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A Dying Breed

What It Means to Be a Volunteer Firefighter

Volunteer firefighters are indispensable to the safety and welfare of many communities across the United States. In places large and small—rural townships, suburbs, and small cities alike—these individuals provide critical emergency response services, often without pay. Their role is defined by professionalism, courage, and sacrifice, and it is further underscored by statistical trends that reveal both their strength and the challenges the volunteer system faces. When examined at the state level, particularly in Pennsylvania, these trends take on added urgency.


National Scale and Trends

  • As of 2020, there were approximately 1,041,200 firefighters in the U.S., both paid (career) and volunteer. Reddit
  • Around 65% of those—roughly 676,900 individuals—were volunteer firefighters. Reddit
  • Over the past few decades, the number of volunteer firefighters has declined significantly, even as the population and demands on emergency services have increased. Pennsylvania Government+2Reddit+2

Pennsylvania: State-Level Statistics and Trends

Including statistics specific to Pennsylvania helps illustrate how these national issues manifest in a particular state with a strong tradition of volunteer firefighting.

MetricValue / EstimateNotes / Source
Number of volunteer firefighters today~30,000Estimates; PA does not require mandatory reporting on volunteer count. AP News+2GovTech+2
Number in the 1970s~300,000-360,000Reflects a dramatic long-term decline. FireRescue1+3Inquirer.com+3PoliticsPA+3
Number of fire departments / companies in PA~2,400(“About 2,400 fire departments and their personnel”) PoliticsPA+3Pennsylvania Government+3Cause IQ+3
Percentage of those fire departments that are volunteer or mostly volunteer~90-97%Estimates vary depending on definition of “mostly volunteer.” PoliticsPA+3WITF+3Pennsylvania Government+3
Estimated annual cost savings to communities from volunteers in PA~$10 billionReflecting what would otherwise have to be paid if the services were fully career/paid. Inquirer.com+2Pennsylvania House Republican Caucus+2

What These Statistics Suggest About the Volunteer Firefighter Experience in Pennsylvania

These numbers help paint a clearer image of what it means, in Pennsylvania, to be a volunteer firefighter today:

  • Scale of reliance: With over 90% of fire departments in the state being volunteer or mostly volunteer, the state depends heavily on volunteers to provide fire protection and emergency response services. Pennsylvania Government+2WITF+2
  • Dramatic decline in numbers: From the 1970s to today, the drop from several hundred thousand volunteers to around 30,000 highlights erosion of capacity. This affects readiness, ability to respond, manpower for training, and resilience in emergencies. AP News+3Inquirer.com+3FireRescue1+3
  • Volunteer shortage and aging force: As fewer people volunteer, and many existing volunteers age out, fire companies struggle to maintain active rosters. The decline places added demands on those who remain. AP News+3Pennsylvania Government+3Firehouse+3
  • Economic value: The estimated $10 billion in saved costs demonstrates the significant economic impact of volunteer service. Without volunteers, many municipalities would face steep increases in expenditures for fully paid services. Inquirer.com+2Firehouse+2

What These Mean Locally — Implications for Volunteer Firefighting in Schuylkill County

  • Sharp decline in volunteers: Going from ~10,000 to under 1,000 volunteers reflects a steep drop in manpower. That means each remaining volunteer carries much more of the load.
  • Large number of fire companies, shrinking workforce: With ~105 companies and less than 1,000 volunteers, many companies likely have significantly understaffed rosters. Some companies may struggle to respond to calls or maintain required training.
  • Aging volunteer force: Average age over 40 suggests recruitment of younger people is lagging. Aging volunteers may retire or leave, exacerbating shortages.
  • Lower active response: In some companies, though membership may still be dozens strong, only a fraction truly respond to emergencies This reduces effective readiness. Eg: OFD has 200 “members” and only 22 actively running alarms. Of the 22 maybe 12-15 interior firefighters.
  • Demographic & population shifts: Declining population (from ~235,000 down to ~148,000) means fewer people available for volunteer work, fewer fundraisers, less tax base perhaps, and corresponding challenges in sustaining many rural fire companies.
  • Dependence on state aid: Grants totaling over $1.6 million for 101 agencies show that without external funding for equipment, training, and support, many companies would struggle.

Conclusion

To be a volunteer firefighter is to accept responsibility in its most demanding form: protecting one’s community through sacrifice, training, and constant readiness—despite declining numbers, greater demands, and increasing complexity of emergency response.

In Pennsylvania, where nearly every fire department depends on volunteers, the challenges are acute. The steep decline in volunteer firefighters over the past decades, combined with the state’s heavy reliance on volunteer departments, indicates that sustaining this vital form of public service will require systematic support—through recruitment, retention, funding, and perhaps policy changes.

Orwigsburg Fire Department News:


Capital Campaign and How You Can Help!

The Friendship Hose Company No. 1 of Orwigsburg, or Orwigsburg Fire Department has
some more exciting news! You may remember or have recently seen our plans to build a new fire station in town. In a previous article, we mentioned the need for the community’s support and that we would be kicking off a Capital Campaign. The time has come toofficially anouce that our campaign is live.

