I didn't say their wages are exorbitant. I said their retirement packages are. These guys retire after 20-30 years, getting a job after a few months of training directly after high school. At 45-50 years old, they are on their second career, doubling their income. This means they wil often collect a pension for 4-5 decades. Therefore, they don't have to worry about saving their money. They can live pay-check to pay-check and have side-jobs to earn extra money. The pay is greater than any other job one can get for so little training, that has such minimal job duties.
I've spent a lot of time hanging around EMS, before medical school, during medical school, and during residency. My experience is that they spend at 75%-95% of their time doing nothing...nothing, at all. In each firehouse is tens of thousands of dollars worth of exercise equipment, weight machines, and full kitchens. Hundreds of thousands of specialized equipment lies idle. Rows of Lazy-Boy chairs sitting in front of big-screen TVs, with 100's of cable channels. I don't advocate dismantling the program, I'm just pointing out that there is a lot of fat that could be trimmed.
Ultimately, what irritates me more than anything, is the culture of risk-aversion that has facilitated the over-building and over-staffing of these facilities. Cities and counties constantly call for more and more funds and urge the construction of more and more firehouses. Why? Because they don't want their city to be on the national news as having some mass-casualty cituation that they couldn't handle. Because the public demands it, not realizing their taxes are paying for all this. This gives the public a false sense of security that bad things will never happen to them. Dad can drive drunk and cause a multi-car pileup, and if the ambulance isn't here in the next few minutes to cut us out, we are suing the city for everything they have. Grandma will die, but the medics will be here in 3 minutes to raise her from the dead and wisk her mottled corpse away so we don't have to look at it. Risk aversion is killing our country, and literally, transforming it into something unrecognizable.
Not to mention the hospitals that are fed by these vast networks of firestations are viewed by the public as too expensive, while the government actively plans to starve those hospitals of funds.