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Welcome to the IAFF Frontline News Brief, distributed
twice a month to IAFF affiliate leaders and IAFF
members. We encourage you to forward this news to your
members and others in the fire service.
The Frontline News Brief is delivered directly by email
and is also published on the IAFF web site. You can view
past issues at
http://www.iaff.org/Comm/frontline/news.htm.
Your feedback is also welcome - email
pr@iaff.org with questions and
comments.
"Fire Fighters For Dodd Bus Tour Rolls Through Iowa"
(Fire Fighters For Dodd)
"Feinstein Urges San Diego to Improve Fire Department
Funding" (California Progress Report)
"IRS Publishes Instructions on HELPS Benefit "
(International Association of Fire Fighters)
"More Hispanics, Blacks and Women Pass Firefighter Exam"
(New York Times)
"New Mexico Fire Fighters Give Earliest Endorsement in
Union's History" (Democracy for New Mexico)
"OSHA Rules Employers Must Pay Cost of Workers' Safety
Equipment" (Insurance Journal)
"Atlantic City Gets a New Mayor" (Star-Ledger)
"Arizona Fire Fighters Win Meet and Confer Rights"
(International Association of Fire Fighters)
"Firefighters: City Has Created Hostile Workplace"
(Muskogee Daily Phoenix and Times-Democrat)
"Firefighters, Port Reach Agreement Over Labor Dispute"
(KEPR19)
"Local Rescuers Stymied by Today's Sturdier Cars"
(News-Press (FL))
"Union Takes Cautious Approach to New Fire Chief"
(Workday Minnesota)
"City Fire Fighters' Scandal Isn't Over" (Orlando
Sentinel )
"Do Americans Think Your Job Is Prestigious?" (CNN)
"Firefighters Burn the Fat" (Denver Post)
"Refund Fire Pension Cash, City Urged" (Miami
Herald)
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IAFF and MDA - - a Proud Tradition
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In the
battle
against ALS
(amyotrophic
lateral
sclerosis or
Lou Gehrig's
disease),
the Muscular
Dystrophy
Association
operates 37
MDA/ALS
centers
across the
country.
These
state-of-the-art
facilities
are staffed
by
multidisciplinary
teams of
health
professionals
skilled in
the
diagnosis
and medical
management
of ALS.
People with
ALS may
attend any
of these
centers, as
well as any
of MDA's 225
clinics
nationwide.
To learn
more, call
(800)
572-1717 or
visit
www.als-mda.org.
|
Fire
Fighters For Dodd Bus Tour Rolls Through Iowa
Fire Fighters For Dodd
Beginning November 29, IAFF General President Harold
Schaitberger will be traveling in Iowa with the Fire
Fighters For Dodd campaign for a 20-city, eight-day Bus
Tour through the state as part of the IAFF's efforts to
encourage members to attend the Iowa Caucus in support
of Chris Dodd on January 3. The Fire Fighters for Dodd
Bus Tour will travel the state in a 42-foot
gold-and-black RV with the Fire Fighters For Dodd wrap.
Beginning in Council Bluffs and ending in Des Moines on
December 6, Iowa fire fighters along the route will seek
to boost support for Dodd from communities throughout
Iowa.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Feinstein
Urges San Diego to Improve Fire Department Funding
California Progress Report (11/27/07); Duerksen, Susan
U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein said that city officials
must move "vigorously" to end the city's historic
under-funding of its fire department or risk massive
loss of life in another brush fire. In her opening
comments at a hearing of the Senate Interior
Appropriations Subcommittee, Feinstein said San Diego
lagged behind other major cities in almost all measures
of fire protection, including response time and the
number of fire fighters and fire stations.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
IRS
Publishes Instructions on HELPS Benefit
International Association of Fire Fighters (11/27/07)
The IRS has published new instructions on how retired
fire fighters can take advantage of the Healthcare
Enhancement for Local Public Safety (HELPS) benefit on
their 2007 tax returns. Last year, the IAFF won an
unprecedented congressional victory in the passage of
the HELPS retiree health care benefit, a tax-free
distribution of up to $3,000 from retirement plans to
help retirees pay for health insurance or long-term care
insurance premiums.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
More
Hispanics, Blacks and Women Pass Firefighter Exam
New York Times (11/27/07); Chan, Sewell
Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg and other city officials have
announced that 38 percent of the 21,183 applicants who
passed the city's fire fighters examination on January
20 are minorities, calling the result "a significant
improvement" since the last time the exam was
administered, in 2002, when 21 percent of those who
passed were minorities. The Fire Department has
historically been criticized for having relatively few
women, blacks and Hispanics, compared with the far more
diverse police department. The city also noted a 50
percent increase in the number of women test-takers who
passed: 770 this year, compared with 512 in 2002.
