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Struggling to adapt

Photo credit: Brendan Bullock / Maine Morning Star - More than 90 percent of Maine’s fire departments are staffed mostly or entirely by volunteers, and these departments face added challenges reducing PFAS exposure to firefighters.

Read the full article by Marina Schauffler (Maine Morning Star)

This article is the third in a series, A Fire Hose of ‘Forever Chemicals,’ which can be seen in entirety here.

Small-town fire stations have a striking simplicity, their plain architecture and functional interiors reflect their sole mission: mustering members, largely volunteers, to help neighbors in times of need. In Maine, many of these buildings were constructed in the last century, at a time when communities were smaller, fewer demands were placed on firefighters, and far less was known about the hazards of the job.

Monmouth’s 62-year-old fire station fits this stereotype, with three truck bays flanked by a single meeting room. One wall of the truck bay holds hooks for the protective turnout gear that the department’s volunteer firefighters don to shield them from flames, heat and water.”…

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