Date: Fri 16-May-1997
Date: Fri 16-May-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: DOTTIE
Quick Words:
schools-Ruot-firewoman
Full Text:
Lisa Ruot Tells Students About Life As A Firewoman
Westport firefighter Lisa Ruot (right) helps Newtown Middle School classroom
aide J.J. Robinson dress in the 70 pounds of full gear that Mrs Ruot routinely
wears on her job.
-Bee Photo, Evans
B Y D OROTHY E VANS
The middle school sixth graders had prepared their questions ahead of time,
knowing that Westport firefighter Lisa Ruot would be visiting their classroom
Thursday morning, May 8.
Guided by their English teacher, Sheila Kolesar, the students got right to the
point.
What's it like for you as a woman, working alongside men in a physically
demanding and hazardous job?
Does size and strength make a difference?
You are a female firefighter and a mother. How do you juggle child care
responsibilities with answering emergency fire calls?
Do your husband and children worry?
In school, they had been learning about alternative careers and the different
roles that women can play in today's work force.
But after Mrs Ruot's talk last Thursday, they also learned that a woman like
Mrs Ruot could enjoy working in a profession that was mostly dominated by men.
Her positive attitude and dedicated work ethic were what made this possible.
Aren't you scared to go to work, afraid of what might happen?
"It's actually very exciting. Pretty much every day, I'm glad to go to work,"
Mrs Ruot told the students.
"I like to work outside, and I like the fact that every day, it's different.
Also, you work with great people," she added.
Mrs Ruot has been a Newtown resident for more than three years, and is a paid
firefighter now working for the town of Westport. She has worked in the field
of fire emergency control for 18 years, is married to a fireman, and has three
children, ages 15, 12 and 3.
Her daughter, Amanda Bloom, a student in Sheila Kolesar's class, was sitting
at a desk with the other sixth graders, listening. Amanda was used to the idea
of her mother being a professional firefighter, she said, "but sometimes, I
worry about her."
Do the men accept you as an equal?
Mrs Ruot admitted it took a little time.
"It's easy for all the guys to be friendly, but at first I think they didn't
know what to make of me," Mrs Ruot said.
Once they saw she was willing to pitch in and work hard and that she could be
depended upon, they accepted her.
As for the balancing act between home and work, Mrs Ruot said that as a paid
professional, her work schedule allowed her to plan her time pretty well.
"I work two days from 8 am to 6 pm and two nights from 6 pm to 8 am. Then I'm
off for four days. It's a very nice schedule," Mrs Ruot said.
Is it hard going on calls where people are hurt or in bad trouble?
"I've gone to a lot of calls that really bother me, but I keep telling myself
I didn't cause the problem and I'm there to help," Mrs Ruot said.
She explained that firefighters are extremely well trained, are certified as
Emergency Medical Technicians (EMTs), and are equipped for almost any
emergency.
"You don't just go rushing into every burning building," she said.
The first step is a "size up," where firefighters look over the situation from
the outside before entering, and ask the following questions.
How far has the fire spread? Are there structural parts that might collapse
any time? Has the heat inside reached the "flash over" point where everything
will burn instantaneously?
What about the uniform? Didn't you find it cumbersome and difficult to move
around?
(Mrs Ruot is a relatively small woman but she is obviously strong. She said
keeping in good physical shape is a necessary priority for anyone in her
profession.)
"The full suit of fire gear weighs 60 to 70 pounds," she said, holding the
various parts up for the students to examine.
There were three layers of clothing to create thermal barriers; a helmet,
goggles, boots and gloves; back pack with oxygen supply; several tools and a
flashlight, as well as a radio communication device as part of the head gear
("Otherwise, we'd never be able to hear each other talk!").
Then Mrs Ruot dressed special education aide J.J. Robinson, who had
volunteered to be a model.
Video Tracks Fire's Spread
A memorable part of Mrs Ruot's visit was a video she'd brought along to
illustrate how rapidly a household fire can spread.
Fireproof cameras had been installed in various rooms of a typical home and
recorded the almost unbelievable rate at which fire can move through a
building.
To start the fire, a smoldering cigarette was purposely dropped into a living
room waste basket. Within 30 seconds the smoke had turned to flames and the
sofa cushions near the waste basket had ignited.
In one minute, the polyurethane pillows were melting and smoke was filling the
room, setting off the smoke detector at the top of the stairs.
In three minutes, the temperature had reached 1,400 degrees or "flash over"
and the living room was a fiery inferno. Windows were breaking, smoke was
billowing up the stairs and plastic toys in a children's bedroom overhead were
melting into shapeless black blobs.
By the time the fire department arrived, at the four-minute mark, the first
floor of the house was almost totally destroyed. Yet, a second floor master
bedroom on one corner was spared because the door had been left closed.
"People who are planning to tear down an old dwelling often donate it to us
for practice," Mrs Ruot said, when students asked why such a seemingly nice,
normal house had been burned for the video.
Mrs Ruot told the students if they were ever caught in such a fire and found
they couldn't escape on their own, they should get as far away from the source
of the fire as possible, close the door, keep low to the floor near an open
window and wait for help.
"Be sure the firemen know where you are. Throw something out the window, like
a sheet, to show them. And don't jump until it's the last possible minute, you
might get hurt."
Since you've been a firefighter, how do you think your life has changed?
"I see a lot of accidents involving alcohol and kids riding bikes but not
wearing safety helmets. It makes me crazy. I guess I'm overly safety conscious
now. I look at every situation and ask myself, `What could happen here?'" she
said.
Parents think that way, too, she added. It comes with the territory.
