If you're on your back and turning blue, you want a man like Johnathon McClellan kneeling over you.
At over 6-feet-3 with plenty of muscle, McClellan, a Minneapolis firefighter, has the endurance and training to do chest compressions all the way to the hospital.
"You don't want to give up. You're praying, hoping that this person opens up their eyes," he said. "I've lost some; I've brought some back."
At such times, McClellan, 31, pushes away the worries about how long his job will last. He's one of 27 rookie firefighters who got layoff notices from the city last fall. Some budget maneuvering by the City Council staved off their departures. But they come to work knowing that they're on the bubble and that any further cuts in state aid could mean their jobs.
McClellan was so concerned that he and fellow rookie Floyd Walker turned out when the council passed the budget to see for themselves. "It shows that the time has come and passed where we're going to sit on our butts," McClellan said.
'Durgans and tramps'
The road to becoming firefighters was long for McClellan and 23 others hired in 2007 to start training. More than a thousand applicants took the city's written exam. They took agility tests, sat with veteran firefighters for interviews, then took lengthy psychological and physical examinations.
Some tests measured strength. A water-filled foot of fire hose can weigh up to 10 pounds, and firefighters commonly handle bundles of up to 100 feet of it. They also lug oversize chain saws or bulky cutters and spreaders to extricate people from vehicles. Some tests measure fitness for the stresses of living in a firehouse.