VIDEO: When the job is saving lives, Kyle Vaughn's job is to make sure firefighters do it right, especially at night. "We’ve done a lot of daytime trainings, but we haven’t done a lot of nighttime trainings and we've done a lot of night time extrications," Vaughn said, "So, we wanted to bring some realism into our training." Vaughn is the deputy fire chief of the Foothills Fire Protection District. His department teamed up with neighboring ones to train 35 firefighters. They are responding to a multi-car fiery car accident with two dummies trapped inside two different cars and a real person trapped inside another one. "If you go too fast and you don't think about it and you do things unsafe, you cause a bigger problem and can injure yourself and others," Vaughn said. "But, if you slow down just a little bit and do things smart, then it actually becomes a lot faster in the end." Even though these are all volunteers except for the chief, Vaughn says they are all professionally trained by doing exercises like this. "We have lawyers. We have doctors. We have engineers," Vaughn said. "All of our 34 other people have a day job nine to five and then they come play firefighter at night."