Editor's note: This is the second in a three-part series that shows how far the Rankin Inlet fire department has come in the past five years as it readies to officially open its new training centre in Rankin.

Darrell Greer/快盈v3 photo
There have been a lot of changes within the Rankin Inlet Fire Department since Fire Chief Mark Wyatt took the reins about five years ago; some accomplished with positive attitudes and lots of elbow grease from a talented staff, some with hefty price tags attached, and some are still a work in progress that no one could imagine ever being in Rankin.
Fortunately for the community and beyond, Wyatt has a good imagination.
And, he knows the value of a well-equipped and smartly-dressed force and what that does for morale and effectiveness.
Wyatt said in a fire department like the one in Rankin, you tend to have highs and lows all the time.
He said you have periods of time when you get good people in the department, and then sometimes you get people who aren't so good and that can mess things up a little bit.
鈥I have to say that, right now, this fire department is stronger than it's ever been before,鈥 said Wyatt.
鈥Everyone is paddling in the same direction and we brought a lot more women into the department, which has made a heck of a difference in terms of being better and more balanced.
鈥The women we have in the department are every bit as capable as any male firefighter I have in here. And, we now have a 50-50 balance in terms of men and women.
鈥In fact, I had all women recruits this year and they've all either passed, or are going to pass, their Firefighter Level 2 in their first year. It's an exciting place to be right now.鈥
Wyatt's current contract with the hamlet has him heading the Rankin department until at least the end of 2021.
He said one of the things still at the top of his wish list for the Rankin department is a ladder or aerial truck.
鈥If there's a fire in the kitchen and people have to get out of the apartment, for example, on the third storey of a structure that's not a sprinkler building, it's just going to spread because of the lack of that sprinkler system in there to help put it out.
鈥So, all of a sudden, I've got a building with a fire on the third floor at the back, where I have no access up to the windows apart from a regular 35-foot ladder.
鈥That means I don't have the ability to fight that fire the way it should be fought. And, even more importantly, if there are people trapped who can't get out, I don't have the ability to rescue them from any of these apartment buildings, so a ladder truck is a primary piece of apparatus that we need in this community.
鈥The ticket price on that is $650,000 to $1 million, but it's a basic piece of firefighting equipment in any town this size that has multi-storey buildings and I'm determined it's something we are going to have here in Rankin Inlet.鈥
Thankfully, the department has managed to bolster morale in other areas with much smaller price tags.
Wyatt said the firefighters all have station uniforms and some of them have dress uniforms.
He said Remembrance Day is a prime example of when all the firefighters show up in their uniforms.
鈥They look proud because they're an organized department.
鈥In addition to that, they get summer jackets and we've had parkas made locally for all the firefighters, which we need more of this year for our new members.
鈥They also get baseball caps, T-shirts and hoodies so that even when they're at a community event, or whatever, we can recognize that they're part of the fire department.
鈥And every time I'm able to open a box of new stuff, people are happy.鈥