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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://daily.iaff.org/frontline/morenews.html.
Your feedback is also welcome - email
pr@iaff.org with questions and
comments.
"Unions
Must Change Tactics and Not Pledge Blind Allegiance to
Democrats" (Detroit News)
"Firefighters Lose Pay Raise Fight" (WXIA-TV
(Atlanta))
"New
Orleans Mayor Signs Fire Fighter Contract"
(International Association of Fire Fighters)
"Tarrant
Touts Health Plan; Sanders Gets Firefighters' Backing"
(Boston Globe)
"Firefighters Who Get Sick on the Job Win Support"
(Kitchener-Waterloo Record)
"Firefighters Awarded 3-Year Pact"
(Philadelphia Inquirer)
"Can
Congress Rescue FEMA?" (The Washington
Post)
"HFD's
Female Firefighters Climbing Ladder of Success"
(Houston Chronicle)
"Casey
stops to stoke fire"
(Observer-Reporter)
"City
loses grievance filed by fire union"
(St. Petersburg Times)
"City
agrees to hire 15 more firefighters"
(Providence Journal)
"Fire
Drills" (San Diego Union-Tribune)
"Fit to
Survive Features No Rest Workout for Fire Fighters"
(International Association of Fire Fighters)
"San
Francisco Fire Fighters Get Parity with Police"
(International Association of Fire Fighters)
"IAFC,
VCOS, and IAFF to Conduct Safety Stand Down Survey"
(Fire Chief)
"Wisconsin Holds First Statewide Fire Ops 101"
(International Association of Fire Fighters)
"Rhode
Island Fire Fighters Earn Day of Recognition"
(International Association of Fire Fighters)
"In
Revised Design, Freedom Tower Sheds Its Look of Bulky
Armor" (The New York Times)
"Frontline News Brief" is
Sponsored By:
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MDA gives special recognition and
credit to all the hard-working,
supportive and enthusiastic men and
women of the IAFF across the United
States and Canada for their
overwhelming support for MDA.
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Unions Must Change Tactics and Not Pledge Blind
Allegiance to Democrats
Detroit News (06/30/06); Schaitberger, Harold
International Association of Fire Fighters (IAFF)
General President Harold Schaitberger argues in this
editorial that rather than blindly following Democrats
in the mid-term elections, union members should consider
some Republican candidates. For instance, several
Michigan Republican representatives have backed measures
that benefit professional fire fighters, including
measures to improve retirement and health benefits for
fire fighters, as well as increase funding for homeland
security. Several Michigan Democrats have also earned
the support of the IAFF. Schaitberger writes: " ... we
wear a bipartisan boot. We work with Republicans and
Democrats sympathetic to working-class Americans whose
health care and energy costs are rising .... Labor can't
be an ATM machine for either party."
(Web Link)
Return to
Headlines
Firefighters Lose Pay
Raise Fight
WXIA-TV (Atlanta) (07/05/06); Shirek, Jon
The Atlanta City Council has failed to override Mayor
Shirley Franklin's veto of a 3.5 percent pay raise for
city fire fighters, in line with the raise received by
police officers. The Council had approved the raise last
month by a 9-6 vote. One of the original supporters
failed to endorse the veto override. The vote comes
after a vigorous lobbying campaign by Atlanta, GA Local
134 President Jim Daws, who says he will encourage fire
fighters to leave for higher paying departments. "It's
really a kick in the gut and it's going to have
repercussions for our fire department," says Daws. "I'm
going to start advertising all the better fire fighting
opportunities that are available nationwide to our
members and there are greener pastures elsewhere for
fire fighters too." Atlanta fire fighters say that their
pay is up to 20 percent lower than other area fire
departments and 7 percent less than the police starting
pay. The starting pay for fire fighters in Atlanta is
$34,563.
