occupations in this regard. There are other occupations which demand extreme physical strength basically all shift (oil drilling platforms, e.g.) but firefighting demands jumping from bed to intense work at the sound of an unpredictable alarm which is an added stressor. I should add our selection process survived several federal court challenges. Having retired in 1999, I have no idea what has transpired since.

Expand full comment
Stephen Russell's avatar

IF women want to fight fires then Yes if fit for the job

NOT for DEI

Expand full comment
3 more comments...

No posts