This Isn’t a Hose-Measuring Contest Anymore
By: Robert Avsec, FSPA Operations Chief
The title of this post comes from a recent article by the same name published on CRACKYL Magazine.
Below is a distillation of the article’s core points, framed specifically for a psychologist or master’s level clinician who works with (or wants to work with) a fire department. With assistance from Microsoft’s Copilot AI, I’ve translated organizational and leadership themes into clinical, cultural, and systems-relevant insights that affect firefighter mental health, engagement, and longevity.
- Recruitment and Retention Are Now Behavioral Health Issues, Not Just HR Problems
• Fire departments can no longer assume a surplus of applicants or lifelong loyalty.
• Staffing shortages are increasingly driven by perceived lack of support, culture, and leadership, not by lack of interest in firefighting itself.
• For clinicians, this means:
o Organizational culture has become a primary determinant of psychological risk or protection.
o Recruitment failures and early exits often signal unmet mental health, identity, or belonging needs—not individual weakness.
Clinical relevance: Departments that struggle to recruit or retain members often have systemic psychosocial stressors that affect morale, safety, and post-traumatic outcomes.
- Modern Firefighters Are Highly Aware of Occupational Psychological Risk
Applicants now openly account for:
• Cancer risk
• Cumulative trauma exposure
• Behavioral health struggles
• Chronic sleep deprivation
• Family strain and relationship disruption
They are not willing to “accept the risk” without mitigation.
Clinical relevance:
• Firefighters are entering the profession with psychological literacy and expectations of prevention and support.
• This creates an opportunity—but also pressure—for departments to deliver on behavioral health promises.
• Clinicians may encounter early moral injury or cynicism when organizational support does not match recruitment messaging.
- “What Happens to Me After the Call?” Is the Central Mental Health Question
Departments often promote:
• Equipment
• Call volume
• Station upgrades
Applicants (and current members) are asking instead:
• Will I be supported if I struggle?
• Is behavioral health accessible and stigma-free?
• Will leadership respond constructively to injury, burnout, or trauma?
Clinical relevance:
• This reflects a shift from hero identity to sustainability identity.
• Firefighters want reassurance that emotional impact is expected, acknowledged, and addressed.
• Clinicians should assess organizational follow-through, not just availability of services.
- Culture Is More Impactful Than Policies or Programs
The article stresses that:
• Culture is demonstrated through consistent action, not slogans.
• Firefighters evaluate leadership behavior, peer treatment, and responses to stress—not policy manuals.
• Behavioral health resources that exist but are unused or stigmatized do not protect retention.
Clinical relevance:
• Cultural mismatch is a major contributor to burnout, disengagement, and premature departure.
• Psychological safety is shaped daily by:
o How officers respond to mistakes
o How distress is handled informally
o Whether vulnerability is punished or supported
Clinicians often become barometers of trust within the department.
- Recruitment Is Now a Dialogue—Which Mirrors Modern Therapeutic Expectations
Effective recruitment:
• Involves newer firefighters alongside experienced members
• Emphasizes transparency over idealization
• Allows applicants to ask difficult questions
Clinical relevance:
• The same values that define effective recruitment—authenticity, honesty, shared perspective—also define effective clinical engagement with firefighters.
• Firefighters distrust “sales pitches” in therapy just as they do in recruitment.
• Clinicians who understand this dynamic are better positioned to build rapport.
- Retention Begins on Day One and Is Driven by Belonging
Firefighters now:
• Leave departments due to feeling undervalued—not due to lack of dedication
• Move laterally to find better culture and leadership
Critical retention factors include:
• Mentorship
• Clear expectations
• Feedback and development
• Feeling seen as a person, not a number
Clinical relevance:
• Early career firefighters are vulnerable to identity stress, imposter syndrome, and moral injury.
• Poor onboarding and probation experiences can amplify anxiety, suppression, and maladaptive coping.
• Clinicians may see symptoms long before departments recognize the organizational cause.
- Leadership Quality Is One of the Strongest Predictors of Mental Health Outcomes
The article is explicit:
• Culture is shaped by chiefs and command staff, not HR.
• Leaders who are visible, accountable, and people-focused strengthen retention.
• Neglectful or punitive leadership accelerates disengagement.
Clinical relevance:
• Leadership behavior directly affects:
o Psychological safety
o Willingness to seek help
o Normalization of distress
• Clinicians often treat downstream effects of leadership failure, including depression, anger, substance use, and hopelessness.
Consultation with leadership can be as impactful as individual therapy.
- Firefighters Seek a “Total Package” That Includes Psychological Sustainability
Beyond pay and benefits, firefighters now evaluate:
• Trust
• Wellness
• Growth opportunities
• Purpose
• Respect
Loyalty still exists—but it must be earned.
Clinical relevance:
• Meaning, dignity, and growth are protective against trauma-related injury.
• Departments that fail to meet these needs create predictable cycles of burnout and exit.
• Clinicians can help departments conceptualize mental health as retention infrastructure, not a perk.
Bottom Line for Clinicians
This article underscores that firefighter mental health is inseparable from organizational culture and leadership.
For psychologists and clinicians:
• Individual symptoms often reflect systemic conditions.
• Recruitment and retention struggles are early warning signs of cultural distress.
• Your role may include:
o Clinical care
o Cultural consultation
o Leadership education
o Prevention and resilience design
Departments that succeed do not eliminate risk—but they acknowledge it, plan for it, and support people through it.
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