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The courage of first responders can only be imagined -- but at what cost to them?

Firefighters in helmets and hazmat suits spray water into a huge, scorching fire
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As of January 1st, the 2nd Alarm Project has merged with UCF RESTORES at the University of Central Florida

Americans are watching in horror as wildfires devastate southern California. At least 27 people have died. Tens of thousands of people have fled their homes. And thousands of emergency personnel are battling desperately to contain the flames. The events have Floridians thinking about the courage of their own first responders here at home.

State Fire Marshal Jimmy Patronis has announced a request for $3.6 million in state funding to improve mental health care for the state’s first responders: firefighters, law enforcement officers, dispatchers and emergency medical personnel.

In an October interview with WFSU, he reflected on the emotional toll first responders face in their daily jobs.

“A three-year-old child had entered into a retention pond back in 2017 in Palm Beach County," Patronis said. "And all I could think about is: The child didn’t make it, and some first responder had to go out there and wade into the retention pond to grab this child. And somebody had to go and tell the mom and dad they’re never going to hug their little baby ever again.”

While most people flee natural and man-made disasters, first responders run to them. Firefighters, paramedics and law enforcement officers were deployed to the Surfside condominium collapse, the Pulse nightclub and Marjory Stoneman Douglas mass shootings, and a long string of hurricanes.

First responders make up 1.4 percent of Florida’s workforce, but their suicide rate is more than two times higher than the rate of working-age Floridians.

That’s why the 2nd Alarm Project deploys teams to communities where first responders are working: to help them cope with what they’re seeing. The project began in 2019, in the wake of Hurricane Michael. Its teams include trained first responders who know the job and serve as peer support…along with trained chaplains, clinicians and comfort dogs.

This week the Senate Children and Families Committee heard from the 2nd Alarm Project’s Kellie O’Dare, its founder and leader. As she told them, the project is deeply personal to her; she’s the spouse of a career firefighter paramedic and comes from a family of first responders.

“My uncle, Shawn O’Dare, gave his life in the line of duty as a Miami-Dade County firefighter rescuing a child trapped in an overturned vehicle submerged in a canal," she said. "And his legacy inspires me to advocate for the well-being of those who serve and protect our communities. This mission is my way of honoring him and supporting the first responder family I’m so proud to be a part of.”

O’Dare says the state is at a pivotal point in the evolution of first responder mental wellness, with stigma decreasing and cultural shifts beginning to take hold.

“This is a time of immense opportunity for growth, provided we harness lessons learned and address ongoing challenges," she said. "Awareness of first responder mental wellness has grown, but significant resource gaps, inconsistent practices and an over-reliance on reactive measures hinder progress, particularly in under-served areas.”

A coordinated statewide strategy is essential, says O’Dare, and her colleague at 2nd Alarm, firefighter Mike Bellamy, agrees. Bellamy’s been on both sides of the need for support. He was deployed to the Surfside building collapse in 2021, where 98 people died.

“I was at Surfside for a couple of weeks, and I remember the peer teams coming into our base camps -- we were living in tent cities," he said. "It was such a refreshing feeling to see a firefighter in the 2nd Alarm shirt walk in and put his arm around you and just say, ‘Hey, bud, I know this can’t be easy. I’ve been there. Let’s have a cup of coffee and catch up.’”

Now, as of January 1st, the 2nd Alarm Project has merged with UCF RESTORES at the University of Central Florida. UCF RESTORES not only serves first responders but also military personnel, veterans, and survivors of mass violence and natural disasters. Bellamy says the merger provides the coordinated statewide strategy its advocates have been calling for.

“It’s proactive rather than reactive work," he said. "It’s blue-sky work. We’re going in and building these programs out ahead of the event. So that when the event occurs, we have a behavioral plan and access for those first responders.”

UCF RESTORES specializes in the delivery of peer support training for first responders and public safety leaders. It also offers training to help licensed mental health clinicians provide effective support.

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https://ucfrestores.com/ucf-restores-and-2nd-alarm-project-unite-to-redefine-behavioral-health-for-first-responders/

If you are a first responder, peer, family member, or clinician interested in learning more about trauma therapy or training, please visit UCFRESTORES.com or call UCF RESTORES at 407-823-3910 to learn more.

For more information about UCF RESTORES, visit www.UCFRESTORES.com, explore the organization’s 2023 Annual Report here, and follow UCF RESTORES on LinkedIn, Facebook, and Instagram.

For more information about the 2nd Alarm Project, visit https://2ndalarmproject.org/, explore the organization’s Impact Report here and follow 2nd Alarm Project on Facebook and Instagram.

Follow @MargieMenzel

Margie Menzel covers local and state government for WFSU News. She has also worked at the News Service of Florida and Gannett News Service. She earned her B.A. in history at Vanderbilt University and her M.S. in journalism at Florida A&M University.