Yukon has first woman fire chief in more than 20 years - Action News
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Yukon has first woman fire chief in more than 20 years

Melissa Meier is new chief of Hootalinqua Volunteer Fire Department.

Melissa Meier is new chief of Hootalinqua Volunteer Fire Department

Melissa Meier, the new chief of the Hootalinqua Volunteer Fire Department, with Fire Marshall James Patterson. (Leslie James)

Firefighting has always been a passion for Melissa Meier.

Nowchief of her department, Meier will be the first Yukon woman in the role since the late 1990s.

"I wish we were in a place where it wasn't an unusual thing, but I think we're getting there," said Meier, the new chief of the Hootalinqua Volunteer Fire Department.

Meier startedvolunteering in2001, battling blazes inVancouver Island, Dawson and Whitehorse.

"I reallydeveloped a passion for it," she said. "It really challenged me in a lot of ways I never even thought about."

As she leads the department, she also worksfull-time and has a seven-year-old child.

Meier said it's a "big honour" to be chief, and encourages more womento try volunteer firefighting.

Melissa Meier, the new chief of the Hootalinqua Volunteer Fire Department, at a live fire training exercise in December. (Submitted by Melissa Meier)

Yukon has seen other female fire chiefs in the 1990s, says a spokesperson for Yukon Protective Services.

Jackie Shorty was the fire chief of Upper Liard from 1993 to 1999, and Liz Row was chief at Mount LorneVolunteer Fire Department in 1996. Row'sfather was fire chief in Whitehorse, and shesays it "ran in the blood."

"I think that the fire department is more geared towardaccepting females more than they used to be," Row said. "Twenty-five years ago if you wanted to be a firefighter in Whitehorse, there was no chance unless you joined a volunteer firefighter ... it was a 'man's job.'"

She said it's "absolutely awesome" to see Meier in the chief role.

There are three women currently serving as deputy fire chiefswith the Yukon Fire Service, said Maria Gosselin, communications analyst for Protective Services.

As a new chief, Meier hopes to build the team, and support more training.There are 15 members at her hall, she said, four of whom are women.

Meier said she loves working with theteam and serving the community.

"You can train for really difficult, harrowing situations in a controlled manner," she said.

"I learned to compartmentalize, and to kind of fall back on thetraining and trust in my team andand gear," she said.

Once the fire wasout, "you can kind of reflect on what it was you just did as a team," she said. "It's a pretty profound experience."

At her first fire hall in B.C., Meier remembers being inspiredby a woman fire chief.

"I hope I can be that inspiration to my crew as well."