According to the city, of the 21,183 test-takers who
passed this year, 19 percent were Hispanic, 17 percent
were black and 2 percent were Asian.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
New
Mexico Fire Fighters Give Earliest Endorsement in
Union's History
Democracy for New Mexico (11/27/07)
All aspects of elections, including endorsements, are
now occurring earlier and earlier in election cycles.
Take this, for example: Almost three years from before
the general election, gubernatorial candidate and Lt.
Governor Diane Denish received the endorsement of the
New Mexico Professional Fire Fighters Association.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
OSHA
Rules Employers Must Pay Cost of Workers' Safety
Equipment
Insurance Journal (11/19/07); Holland, Jesse J.
Over the next six months, employers must prepare to
cover the costs for personal protective equipment (PPE),
including safety-toed footwear, safety eyewear and other
clothing. The U.S. Labor Department and the U.S.
Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)
finalized a rule proposed in 1999 requiring employers to
pay the full cost of most PPE used by workers.
Regulators expect employers to become more accountable
regarding the PPE choices they make, and studies
indicate employers are more likely to maintain and
replace equipment when mandated to pay for it. OSHA
estimates the costs for providing PPE will reach $85
million, in addition to the partial PPE payments already
paid by employers. The agency also hopes the rule will
reduce medical and insurance costs for work-related
injuries by $200 million as work-related injuries drop
by 21,000.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Atlantic
City Gets a New Mayor
Star-Ledger (11/21/07)
The head of the city's Democratic Party was selected as
its new mayor. Scott Evans, a city fire fighter, was
chosen by the city council at a special meeting. He will
serve until after an election next November. Evans is
Atlantic City's third mayor in a little over a month --
a situation that began when former Mayor Bob Levy went
missing for two weeks and later admitted embellishing
his Vietnam War service to fatten his veterans' benefit
check. Evans will take a leave of absence from his job
as a battalion chief with the city's fire department to
serve as mayor.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Arizona
Fire Fighters Win Meet and Confer Rights
International Association of Fire Fighters (11/15/07)
A five-year effort by United Mesa Fire Fighters Local
2260 to bring meet and confer rights to Gilbert,
Arizona, fire fighters paid off November 13 when the
Gilbert Town Council voted 6-1 in support of Town
ordinance number 2085 to allow fire fighters and Town
management to meet to discuss wages, hours and working
conditions.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Firefighters: City Has Created Hostile Workplace
Muskogee Daily Phoenix and Times-Democrat(11/14/07);
Smoot, D.E.
