All fired up
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Deepa Bharath
Erin Brown is a trailblazer.
After all, the 26-year-old is the Newport Beach Fire Department’s
first-ever female firefighter.
The former WNBA player shot hoops for the Los Angeles Sparks and Utah
Stars, but says she gets a feeling of awe and accomplishment being a
firefighter that she never did on the basketball court.
“This is like a family,” said Brown, whose probationary period of a
year will end Nov. 3. On Friday, she will get her badge during a ceremony
at City Hall, along with other new hires and promoted officers.
Brown played basketball for 15 years through high school and college.
But when she turned professional in 1998, she realized she was destined
to be elsewhere.
“The world of pro sports is very cutthroat,” she said. “I was looking
for the kind of team-oriented camaraderie that you have when you play
sports in school and college, and that just wasn’t there.”
So she went on a quest -- a short one that ended in Santa Ana
College’s Fire Academy. Brown completed all the required fire education
courses and graduated from the academy in June 1999. She trained as a
reserve firefighter with the Orange County Fire Authority.
“I just pounded it out for two years,” she said. “I think I was very
focused. I really wanted to do this. I didn’t think that something would
get me so excited.”
But as she expected, there were challenges too. The physical part was
not a big problem for Brown, a natural athlete.
“The bigger challenge was dealing with people who think you can’t do
it because you’re a woman,” she said. “People have this perception when
they see you’re a woman -- a small woman from a small town. But it
dissipates over time, and you just need to prove yourself.”
Brown says a woman must work twice as hard as a man to get and stay
physically fit. She runs four miles in the morning before she gets to
work. She lifts weights in the afternoon and indulges in cross-training,
such as mountain biking, on days off.
Part of the common perception is also tainted by myth and
misinformation, Brown said.
“A woman once asked me how she could trust me to carry her husband out
of a burning building,” she said. “That’s out of the question because a
male firefighter couldn’t carry a man by himself out of the building on
top of 70 pounds in gear that he’s already carrying. The thing is, we
don’t work alone.”
Brown brings with her skills and talents that are vital to the Newport
Beach community, aside from being a tremendous resource for the
department’s basketball team, said her supervisor Capt. Tom Lloy.
“She’s a compassionate and caring person and deals very well with the
public,” he said. “She’s also a very competitive person -- always strives
to do a good job.”
Lloy said the department has had a few female applicants over the
years, but only one other than Brown made the cut but ended up going to
another department. Newport Beach puts its firefighters through a
rigorous testing process that includes firefighting skills, physical
endurance, written and oral exams.”Erin’s edge is her tremendous physical
capability and her intellect,” Lloy said.
The department looks for the same attributes from candidates -- male
or female, Capt. Dave Bowman said.
“Erin is not just intelligent, she is flexible and adapts to the
situation,” he said. “She is confident but not cocky. And she is probably
5-foot-7, but I’ve never seen her struggle with any part of her job.”
Brown said she is happy with the positive atmosphere in the city.
People give her a chance to prove herself before they judge her, she
said.
“Maybe I can’t carry a man by myself out of a burning building,” she
said. “But I’m going to die trying, just as any of my colleagues would.”
* Deepa Bharath covers public safety and courts. She may be reached at
(949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
PROFILE
Erin Christine Brown
Age: 26
Place of residence: Irvine
Hometown: Solvang
High School: Santa Ynez High School, Solvang
College: UC Santa Barbara
Family: Married to Tannon Brown, a California Highway Patrol officer
in Los Angeles County
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