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If you're enjoying this article, you'll love our daily newsletter, The LA Report. Each weekday, catch up on the 5 most pressing stories to start your morning in 3 minutes or less.A Los Angeles County program that trains formerly incarcerated people for firefighting careers recently launched its first all-female cohort.
Seventeen women are participating in the job training program, which will certify them to work in fire service jobs while providing on-site room and board, as well as support services. The group held an open house Monday at the Los Angeles County Training Center in Calabasas, where these cadets will live and train for the next eight months.“It is a male-dominated field, so it's good that it is an all-female cohort because then there's other women who are like-minded,” she told LAist.“These 17 trailblazing Angelenos are not only breaking barriers — they’re setting a new standard for what leadership, grit and public service look like,” L.A. County Supervisor Lindsey Horvath said in a statement. Incarcerated girls from Malibu's Conservation Camp No. 13 were invited to celebrate the launch of an all-female cohort of the county's firefighter training program.L.A County launched the program last year with two goals in mind: to bolster the county’s fire defenses and to give formerly incarcerated people with firefighting experience more opportunity to work in fire departments.People held in state prison have been part of California’s firefighting force for more than a century. Over 1,800 incarcerated firefighters currently live in minimum-security conservation camps known as “fire camps” across California, according to the state Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.Historically, it's not unusual for individuals to be incarcerated and to essentially fight fires, but there weren't many paths for them to careers after that,” said Songhai Armstead, director of the county’s Justice Care and Opportunities Department. The training program allows people who have been incarcerated to take their firefighting careers to the next level, county officials said, training and certifying them to fight wildland fires, battle structure fires and perform emergency medical care.About a dozen cadets graduated from its inaugural, all-male cohort last fall, about half of those who began the training program. All but a few of those graduates are now working for Cal Fire, Armstead said.The cohort of 17 cadets moved into the training site in March. Most fought fires in fire camps while in custody as adults or juveniles. In addition to formerly incarcerated people, the program also prioritizes applicants who left foster care or the military. Applicants must be over 18, have no convictions for sex crimes or arson, and pass a physical test and drug test. Johnson, who said she's in her early 30s, worked as a firefighter more than an decade ago when she was incarcerated as a young adult. For more than two years, she worked alongside nine other incarcerated women at a fire station in Madera County. More recently, she’s volunteered for Sister Warriors, doing policy advocacy work for incarcerated firefighters. “I would love to train with men, but I think it's only 9% women actually in the fire service,” said Johnson. “So to have a program like this, we get to show like, ‘Hey, we're interested too, and we want to be a part of it.”Elizabeth Melendez, 45, also has experience fighting fires while incarcerated nearly a decade ago. She saw one of her fellow crew members die during a Malibu brushfire in 2016. “It's a very dangerous job,” said Melendez. “But still, the life that I was living was dangerous. So me doing this to help and save people, I realized that I still want to do this even if it's risking my life.” Melendez said she heard about an all-women fire center training cohort and jumped at the opportunity. Her goal is to work for Cal Fire. “ I wanted something where I could give back to the community as opposed to in my past taking,” she said.At a time when trusted news and information are more important than ever, your donation ensures that LAist can continue to serve everyone in our community. Make a powerful statement that you value quality reporting from LAist and safeguard the future of public media today with your gift.Rebecca Grossman, co-founder of Grossman Burn Center, sentenced to 15 years in prison for killing 2 boys Grossman was traveling 81 mph when she struck and killed 11-year-old Mark Iskander and his 8-year-old brother Jacob in a marked crosswalk in 2020.One Woman's Quest To Bring The 'Karen' Who Falsely Accused Her Of Attempted Kidnapping To Justice In December 2020, Sadie and Eddie Martinez were falsely accused of attempted kidnapping by a white woman who had been shopping at a Michaels craft store at the same time as them. This is the story of Sadie's fight to clear their names and bring her accuser to justice.An Orange County public defender has tallied 57 tainted criminal cases stemming from the county's informant scandal. New revelations of alleged misconduct could affect dozens more.1980s Con Artist Who Resurfaced In Hollywood — And Scammed More People — Faces Charges L.A. County prosecutors say David Bloom scammed nine people out of nearly $250,000. Bloom, a twice-convicted con man known in the ‘80s as the “Wall Street Whiz Kid,” allegedly trolled for victims in a Hollywood apartment building and local bars.What's in that bright red fire retardant? No one will say, so we had it testedAs LA veers toward a financial crisis, $320M in liability payouts play a big roleOC treasurer threw keys at subordinate, violating workplace violence policy, investigation found
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