(Web Link)
Return to
Headlines
New Orleans Mayor Signs
Fire Fighter Contract
International Association of Fire Fighters (07/10/06)
In a meeting July 7 with New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin,
International Association of Fire Fighters General
President Harold Schaitberger and New Orleans, LA Local
632 President Nick Felton were successful in getting
Mayor Ray Nagin to agree to sign the city's fire
fighters' contract that was originally negotiated in
August 2005 - just before Hurricane Katrina. Local 632
unanimously ratified the proposal in December 2005, but
the agreement languished without the mayor's signature.
(Web Link)
Return to
Headlines
Tarrant Touts Health
Plan; Sanders Gets Firefighters' Backing
Boston Globe (07/06/06); Gram, David
Representative Bernard Sanders, an Independent running
for an open Vermont seat in the U.S. Senate,
has received the backing of the International
Association of Fire Fighters and the Professional
Firefighters of Vermont. Sanders has worked to obtain
security funding for equipment and training, and has
denounced proposals by President Bush to reduce funding
for first responders.
(Web Link)
Return to
Headlines
Firefighters Who Get
Sick on the Job Win Support
Kitchener-Waterloo Record (07/05/06); Pender, Terry
Members of the Kitchener City Council in Ontario support
providing monetary benefits to fire fighters who
contract certain types of illnesses, such as cancer.
Councilor Berry Vrbanovic is spearheading the effort to
support the Kitchener Professional Fire Fighters
Association (KPFFA), which aims to modify regulations at
the Workplace Safety and Insurance Board. Such benefits
are already provided for fire fighters in British
Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Nova
Scotia. "Fire fighters are absorbing chemicals and
toxins continually when saturated with water, steam
mists and moisture," notes KPFFA President Bill Duncan,
adding that cancer occurs in fire fighters at double to
quadruple the rate of the general population.
(Web Link)
Return to
Headlines
Firefighters Awarded
3-Year Pact
Philadelphia Inquirer (06/29/06); McDonald, Mark
An arbitration panel has awarded Philadelphia fire
fighters a new, three-year agreement that calls for
salaries to increase by 10 percent or more and health
care benefits to rise nearly 45 percent. "This award is
consistent with what the Fraternal Order of Police (FOP)
got, and we think it's a fair award," says Philadelphia,
PA Local 22 President Brian McBride. The new raises
include a 3 percent hike retroactive to July 1, 2005, 3
percent beginning July 1, and 4 percent beginning July
1, 2007, the same as the last three years of the FOP's
four-year deal. In addition to getting a 12th holiday --
the fire fighter's birthday -- fire fighters will
witness a significant increase in Philadelphia's monthly
allocation to the union health and welfare fund.
(Web Link)
Return to
Headlines
Can Congress Rescue FEMA?
The Washington Post (06/26/06); Hsu, Spencer S.
Hoping to avoid another fiasco in the next catastrophic
disaster, Congress is focusing on the Federal Emergency
Management Agency. P ublic debate is centered on
propopals to remove FEMA from the Department of Homeland
Security and allow it to again report to the president.
The White House opposes such a move, and many in
Congress say it is unlikely. Experts say the argument
obscures older, deeper problems that undermine the
nation's preparedness. The issue of creating a national
system of preparedness stems from the failed response to
Hurricane Katrina. Last year, nearly three-fourths of
federal Homeland Security grants went to three
terrorism-focused programs. Funds targeted at
"all-hazards" fell from $1 billion in 2004 to $720
million, while those aimed at terrorism rose from $130
million in 2001 to $2.6 billion. Meanwhile, FEMA lost
influence over states and cities, which provide police,
fire and emergency workers in a disaster. FEMA stopped
holding large-scale training exercises in 1998 and lost
any big role in state drills as its budget for the
office in charge of such exercises fell from $2 million
to $196,000. Competing bills in the House and Senate to
fix FEMA fall broadly into two camps. One would
strengthen FEMA within the Homeland Security Department,
recombining disaster preparedness and response
activities, and restore its power over grants; the other
would make it independent. The International Association
of Fire Fighters believes that emergency response should
remain at the core of the nation's homeland security and
is playing a leading role in the effort to reform and
strengthen FEMA's role within DHS.