Members of Muskogee, OK Local 57 have filed a complaint
with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)
against the city of Muskogee, Oklahoma. The complaint
contests that local fire fighters have suffered from
hostile working conditions. According to the union, the
city's personnel director, Les Weston, threatened to
kill fire fighters if they came near his home. Weston
claims his comments were taken out of context and were
not directed against any fire fighters. Instead, he
says, the threat was a response to recent vandalism in
his neighborhood. Before going to the EEOC, fire
fighters attempted to settle with the city council at a
public meeting. The council rejected the settlement on
the grounds it should have been submitted in writing,
not at a public forum. In response, Local 57 says it
will also register a complaint with the Oklahoma
Attorney General because the city is violating the
state's Open Meeting Act. This recent struggle is part
of an ongoing attempt by fire fighters to reach an
agreement with the city on new contract terms. No matter
how the EEOC investigation goes, the larger labor
dispute will likely be settled by a ballot vote during
an election early in 2008.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Firefighters, Port Reach Agreement Over Labor Dispute
KEPR19 (11/14/07); Kopta, Chelsea
After a four-year court battle, the fire fighters union
and the Port of Walla Walla in Washington have reached a
compromise over airport fire fighters. Fire fighters
Brent Partlow and Jake Riggs will be transferred to
Walla Walla Fire District Number Four. The two fire
fighters were previously members of the Aircraft Rescue
Firefighter Team stationed at the airport. As part of
District Four the two men will be part of the team
responsible for the airport. The Aircraft Team is
officially defunct, and there will be no fire fighters
onsite. The compromise is the result of an ongoing legal
battle started when the Port laid off Riggs three years
ago.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Local
Rescuers Stymied by Today's Sturdier Cars
News-Press (FL) (11/23/07); Husty, Denes
In the past few years, car manufacturers have started
producing vehicles with reinforced steel frames. These
design improvements have done much to make cars safer.
Unfortunately, they can also make fire fighters' jobs
much more difficult when responding to a car wreck.
Often fire fighters have to use massive cutting tools to
tear apart a mangled vehicle and reach injured
passengers. Many fire fighters have discovered the tools
they are currently using are unable to cut through the
reinforced steel. This can lead to the loss of precious
minutes at a rescue scene.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Union
Takes Cautious Approach to New Fire Chief
Workday Minnesota (11/18/07); Moore, Michael
When Tim Butler, St. Paul's new fire chief, introduced
himself to the public at a media event inside Station
18, he made a point of lavishing praise upon the city's
fire fighters, who, he said, "provide the foundation of
our rich history and our bright future ahead." Consider
it step one in the process of mending a relationship
that grew openly hostile under the watch of Butler's
predecessor, Doug Holton. Chris Parsons, secretary of
Local 21, said two union members, including President
Pat Flanagan, sat on the search committee that
recommended Butler to Mayor Chris Coleman. Parsons
called Butler "by far and away the most qualified
candidate for the job."
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
City
Fire Fighters' Scandal Isn't Over
Orlando Sentinel (11/16/07); Schlueb, Mark
A cheating probe at the Orlando Fire Department widened
when the city's Civil Service Board decided to launch
its own investigation. Administrators had closed the
books on the case after they demoted two members of the
department's top brass who cheated on a 2002 promotion
exam. But with more than 100 fire fighters urging them
on, the Civil Service Board voted to subpoena the two
demoted fire fighters and force them to answer questions
about the incident under oath.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Do
Americans Think Your Job Is Prestigious?
CNN (11/23/07); Lorenz, Kate
According to a recent survey by Harris Interactive,
Americans see fire fighters, scientists and teachers as
the most prestigious occupations while bankers, actors
and real estate agents are the least prestigious
occupations.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Firefighters Burn the Fat
Denver Post (11/25/07)
With heart attacks the number-one killer of fire
fighters, Denver's West Metro Fire Protection District
decided to implement a fitness regime that would help
fire fighters take off excess weight. Exercise equipment
was installed in all of West Metro's stations. A
cookbook was developed, and fire fighters began to chart
their daily food intake and exercise habits. Since the
implementation of the program in 1999, when 72 fire
fighters were unable to meet the minimum aerobic
standard, things have improved; now everyone is able to
meet the minimum standard. In addition, workplace
injuries have decreased sharply.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Refund
Fire Pension Cash, City Urged
Miami Herald (11/27/07); De Valle, Elaine
Florida officials are holding $1.1 million in state
pension funds earmarked for the Coral Gables fire union
because it says the city should not have collected
pension contributions from fire fighters for 16 months
several years ago. But the union has asked the city to
return about $800,000 in contributions made by fire
fighters in 2003 and 2004 so the state will unfreeze the
supplemental retirement funds because the fire union is
losing interest on that money -- interest that could add
up to about $100,000.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
©
copyright 2007 International Association of Fire
Fighters
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