On Friday January 24th, with the gracious help of the Schuylkill Chamber of Commerce, we officially began the campaign. Our goal is to raise the needed six million dollars to cover the cost of the project. We know this seems like a large number, and it certainly is. However, we see the costs rising in the future and our needs ever growing. This is an all-in cost, including furnishings and miscelanious items needed to complete the project.
While the plan is not completely finalized, the building will be a 2 story structure of over 10,000 square feet. It will have four garage bays, and a museum on the first floor. It will have a place for our gear and a place to wash and dry our gear. There will be plenty of storage included in the apparatus bays. The second floor will house offices, sleeping quarters a gym and a day room as well as a large training room/community room that we plan to open to our community partners.

There will also be a back-up generator and capabilities to “self dispatch“ in the event the county system is down. This will also allow us to open the building as an emergency shelter if the need would ever arise again in town. We will be able to accomdate needs such showers, meals and a place to stay if the need arrises.
We have applied for numerous government funds and we have solicited the help of
professional grant writers at the state level. We have a great relationship with all of our governmental leaders from the federal level down to our borough council. We are hopeful that the lion’s share of the necessary funds with come through those channels. We do anticipate that those will have some sort of matching component and we will need to plan for that.


This is where we need the help of our community! With the help of our members and the community, we are confident we can find some donors to help offset that number. Below you will find a list of donor levels that will be memorialized in our museum area. There are also oportunities to put you name, or your business name on various areas throughout the building for a period of ten years. We ackowledge the size of these numbers, and that many of you do not have the means to donate at that level. Because of that, there are options for payment plans as well as simply donating at any amount.


There are mulitple ways to donate. Obviously, we would love to meet personally to explain the design and how we will allocate those funds. You can also send a check payable to:
Friendship Hose Co. No. 1
121 North Liberty Street
Orwigsburg, PA 17961
(please include Capital Campaign in the memo)

For those that prefer a online option, you can visit our website at:
http://www.orwigsburgfire.com
There you will find links to donate and you can also follow along with the project and get to know our members.

Also, on April 26th we will be hosting a Gala Casino Event at the Memorial, you can find those details on the website as well and watch your mail for more information.
If you have any questions, please feel free to reach out to our Fire Chief, Scott Rarick
(raricksm@comcast.net) or myself (bmiller1219@gmail.com) or if you drive by and see the doors up, stop in and say hello! We appreciate your anticipated and ongoing support, please be safe!

Thank you,

Brad Miller, President
Friendship Hose Co. No. 1
Orwigsburg, Pennsylvania

DONOR LEVELS & GIFT AMOUNT
Fire Chief $50,000
First Assistant Chief $30,000
Second Assistant Chief $25,000
Captain $15,000
Lieutenant $10,000
Engineer $5,000
Firefighter $1,000

NAMING RIGHTS CHART & RECOGNITION AREAGIFT AMOUNT
Museum 1 $30,000
Engine Bay Hanging
Sign 4 $25,000
Day Room 1 $20,000
Gym 1 $5,000
Elevator First Floor 0 $5,000
Elevator Second Floor 1 $5,000

Conceptual Design of the Building

Beyond the Obstacle

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Growth Unlocked

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Collaboration Magic

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Teamwork Triumphs

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Adaptive Advantage

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Warehouse leveled after devastating fire in Schuylkill County

Photos Courtesy: Orwigsburg Fire Dept

Original Article: @WNEP https://www.newsbreakapp.com/n/0eWxQd0d?pd=07rwqQ7A&lang=en_US&s=i16

ORWIGSBURG, Pa. — Fire swallowed a warehouse in West Brunswick Township, near Orwrigsburg. 

Daniel Cameron was out early delivering newspapers on Saturday morning when he saw the flames and sent this video to Newswatch 16.

RELATED: Building destroyed after early morning fire in Schuylkill County

“The first fire truck for the fire pulled in before me; I was following them down the road. And the video shows that there is only one fire truck there. They’re not even spraying water yet. So that was the full blaze, no water on it at all. It was terrible,” said Daniel Cameron of Orwigsburg. 

In the daylight, the building is leveled. 

The Deer Lake/West Brunswick Fire Chief says the call came in just before 4:30 in the morning and quickly went to a 2nd alarm.  

Roy Heim is the owner of Heim Construction.

He says a plastics company called “Clearly Clean” rents the warehouse from him to house raw materials. 

Thanks to a firewall – Heim says his facility, next door, was likely saved from even more damage.

“We were forced by code enforcement to build a 2-hour wall that separated our facility from the storage facility and we lost, we had some loss in our office but not fire. More water damage and smoke,” said Roy Heim, the owner of the construction company. 

The fire chief says it will be some time before all the rubble is cleared. The construction company owner does tell Newswatch 16 he plans to rebuild.

“At the end of the day, it’s a loss of material. Material is not everything. So we’ll get through it,” Heim said.

“If people were in there working and this happened, It would have been devastating,” Cameron said. “So thank god nobody got hurt, and I feel bad for the owners of the building at least they will be able to rebuild and move forward.”

A State Police Fire Marshal is investigating.

Schuylkill County EMA has been contacted to figure out how to properly dispose of the material and whether there is an environmental concern for soil and runoff. 

June 29, 2018 – Company Level Training

OFD members spent several evenings this month participating in company level training. Members completed hands-on training with foam operations, pump operations, vehicle rescue practices, and air chisels.

As always – a special thank you to USS Achey Inc. for supplying the vehicles for extrication / stabilization training. Also – photo credits to members Deb Shepler and TJ Mollick.

Orwigbsurg Fire Department

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