(Web Link)
Return to
Headlines
HFD's Female
Firefighters Climbing Ladder of Success
Houston Chronicle (07/03/06); Grant, Alexis
After 30 years, women are being appointed to senior
level positions in the Houston Fire Department. The
department hired its first female fire fighter in 1974,
but it was not until the early 1990s that it began
recruiting women aggressively. Of those appointed, only
a handful have more than 12 years of experience, which
is why it has taken so long to get women into the higher
positions. Senior Captain Shelley Squires joined the
department 10 years ago and has received three
promotions over the course of her tenure. She credits
her rapid climb up the ladder to the period in which she
joined the department. "I was pretty fortunate because
throughout my career the timing has been right for me,"
Squires says.
(Web Link)
Return to
Headlines
Casey stops to stoke
fire
Observer-Reporter (07/06/06); Miller, Barbara S.
U.S. Democratic Senate candidate Bob Casey met with
Washington, PA Local 2218 fire fighters during his "New
Direction" bus tour to churn up support for his race
against incumbent U.S. Senator Rick Santorum. Local 2218
has endorsed Casey in his Senate bid. Casey told Local
2218 members -- currently understaffed by four fire
fighters from its complement of 21 at two stations --
"It is essential that you're given the tools that you
need. You guys are at the frontlines."
(Web Link)
Return to
Headlines
City loses grievance
filed by fire union
St. Petersburg Times (06/30/06); Lee, Demorris A.
Clearwater, FL Local 1158 has won an unfair labor
practice complaint against the fire chief and city
manager, who unlawfully threatened the jobs of union
members last year. The state Public Employees Relations
Commission has ordered the city to cease and desist from
such actions and pay the union's legal fees associated
with the claim. The Local 1158 complaint maintained that
several of its members' jobs were threatened when the
union was getting ready to take a no-confidence vote
against the fire chief, and when it questioned the
hiring of a new fire marshal. In the commission's order,
the city is asked to stop "threatening employees with
adverse employment action and lawsuits for engaging in
protected concerted activity," and to stop "interfering
with, resisting, or coercing public employees." Local
1158 has two additional unfair labor practice
complaints currently before the commission. The union
says it is awaiting a decision on a complaint concerning
e-mail use for union business while on duty; and on July
27, a hearing will be held regarding what the union says
is the fire chief's disciplinary actions against union
members for use of the department's e-mail system.
(Web Link)
Return to
Headlines
City agrees to hire 15
more firefighters
Providence Journal (07/06/06); Mider, Zachary R.
The City of Cranston, Rhode Island, has settled a
months-old dispute with Cranston, RI Local 1363 by
agreeing to hire 15 fire fighters to fill most of the
fire department's two dozen vacant positions. The union
had filed a grievance contending that the low staffing
level violated its collective bargaining agreement.
Mayor Stephen P. Laffey insisted the department was
overstaffed. T he settlement, reached early last month
while the matter was under arbitration, calls for
raising the number of fire fighters to about 190. Local
1363 sought the increased staffing because members are
often forced to work extra, consecutive shifts when no
one else can fill them. A second agreement, yet to be
ratified by the union or the City Council, would allow
the city to buy a truck to refill fire fighters' air
tanks at a fire scene. The truck became a priority after
cyanide was found in the bloodstreams of several
Providence fire fighters in March. A subsequent report
by a task force there concluded that fire fighters
should wear air packs more often to prevent them from
inhaling the deadly gas.
(Web Link)
Return to
Headlines
Fire Drills
San Diego Union-Tribune (07/11/06); Ignelzi, R.J.
