From cancer to mental health, firefighters battle on long after the smoke clears
As wildfires ravage Alberta, firefighters point to pressure on mental, physical health
A former firefighter who beat cancer twice has welcomed news that Alberta has made it easier for first responders to get workers' compensation coverage when they face the same disease.
"Cancer is a very, very expensive experience," said Lorne Miller, who is now the resilience officer for the Calgary Fire Department.
"It impacts all facets of life," he told The Current's Matt Galloway. "My wife is an entrepreneur, so that impacted her because she had to stop working and take care of me, and I went on long-term disability."
Miller became a firefighter in 2007, and was first diagnosed with soft tissue sarcoma in May 2021. That summer, doctors removed a tumour the size of a volleyball from his abdomen — but his cancer returned in Nov. 2022. After another surgery, he is currently in remission.
At the end of March, royal assent was given to the Alberta legislature's Bill 9, also known as the Red Tape Reduction Statutes Amendment Act 2023. Part of the new legislation gives firefighters presumptive coverage for 20 types of cancer. That means firefighters don't have to prove a link between their diagnosis and their work, making it easier and faster to receive financial support from Alberta's Workers' Compensation Board.
Last year, firefighting was declared a Group 1 carcinogen by the World Health Organization's specialized cancer agency. The designation recognizes the job comes with the risk of certain cancers, through breathing in or ingesting toxins released in fires, as well as absorption through the skin.
Miller said he's "very confident" that his cancer diagnosis was connected to his line of work. But soft tissue sarcoma did not qualify for presumptive coverage before the new legislation was enacted in March. The new law is not retroactive, meaning previous diagnoses do not qualify.
Despite that, Miller said it brings him comfort to know that "more people will be taken care of in the future," particularly given increasing evidence that firefighters face a greater risk of cancer.
"Historically, when you think of the risks firefighters face, you know, it's chemical incidents, large-scale fires, house fires, all those types of things," he said.
"Nowadays we're also learning that the fires can kill us well after they're been put out … through disease and mental health issues and stuff like that."
When Miller returned to work after his first surgery, he applied for the job of his fire department's resilience officer. He's passionate about the role, and thinks fire departments are taking issues around resiliency much more seriously these days.
"We've sure made a lot of progress in the right direction in terms of mental health, resiliency and taking care of yourself," he said.
"That said, there's a lot of great things that can still happen and a lot more work that can be done."
Alberta fires put first responder 'on edge'
Wildfire season started early in Alberta this year. The province is battling dozens of blazes that have forced tens of thousands of people to evacuate.
Speaking to The Current last week, author John Vaillant said that climate change and the increased amount of CO2 in the atmosphere have created "explosive conditions" for devastating wildfires.
"It dries out the landscape and heats it up, and so fire moves more quickly, more easily than it did a couple of decades ago," said Vaillant, author of Fire Weather: The Making of a Beast.