Chief Royal Ramey moved 3,000 incarcerated individuals into public service careers through wildland firefighting. Here is exactly how he built the pipeline.
Summary
The Forestry and Fire Recruitment Program is a nonprofit workforce reentry pipeline that has moved over 3,000 current and formerly incarcerated individuals into public service careers through wildland firefighting. In this episode, Donald Thompson sits down with Chief Royal Ramey, a 12-year firefighting veteran, 2024 TED Fellow, and the program’s co-founder, to examine how a fire line became one of the most measurable career pathways in the United States. After serving six years in prison, Ramey discovered that the discipline and identity structure of wildland firefighting provided what the traditional reentry system had never offered. Today his program operates across multiple states, and he is building toward a national model.
Episode Long Description
Chief Royal Ramey spent six years incarcerated before wildland firefighting gave him a framework for purpose, discipline, and leadership that the traditional reentry system had never provided him. As a 12-year firefighting veteran, 2024 TED Fellow, and co-founder of the Forestry and Fire Recruitment Program, Royal has built one of the most measurable workforce reentry pipelines in the United States, moving over 3,000 current and formerly incarcerated individuals into public service careers across multiple states.
In this episode of High Octane Leadership, Donald Thompson sits down with Royal to examine how California’s wildland firefighting infrastructure became an unlikely but highly effective model for workforce equity, legislative advocacy, and community reinvestment. The conversation covers Royal’s four-step goal achievement framework, the economic argument for expungement, and what organizational leaders can learn from a culture that trains people to run toward the hardest problems. Housing one person in a California state prison costs close to $130,000 annually. Royal’s program routes that same public investment toward a six-figure career that generates tax revenue, reduces recidivism, and creates measurable community financial stability.
“The most destructive conditions produce the most qualified leaders,” argues Chief Royal Ramey, 2024 TED Fellow and co-founder of the Forestry and Fire Recruitment Program.
Key Talking Points:
- Wildland Firefighting as a Workforce Reentry Model: The Forestry and Fire Recruitment Program fills a structural gap that exists in 13 states: incarcerated firefighters who serve on the line have no guaranteed pathway into the profession after release. Chief Ramey’s nonprofit directly addresses that gap, with documented career outcomes for over 3,000 participants across California and partner states.
- Expungement as an Economic Investment, Not a Social Handout: Housing one person in a California state prison costs close to $130,000 annually, while a wildland firefighting career generates tax revenue, reduces recidivism costs, and creates a multiplier effect on family and community financial stability. Four-Step Goal Achievement Framework for High-Stakes Environments: Chief Ramey’s Four-Step Goal Achievement Framework asks individuals to define the goal, confirm the desire behind it, build a concrete blueprint, and execute without exception. Developed on the fire line, the framework now drives career transition, leadership development, and organizational culture work inside Ramey’s program. .
- Wildland Firefighting Discipline Applied to Business Leadership and Retention: The mindset that produces effective incident commanders maps directly onto corporate retention challenges. Radical accountability, mission clarity, and a culture where every team member understands their contribution are not firefighting-specific virtues; they are the conditions that reduce turnover in any high-performance organization.
- Climate Crisis and Incarcerated Firefighters as a National Workforce Imperative: Western wildfire frequency is increasing, and the incarcerated firefighter population represents a trained, available, and deeply motivated labor force. CAL FIRE workforce planning and state emergency management agencies have only begun to formally invest in this population as a climate infrastructure asset.
Published: May 21, 2026 | High Octane Leadership with Donald Thompson, Episode 184.
Chapter Markers
0:00 – Intro: Chief Royal Ramey
01:40 – From Fire Camp to Public Service: The Journey Out of Incarceration
03:30 – Co-Founding the Forestry and Fire Recruitment Program
05:00 – How Chief Ramey’s Four-Step Framework Moves People from Incarceration to Public Service
07:15 – How Wildland Firefighting Converts a Criminal Record into a Public Service Identity
10:00 – Focus on What You Can Control: The Leadership Mindset That Changes Everything
12:00 – Firefighting as a Lifestyle, Not a Nine to Five
14:40 – Legislative Advocacy and the Case for Expungement
18:00 – Why Expungement Costs Less Than Incarceration: The Economic Case for Second Chances
20:00 – What It Feels Like to Change 3,000 Lives
23:00 – Why Purpose-Driven Leadership Produces Lower Recidivism Than Job Placement Alone
27:45 – What Scaling the Forestry and Fire Recruitment Program to 13 States Actually Requires
30:00 – How the Prison-to-Public-Service Pipeline Works and What Other States Can Replicate
32:00 – From Fire Camps to the Daily Show and Jeff Bezos: What Notoriety Did for the Mission
35:30 – Closing: Chief Ramey’s Legacy and Magic Wand Moment
About the Guest
Chief Royal Ramey is a 12-year wildland firefighting veteran, 2024 TED Fellow, and co-founder of the Forestry and Fire Recruitment Program, a nonprofit workforce development pipeline recognized by CAL FIRE and California workforce development agencies as one of the most effective reentry-to-public-service models currently operating in the United States.
After serving six years in prison, Ramey built an organization that has guided over 3,000 current and formerly incarcerated individuals into careers in wildland firefighting and public service. His advocacy contributed to the passage of California AB 2147 (signed September 2020, authored by Assemblymember Eloise Reyes) allows formerly incarcerated firefighters to petition to have their records expunged and pursue state fire certifications for the first time.
Ramey has appeared on The Daily Show, discussed the economics of second chances with Jeff Bezos, and spoken internationally on the argument that people who have survived the most destructive conditions are frequently the most qualified to lead during a national climate emergency.
Resources:
- Donald Thompson LinkedIn
- Donald’s Books: https://donaldthompson.com/books-resources/
- Chief Royal Ramey LinkedIn
- Forestry and Fire Recruitment Program: [Link]
- Workplace Options 2026 Psychological Safety Study: https://psychsafety.workplaceoptions.com/resource/the-coe-2026-psychological-saf…
