Greener Living

US Wildfire Fighters Are Hitting a Pay Cliff at the Worst Time

After a series of destructive US fire seasons, a platform of federal pay increases for forest firefighters is set to expire on Sept. 30. 

A firefighter uses a drip torch during the Mosquito fire near Volcanoville, California, on Sept. 9, 2022. 

Photographer: Benjamin Fanjoy/Bloomberg
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In Fairbanks, Alaska, the US Forest Service is looking to hire a smokejumper, a person who parachutes out of a rickety airplane to wrangle wildfires that break out far from roads or rivers. Little experience is necessary; the pay starts at $18.06 per hour.

Meanwhile, Sadler’s Home Furnishings, with three stores in the Fairbanks area, is offering $21 an hour to shuffle couches in its warehouse. The Best Western on the nearby Chena River will pay $15.50 an hour for a front desk clerk and the University of Alaska needs an administrative assistant at almost $25 an hour — no parachute necessary.