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Operates firefighting apparatus and equipment to protect Air Force personnel and assets. Responds to aircraft emergencies, structural fires, and hazardous materials incidents at Air Force installations.
“You'll be a fully certified aircraft rescue and firefighting professional — the specialist who responds to aircraft emergencies and structural fires at Air Force installations. Military firefighters are ARFF-certified and the training is directly applicable to civilian fire department careers. Airport fire departments specifically recruit from Air Force fire protection backgrounds because the ARFF qualification is exactly what they need.”
Base firefighting is a career with excellent shift schedules — 24 on, 48 off — and legitimate downtime between actual incidents. What the recruiting literature often undersells is how much of that downtime is mandatory PT, equipment maintenance, and training drills preparing for scenarios that rarely happen at CONUS bases. Aircraft emergencies when they occur are genuinely intense and the training pays off. Airport fire departments and municipal departments with ARFF requirements actively recruit Air Force fire protection veterans. Getting hired at a competitive department still requires testing and isn't automatic regardless of military service.
What this actually is in the real world
Your skills translate. Here's what civilian employers call this job — and what they pay.
ARFF Specialist
Dead-on matchFirefighter
Strong matchFire Marshal
Strong matchHazmat Coordinator
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