Wildland firefighters could get $20,000 raise from infrastructure bill
11 August 2021
Published by https://edition.cnn.com/
USA – Washington (CNN)Federal wildland firefighters, who currently make as little as $13.45 an hour, could get a long-awaited pay raise if the bipartisan infrastructure package making its way through Congress eventually gets to President Joe Biden’s desk.
The $1 trillion bill, which passed the Senate on Tuesday but still needs House approval, would provide $600 million to increase the base salaries for firefighters within the Interior Department and Agriculture Department by up to $20,000 or 50% a year, whichever is less. It would also convert at least 1,000 seasonal firefighters to permanent positions.
Firefighters have been leaving the federal service, as CNN reported earlier this summer, in large part due to the low wages paid for dangerous, unpredictable work. The departures are making it harder for crews to respond to the increasing number of forest fires. More than 3 million acres have burned so far this year across the United States — 1 million more acres than had burned at the same time last year, according to the National Interagency Fire Center.
Federal firefighters can often find higher wages elsewhere. While the average yearly salary for a US Forest Service firefighter is $38,000, California’s state-employed firefighters get paid a median base salary of around $71,000, according to a CNN analysis.
“This is a pretty big first step, I’ve never seen anything like it before. But we don’t feel it goes far enough,” said Riva Duncan, who retired as a federal firefighter in December and and currently serves as the executive secretary of the advocacy group Grassroots Wildland Firefighters.

