The Jerusalem Post

Retirement plans: Fighting Australia’s wild bushfires

- • By JILL GRALOW

BLUE MOUNTAINS, Australia (Reuters) – The dirty, hot and dangerous work of battling bush fires might be physically exhausting for Raymond Lowe, but he is not stepping aside any time soon.

Lowe is part of a four-person crew from the Rural Fire Service (RFS) in New South Wales (NSW) state who are all in their 60s, and have given up their time over Christmas to tackle some of Australia’s fiercest fires in the Blue Mountains west of Sydney.

Lowe is a volunteer and says that for him, the greatest reward is the fellowship among those fighting the fires. “There’s always going to be that desire to get out because it’s the camaraderi­e that you find out here,” said Lowe.

“It’s hard to describe the feeling and how genuine everyone is and just how good it is to be able to help.”

Lowe, a school administra­tor, is part of the biggest volunteer rural fire service in the world, with over 72,000 members who regularly work shifts of up to 14 hours to protect their communitie­s and those around them.

Volunteer firefighti­ng has long been Australia’s primary defense against catastroph­e, but the intensity of this year’s fire season sparked a political debate over whether firefighte­rs should be compensate­d for their time.

The bush fires have destroyed more than 4 million hectares (9.9 million acres) across the country, dwarfing the terrain burnt by fierce fires in California during 2019.

There have also been eight deaths linked to the fires, including two firefighte­r volunteers.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison on Sunday said volunteer firefighte­rs in NSW would be compensate­d up to A$6,000 ($4,186) if they spent more than 10 days in the field this fire season. Previously, Morrison had suggested that payment of firefighte­rs was not a priority.

For another volunteer, Ian White, retirement has meant he has more time to help his community than full-time workers. “Because I’m retired I can take the load off these younger blokes,” White told Reuters.

“As long as I’m healthy enough I’ll keep doing it because that takes the pressure off them.”

 ?? (Jill Gralow/Reuters) ?? VOLUNTEERS from the New South Wales Rural Fire Service extinguish spot fires in Mount Hay, Blue Mountains, on Saturday.
(Jill Gralow/Reuters) VOLUNTEERS from the New South Wales Rural Fire Service extinguish spot fires in Mount Hay, Blue Mountains, on Saturday.

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