The San Diego Fire and Rescue Department practices
functional exercises that mimic normal movement patterns
and help them do their job more efficiently with less
risk of injury. For the past year, the San Diego
Union-Tribune has worked with local fire fighters to
demonstrate a variety of exercises and stretches in its
weekly Firehouse Fitness column. "What we do as
firefighters and what the average person does is
basically the same. We use the same muscles and do the
same basic movements. It just varies in intensity," says
Jay Albrandt, a fire fighter and coordinator for San
Diego, CA Local 145 Peer Fitness Trainers, a group
trained and certified by the International Association
of Fire Fighters and the American Council on Exercise to
give one-on-one fitness coaching to other fire and
rescue workers. "If you don't know how to move properly
and keep your joints and core stable, you will get
injured," he says.
(Web Link)
Return to
Headlines
Fit to Survive Features
No Rest Workout for Fire Fighters
International Association of Fire Fighters (07/10/06)
Discover the new military-style workout for fire
fighters on Fit to Survive, updated with routines for
all levels of ability. Fit to Survive also features a
guide to the best beans and other tips and advice for
staying active, fit and healthy.
(Web Link)
Return to
Headlines
San Francisco Fire
Fighters Get Parity with Police
International Association of Fire Fighters (06/29/06)
San Francisco, CA Local 798 fire fighters have won pay
parity with San Francisco police officers beginning July
1, 2006, thanks to the parity provision in its new
contract with the City and County of San Francisco.
(Web Link)
Return to
Headlines
IAFC, VCOS, and IAFF to
Conduct Safety Stand Down Survey
Fire Chief (06/06)
The International Association of Fire Fighters, the
International Association of Fire Chiefs (IAFC) and
IAFC's Volunteer and Combination Officer's Section want
to measure and document the participation of U.S. and
Canadian fire departments in the June 2006 International
Fire Fighter Safety Stand Down. The organizations are
collecting feedback online from fire fighters who did,
as well as did not, participate. The survey can be found
online at http://www.zoomerang.com/recipient/survey-intro.zgi?p=WEB225EQDY4MGJ.
(Web Link)
Return to
Headlines
Wisconsin Holds First
Statewide Fire Ops 101
International Association of Fire Fighters (07/07/06)
In conjunction with the 71st Professional Fire Fighters
of Wisconsin (PFFW) Convention in Green Bay, Wisconsin,
Green Bay, WI Local 141 held the first statewide Fire
Ops 101 program.
(Web Link)
Return to
Headlines
Rhode Island Fire
Fighters Earn Day of Recognition
International Association of Fire Fighters (06/29/06)
After some focused lobbying by the Rhode Island State
Association of Fire Fighters (RISAFF), the State House
of Representatives has unanimously passed a resolution
proclaiming September 11, 2006, "Police Officers' and
Firefighters' Appreciation Day."
(Web Link)
Return to
Headlines
In Revised Design,
Freedom Tower Sheds Its Look of Bulky Armor
The New York Times (06/29/06) P. A19; Dunlap, David W.;
Collins, Glenn
New York City's proposed Freedom Tower has been
redesigned to be more aesthetically pleasing without
losing any of the security to protect the symbolic
building from terrorist attacks. The building will be
reminiscent of the destroyed twin towers of the World
Trade Center in its size and height, with the roof of
the building located at the same height as the north
tower. But the building will be capped by a spire that
will make the building a symbolic 1,776 feet tall,
largest in the country, and the spire will be
illuminated at night, in an homage to the Statue of
Liberty's torch. The revisions are most notable in the
tower's 187-foot, bomb-resistant concrete base, where
security is the primary focus. The base will still serve
as a security pedestal for the tower, but it will be
covered with sheathes of laminated glass that will
sparkle and glisten with color in the sunlight, making
the base much more pleasing to the eye. The building
will feature a sky lobby and five service elevators
capable of reaching every floor, including one
water-resistant car located in a protected shaft that
will be used by first responders.
(Web Link)
Return to
Headlines
©
copyright 2006 International Association of Fire
Fighters
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