Created at: August 27, 2025 00:29
Company: Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs
Location: Aberdeen, SD, 57401
Job Description:
This is a Wildland Firefighter (Fire Management Planning) position (1) with the Bureau of Indian Affairs, Great Plains Regional Office. Duty Station: Aberdeen, Eagle Butte, Pine Ridge, Rosebud, or Wagner, South Dakota and will be filled from Standard PD Numbers: DX01300. This announcement will be used to fill vacancies utilizing the Direct-Hire Authority (5CFR 337.201). Category rating, veteran's preference, and traditional rating and ranking of applicants do NOT apply for this vacancy.
EXPERIENCE AND EDUCATION REQUIREMENTS: GS-11: 1 year of specialized experience or the equivalent, comparable to at least the GS-09 in the Federal Service (obtained in either the public or private sector that include: develops field/local wildland plans and complex fire management alternatives in environmental settings which reflect management goals and objectives related to fire management; coordinates with the environmental or natural resource specialists to ensure field/local wildland plans are consistent and in adherence with land and resource management plans, laws, policies, regulations, and environmental mandates; conducts geospatial and strategic fire planning analyses for use and support of fire management planning; collaborates to advise and ensure fuels program operations are sufficiently maintained; provide guidance on new and advanced technological tools in fire management programs and facilitate training courses on systems usage. SELECTIVE PLACEMENT FACTOR: This is a MANDATORY qualification prerequisite to qualify for this position. Applicant must have possessed the following qualifications to be considered eligible for this position: Prior Wildland Firefighting Experience: This is an administrative position in an organization having a firefighting mission and is clearly in an established career path. Prior firefighting experience, as gained by substantial service in a primary firefighter position or equivalent experience outside the Federal government is a MANDATORY PREREQUISITE. Wildland firefighting experience is required to meet qualifications for secondary (administrative) covered positions. The Department of Interior defines wildland firefighting experience as: On-the-line wildland firefighting experience gained through containment, control, suppression, or use of wildland fire. Wildland fire is defined as any non-structure fire that occurs in the wildland. Two distinct types of wildland fire have been defined and include wildfire and prescribed fires as follows: 1) Wildfires - unplanned ignitions or prescribed fires that are declared wildfires; 2) Prescribed Fires - Planned ignitions. This description includes only fireline experience on a Prescribed Fire; it does not include experience in the planning stages. Prescribed fire experience must be supplemented by fire suppression experience in order to be creditable as previous wildland firefighting experience. NOTE: Selective factors are knowledges, skills, abilities, or special qualifications that are in addition to the minimum requirements in a qualification standard but are determined to be essential to perform the duties and responsibilities of the position. Applicants who do not meet the selective factors are ineligible for further consideration. FIREFIGHTER RETIREMENT COVERAGE: This position is covered under the secondary/administrative firefighter special retirement provisions of 5 U.S.C. 8336(c)(CSRS) and 5 U.S.C. 8412(d)(FERS) when it is filled by an incumbent who transfers directly from a primary or another secondary law enforcement or firefighting position with no break in service to this position. Firefighter retirement coverage of the incumbent will depend upon his or her individual work history. You may meet the qualification requirements, but not be eligible for special retirement coverage. If you are not eligible for special retirement coverage, you will be placed in the regular retirement system. FERS TRANSITION REQUIREMENT: To be eligible for Secondary retirement coverage under FERS, an employee must: 1) transfer directly (without a break in service exceeding 3 days) from a primary position to a secondary position, AND 2) complete 3 years of service in a primary rigorous position including any such service during which no FERS deductions were withheld, AND 3) must be continuously employed in a secondary position(s) since moving from a primary rigorous position, except for any break in employment from a secondary position that began with involuntary separation (not for cause). It is the responsibility of the applicant to ensure this office has enough information to determine your special retirement status to ensure you do not lose benefits (normally through submission of your work history or other documentation that demonstrates work history of approved covered positions). You must let this office know if you are in a Primary coverage position. All qualification requirements must be met by the closing date of this announcement. Additional selections may be made from this announcement if identical vacancies occur within 90 days from the closing date. Physical Demands: The work is primarily sedentary, although a level of physical fitness is required which will allow for work during periods of extended stress and in the field when wildland fire situations arise. During the fire season, extended fire assignments away from the unit may be required under very stressful conditions. Work Environment: Although work is generally performed in an office setting, intermittent field work is involved. Field work involves exposure to temperature extremes, both from weather and fire conditions where falling trees and the presence of smoke and/or dust conditions create hazardous conditions. The nature of fire investigation work requires that protective clothing (boots, hard hats, etc.) be worn.
Develops wildland plans and complex fire management alternatives for various environmental settings that reflect goals and objectives related to fire management through periodic on-the ground and field unit site visits inspections.
Provides specialized skilled decision-making recommendations on short and long-term strategic fire management planning, assessments, and interagency unit fire management plans.
Coordinates with the environmental or natural resource specialists to ensure field/local wildland plans are consistent and in adherence with land and resource management plans (L/RMPs), laws, policies, regulations, and environmental mandates.
Conducts geospatial and strategic fire planning analyses and implements for use and support of geospatial information technology strategic fire management planning.
Consolidates unit planning information/data for inclusion in state, regional, and/or national plans, projects, and conducts analytical studies in fire and aviation management.
Advises and partners in the development of short-and-long-term strategic fire management planning and assessments of unit and interagency fire management missions.
Accounts for the integration of geospatial data accuracy in order to develop and implement new and revised policies and standard operation procedures and practices in compliance with Bureau and agency policy mandates.
Monitors and reports on the status and progress of work, checking work in progress and reviewing completed work to ensure supervisor’s instructions on work priorities, methods, deadlines, and quality are met.