Fire departments across the west metro are getting creative in recruiting candidates to join them as paid on-call firefighters.
Departments such as Plymouth, Golden Valley and Maple Grove are taking to social media, holding information events and handing out fliers in hopes of attracting as many qualified applicants as possible.
"It's difficult, we don't see the interest we had in the past," said Plymouth Fire Chief Roger Coppa. "The volunteerism is more difficult to come by now. We do notice that."
Most Minnesota cities mainly use paid on-call firefighters who live or work minutes away from their local fire station. Only a handful of firefighters in most departments are full-time.
In recent years, recruiting for the on-call positions has run up against people's changing priorities, whether family commitments or careers or both.
George Esbensen, Eden Prairie's fire chief and director of emergency preparedness, said that 90 percent of Minnesota's firefighters are part-time who don't make it a career.
Esbensen, who serves as president of the Minnesota State Fire Chiefs Association, said that many departments have only about 80 percent of the personnel that they can carry.
"There is a such a struggle keeping staffing," Esbensen said. "It's a huge statewide issue, nationally as well. The current trend says that this will not get any better."